We use cookies to provide you with a better service. Carry on browsing if you’re happy with this or read more about our cookie policy and privacy policy.
You may experience other symptoms that are not directly related to your SACT treatment
We appeal to smokers to take their cigarettes well away from our buildings and grounds, and hope that they will consider others before they light up.
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.
As leaders of Gloucestershire’s health and social care community, we are speaking out together because we are deeply concerned by the recent reported rise in racially motivated incidents in our communities and aimed at our staff.
Cheltenham General Hospital’s A&E department resumes its night-time nurse-led service on 30 June in line with plans to restore the service to its pre-pandemic status
This page gives discharge advice following an oesophageal stent insertion.
This page gives you information about how to care for your wound following a caesarean section operation to deliver your baby.
You may be offered a colposcopy if your cervical screening (smear test) finds abnormal cells in your cervix. Cervical screening is a way of preventing cancer by detecting and treating abnormalities early.
Dr Younger is a medical oncology consultant, specialising in the treatment of patients with sarcomas and skin cancers. She has a special interest in health-related quality of life in patients with cancer.
Otology: adult and paediatric
Hyperemesis gravidarum (HG) is a severe form of pregnancy sickness which can start early in pregnancy and last for months.
In line with Government guidance, the NHS in Gloucestershire is asking hospital outpatients and visitors (who are not affected by current visiting restrictions) to plan ahead and have face coverings available for when they attend hospital from 15 June.
This page gives you information about intermittent claudication, the causes and treatments that may help to reduce the risk.
This page is a guide for patients having an angiogram or angioplasty.
On Saturday 1 March from 08:00 – 13:30, a crane will be lifting a new external AC condenser to the roof of the Chedworth Day Surgery Unit
Access to the Tower Block at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital will be via an alternative entrance from 23-27 June during daytime hours (8am - 4pm)
Serum - paired samples not required
The Emergency Gynae Admissions unit (EGAU) is located on the ninth floor of the Tower Block at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital within Ward 9A.