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Changes to Cheltenham A&E during BMA Industrial Action 17 - 22 December
We collect, store and process information about prospective, current and former staff. This notice explains how we use your information, and your right to control how we use it.
Cotswold Fertility Unit (CFU) in Cheltenham offers services, advice and support to couples looking for fertility treatment in Gloucestershire.
Prescribers wishing to prescribe restricted antibiotics are required to contact the Microbiologist for approval, which must then be recorded in the medical notes. The exception to this is where:
Clotted blood.
This page gives you information about the repair of your fractured cheekbone. If you have any further questions, please ask a member of the medical or nursing staff or contact us on the phone number at the end of this page.
This page gives you information about infections around your anus (bottom) known as perianal abscesses. Also included is information about fistulae (abnormal connections) that can happen in this area.
Patients are now able to view Gloucestershire Hospitals appointment information and associated letters, as well as receive reminders in the NHS App.
Purpose
by Helen Overton, Silvia Oliva and Vivienne McCrorie
As part of our ongoing commemorations marking the anniversary of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021, we remembered the lives lost and reflected on the many changes it brought to all our lives.
By Dr Hina Iftikhar, Dr Bethany Stoneham, Dr Jonathan Archer, Dr Adam Usher
by Sister Jo Davis, Ptech Cert
This page gives you information about vaginal hysterectomy and pelvic floor repair, including information about the benefits and risks of the procedure.
Women in a Gloucestershire village whose lives have all been touched by cancer have joined together to get behind the £17.5m Big Space Cancer Appeal.
This page gives you information about the options available to remove your PEG. Also included is care advice for you to follow after the procedure.
Congratulations on the birth of your baby! This page provides information relating to caring for yourself and your newborn.
This procedure is designed to straighten the finger, and is something that people usually opt to do because of restriction in the function of the hand as a result of Dupuytren’s disease.
You have been advised to have a gastroscopy, which you may also have heard being called an endoscopy or OGD (meaning an oesophageal-gastro-duodenoscopy). A gastroscopy will help us to investigate the cause of your symptoms. It is important that you read this page before your appointment so that you understand what will happen during this procedure and the preparation involved.
Clotted blood. (No patient preparation or special handling required)
Surgery to decompress a trigger finger is a last resort, since the majority of trigger fingers resolve with steroid injection