Acta Dermato-Venereologica 97-4 | Page 37
546
See also In-this-Issue, p. 425
CORRESPONDENCE
Quimp: A Word Meaning “Quality of Life Impairment”
Andrew Y. FINLAY
Department of Dermatology and Wound Healing, Division of Infection and Immunity, Cardiff University School of Medicine, Heath Park,
Cardiff CF14 4XN, UK. E-mail: [email protected]
Accepted Feb 28, 2017
Here’s a dermatology riddle: You can describe me, you
can measure me, you can experience me. I’m very com-
mon and important. But I don’t have a name. What am I?
The answer is “quality of life impairment” (1).
The main purpose of proposing the new word “quimp”
to mean “quality of life impairment” is to facilitate the
integration of thinking about quality of life (QoL) into
routine clinical practice (2). Having a single word might
also accord the subject more importance. Attention to
ideas may be held back by only being able to express
a concept in a clumsy way, using several words. If you
had to say “the feeling that makes you want to scratch”
instead of “itch” or “the feeling that makes you cry”
instead of “pain” then less attention may have been paid
to these issues. A single word may help communication
and give a “personality” to an idea: it is more awkward
to describe your daughter as “our new little girl, we’re
still trying to agree a name” than to call her, say, Mary.
DEVELOPMENT OF “QUIMP”
The origin of quimp is obvious: “QUality of life IM Pair-
ment”. The word appropriately rhymes with and sounds
like “limp”, that quintessentially describes a physical
impairment. Words describing the most important things
are usually single syllables: love, war, peace, food, sex,
sun, rain. Key words in dermatology are also often single
syllable: itch, pain, scale, red, rash, scratch, spot. Quimp
is one syllable instead of the eight of “quality of life
impairment” and is easy to remember and pronounce
(“kwɪmp”, to rhyme with “limp”). Communication is
aided by using simple unambiguous words, rather than
long descriptive phrases.
Some examples of the possible uses of quimp are:
“How severe is that patient’s quimp?”, “Did you mea-
sure his quimp?”, “How can we improve her quimp?”,
“That child’s eczema is quiescent, it’s hardly causing
any quimp”, “His quimp should improve quickly once
he starts the biologic.” “Quimpic” is the derived ad-
jective, meaning “having or resulting in quality of life
impairment”. Examples of its use might be “It’s on her
face so it’s a very quimpic hemangioma”, “He’s keen on
swimming so the psoriasis could be quimpic for him.”
Some song phrases “earworm” their way into our
subconscious (3): perhaps single words can have the
same effect. If quimp became embedded in our minds
and our vocabularies it might subconsciously trigger
our thinking about QoL impairment. Perhaps it could
doi: 10.2340/00015555-2650
Acta Derm Venereol 2017; 97: 546–547
influence thinking and attitudes about the attention we
should give to this aspect of patient experience and care.
New words are always being created. Dermatologists
have constantly been inventing new words, mainly to
describe diseases or symptoms. There was a flurry of
such activity in the early 19 th century as the battle raged
between the Willan (4) and Alibert classifications: the
process continues whenever new diseases or concepts
arise that need to be defined and communicated. There
are at least 12 types of new word formation (5). Quimp
is an example of a “portmanteau” word developed by
“blending”. Although their origins go back to Latin and
earlier, the words “quality” (qualité) and “impairment”
(empeirer) come via Old French (6) from the 13 th to 14 th
centuries: at that time the rulers in England still spoke
Anglo-Norman French. So the “new” word quimp has a
long historic pedigree.
As with many words, “quimp” has several meanings.
It is defined (7) as “a graphic element, used within male-
dicta balloons in comics to represent obscenities, curses
and swearing, resembling the planet Saturn.” Written
as “QuimP,” it is the name of software used to quantify
spatio-temporal patterns of fluorescently labelled prote-
ins in the cortex of moving cells (8). Neither use is likely
to cause any confusion in this totally different context.
And it is nothing to do with the Brittany town Quimper.
LIMITATIONS
There are several limitations to the quimp proposal.
Although suggested in the context of health related QoL,
the word quimp seems to make no distinction between
health related QoL and the more general concept of QoL.
Quimp could be used in any of these contexts to mean
“quality of life impairment”: it is a generic word that
could be used in any area of medicine or beyond. It is
virtually impossible to conduct a meaningful prospec-
tive trial concerning a new word proposal: however the
prospect remains of tracking the use of quimp in future
publications. No Delphi process or discussion groups
were involved in developing this proposed new word:
the idea will either sink or swim. Quimp encompasses
the pronunciation of the pejorative term “wimp” and the
archaic vulgarism “quim” as well as the mischievous
“imp”. However in English, words commonly closely re-
semble others while maintaining clear separate meanings
and not being perceived as associated, such as “quilt,
wilt” and “quit, wit.”
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC license. www.medicaljournals.se/acta
Journal Compilation © 2017 Acta Dermato-Venereologica.