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An ultrasound scan is a test that uses high frequency sound waves to build a picture of your baby in the womb. Ultrasound scans are very safe and can be carried out at any stage of pregnancy.
This page gives you instructions for putting drops into your eyes and how to care for your eyes after surgery.
This page gives advice about having a brother or sister in the Neonatal Unit (NNU)
This page gives you information on how to use the eye drops you have been prescribed. Different ways of using your eye drops are explained step by step. A useful chart to note down your doses is also provided within the PDF attached, below.
This page aims to help guide you through your recovery from gynaecological surgery.
The allocated appointment length is between 20 and 40 minutes; please allow the whole morning or afternoon in case you need tests.
It is important that you read the information on this page regarding your vascular surgery before your admission to hospital.
We’re constantly working to make the gloshospitals.nhs.uk website as accessible as possible for every user.
This page provides information about the Urology Suspected Cancer Exclusion Pathway. Your GP has referred you to this service to quickly determine whether your symptoms are caused by cancer.
Hearing Services offer a full range of rehabilitation on the two main sites, Cheltenham General Hospital, and Gloucestershire Royal Hospital.
This page explains why we use eye drops for some visits to the Eye Clinic. This page also gives instructions on how to use them.
You have been referred to the Rapid Access Skin Assessment Clinic by your GP. Your GP may have attached photographs to the referral which will have been reviewed by a consultant dermatologist at the hospital. At the Rapid Access Skin Assessment Clinic, we will look at or treat a skin lesion. A skin lesion is a part of the skin that has an abnormal growth or appearance compared to the skin around it. Our priority is to confirm or rule out a diagnosis of skin cancer. This page gives you information about the clinic and how it runs.
If you're thinking of returning to the HCPC register, there is help, support and information to allow you to Return to Practice.
Stool container with spoon
This page provides Fever advice for children and young people
Leg ulceration is a common problem affecting about 1 to 2% of people in the United Kingdom. Venous leg ulcers can appear suddenly or as a result of an injury to the leg. They are defined as an ulcer if they do not heal within 2 weeks.
This section profiles some of the work that we do
You have been asked to attend Same Day Emergency Care (SDEC) or the Ambulatory Emergency Care (AEC) departments because you may have an infection in your legs called cellulitis. This page contains information about lower limb cellulitis and how it will be treated.
We want our staff, patients, and communities to be proud of the Trust, and for our hospitals to be recognised as places where people can receive consistently high-quality care.