Page results
-
This page has been written by the Department of Neurosurgery at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery to provide general information about the care of your surgical wound. Your ward nurse and neurosurgeon will discuss any needs that you have in detail.
-
This page explains who you will meet and what to expect at your appointment with the adolescent gynaecology team at UCLH.
-
Work experience at UCLH is offered to full-time students aged 16-18 through our partnerships with The Social Mobility Foundation and selected local secondary schools. As we receive a high volume of requests for work experience, we are unfortunately unable to accommodate students outside of these two programmes.
-
A safeguarding clinic dedicated to the long term needs of children and young people who have problems related to Sexual, gynaecological or genito-urinary health, Complex maltreatment including sexual abuse, female genital mutilation, factitious illness and related issues. We also see unaccompanied children, refugees and looked after children.
-
The specimen containers used for urine microscopy culture test are changing. The new specimen containers include boric acid preservative. The presence of boric acid helps to maintain the microbiological quality of the specimen and prevents overgrowth of organisms during transport to the lab.
-
The UCLH play and youth services team provides therapeutic, diagnostic, developmental and specialised play interventions to help support children and young people during their time at UCLH.
-
This page explains what a low-phosphate diet is. It also provides information about foods you can eat and foods to avoid when taking a medicine called futibatinib.
-
This page is designed for patients scheduled to attend our department. It outlines the various tests that may be conducted during your appointment.
-
This page explains what to do and what to avoid when your child has had extractions or minor oral surgery.
-
C. diff is a bacterium (a “bug”) that lives harmlessly in the bowel (gut) of approximately three per cent of people. If the balance of C. diff and good bacteria is disrupted (for example when taking antibiotics), the good bacteria may be killed and C. diff can multiply and produce toxins. These toxins cause inflammation in the bowel and diarrhoea.
File results
-
FOI/2023/0379 - MDT meetings in relation to tailgut cysts
-
FOI/2023/0381 - Apprenticeship Levy - total paid into apprenticeship service accounts 2020/21 - 2022/23 (Part 2)
-
FOI/2023/0385 - IT services staff contact details
-
FOI/2023/0391 - Senior staff contact details - surgical, medical and elective care
-
FOI/2023/0393 - Social listening list for social media posts monitored by the Trust
-
FOI/2023/0399 - Patient deaths while waiting to receive planned care/ patients waiting more than 18 weeks - 2022
-
FOI/2023/0415 - Contact details for senior staff at Estates and Facilities
-
FOI/2023/0425 - Trusts temp agency spend for doctors, nurses and allied health professionals (AHP) - 2022/23
-
FOI/2023/0430 - Number of operations performed to remove rectal foreign bodies
-
Neuroimmunology and CSF Laboratory User Handbook