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A variety of conditions, including:
We have created the Big Plus Fund to help support local projects that will improve the patient experience and transform the hospital environment wherever the need is greatest.
A new initiative to improve the experience of patients experiencing a mental health crisis launches this week in our Emergency Departments at Cheltenham and Gloucester
If your GP arranges for you to be seen by our Frailty team, they will usually ask for you to come to our Frailty SDEC (Same Day Emergency Care) at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital.
Our Arts in Trust programme is dedicated to supporting care through creativity
Thanks to our supporters, a dedicated room in Gloucestershire Royal Hospital’s A&E department has been created as a much-needed safe haven for patients.
A step-by-step approach for parents and carers This page provides you, or those people who may be looking after your child, with a basic guide on what to do if your baby looks to be blue or is not breathing normally. Usually, young children have breathing problems before their heart stops beating normally. By helping them breath you are trying to prevent them getting more unwell.
Ward 2B is located on the second floor of the Tower Block at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital. The ward specialises in treating patients with head and neck cancers.
Check swab expiry date before use
By Dr H Iftikhar, Dr S Alaee, Dr J Bennett, Dr A Creamer, Dr R Kaminski, Dr D Windsor, Dr C Sharp
Sample requirements
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.
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.
The aim of this booklet is to provide you or those caring for you with the necessary information to feel confident in caring for your laryngectomy. There is a lot of information which we have tried to simplify by grouping into sections.
This page gives you information about your planned exercise stress echocardiogram.