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A splint is a support prescribed to protect a broken bone or injury.
This page has important information about Having a brother or sister in the Neonatal Unit (NNU).
Infected Blood Inquiry report
Thanks to your donations, our latest mental health and wellbeing project has been making a real difference for our colleagues at Gloucestershire Hospitals.
Tivoli ward is a mixed ward, specialising mainly in Urology
Suspected measles, mumps and rubella cases can be confirmed using an oral fluid test kit
A minimum of 1 mL CSF taken into a 30 mL Universal (tap #4 preferred) (approximately 25 drops from the Luer connector on the needle)
This page provides information about how to help care for your child following a burn.
This page gives you information about uterine fibroids which may answer some of the questions you might have following the discussion with the specialist. Fibroids are common, benign (non-cancerous) growths of womb (uterine) muscle. They occur in around 25 in every 100 white women and 50 in every 100 black women. Fibroids do not always cause symptoms, but those that do, account for about one third of all hysterectomy operations.
This page gives you information about what to expect in the Dental Assessment Clinic before and after having your radiotherapy treatment to the head and neck area. It also explains why it is important to have a dental assessment and why you may need treatment in your mouth in the Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Department.
The information on this page is about skin conditions which affect the vulval skin. These skin conditions are not cancer but in some women the cells over time can become cancerous. This is why they are called “pre-malignant conditions”.
This page gives you information about the exposure of an impacted upper canine tooth and answers many of the commonly asked questions. If you have any other questions that this page does not answer or would like a further explanation, please contact the Oral and Maxillofacial department. The details are at the end of this page.
This page gives you information about Meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and its treatment.
Women suffering from Hyperemesis Gravidarum (HG) can now be looked after as day cases following an innovative move by the Trust designed to improve patient experience.
AMU provides rapid assessment, diagnosis and treatment of patients with urgent medical conditions who require inpatient admission.
By Dr H Iftikhar, Dr S Alaee, Dr J Bennett, Dr A Creamer, Dr R Kaminski, Dr D Windsor, Dr C Sharp
by Dr Alexander Grant
by Catrin Davies & Laura Cummings
by Rebecca Offord & Nicky Cantrill
This page gives you information about bladder urgency and how to improve bladder function with retraining and other treatment methods. Bladder urgency is having the sudden urge to hurry to pass urine, often with the fear of not getting to the toilet in time. People with bladder urgency can find that they frequently have to pass urine in the daytime and sometimes at night. Bladder control can be lost and an embarrassing leak of urine might happen. Studies have shown that bladder urgency is a common problem but, with the right assessment, treatment can work very well.