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GHNHSFT works in collaboration with Approved Education Institutes (AEIs) across the region to provide practice placements for Undergraduate Nursing Students. We hope that the information you find on these pages will be useful and give you an insight into your placement and the learning opportunities available. We are very much looking forward to having you on placement with us.
This page gives you information about the banding of your piles, what to expect after the procedure and the possible complications. It also gives you information about how to stop the piles returning.
This page gives you information about the medication duloxetine which you have been prescribed to reduce the pain of vulvodynia. Vulvodynia is pain in the vulva (area around the outside of the vagina) that lasts at least 3 months but does not have a specific cause.
This page explains why your child has an appointment for the Neurodevelopmental Clinic at either Gloucestershire Royal Hospital or Cheltenham General Hospital and why it is important for your child to attend their appointment.
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.
Project Management Toolkit
The organs and tissues in the human body are made up of cells, which are constantly growing and then dividing to form new cells.
11DEOXY, 11CORT
This will provide you with information about Patient Initiated Follow-Up appointments (PIFU), at Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. It explains what PIFU appointments are and how they work.
You have been asked to come to the hospital for an oral Glucose Tolerance Test (GTT). This page gives you information about the test and the preparations needed.
Dr Webb-Peploe is a consultant clinical psychologist, specialising in working with people affected by cancer and life-limiting conditions. She has specialist interests in post-traumatic responses and with people with learning disabilities.
If you have kidney disease you are likely to have anaemia, which is a drop in the amount of haemoglobin found in your bloodstream. Anaemia can make you feel very weak and tired. This page gives you information about anaemia, why it happens and what treatment is available to control it.
Some types of cancer treatment can cause side effects that affect your bladder and bowel.
Mr Eaton was appointed to Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust in 2013. He continues to provide a general urology service whilst supporting the continued development of the uro-oncology service.
Update on Systemic Anti-Cancer Therapy (SACT) production
This page gives you information about the treatment options for early vocal cord cancer.
In 2013, I celebrated my 36th birthday with my twin brother Tim, with a family lunch, a trip to the Lego store, followed by an appointment that night for a short stay at Royal Liverpool Hospital.