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Urgent treatment centres

Our four Derbyshire UTCs, Ilkeston Hospital, Ripley Hospital, Buxton Hospital and Whitworth Hospital

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Use of Clamshell Vaccine Bags by Community Nursing Teams (S99)

DCHS staff support the annual Influenza vaccination campaign and other vaccination programs by vaccinating some patients on behalf of GP practices. Vaccines are stocked in the GP practices and administered in the patients’ own homes (including care homes), which means they need to be transported between locations. DCHS staff have been provided with Clamshell Vaccine Bags for this purpose. This Standard Operating Procedure provides information to DCHS staff on the use of Clamshell Vaccine Bags.

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APPENDIX 1 Notification of Intention to take Paternity Partner Leave Pay.docx

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DCHS Empirical Non-Diabetic Foot Antimicrobial Guidelines For The High Risk Foot Clinic and Surgical Site Infection For Use In Podiatry and Podiatric Surgery (G342)

DCHS Empirical Non-Diabetic Foot Antimicrobial Guidelines For The High Risk Foot Clinic and Surgical Site Infection For Use In Podiatry and Podiatric Surgery

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A7 - Patient Enquiries to Respiratory Administration (S88).docx

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Escalation Report Template - July 2022.docx

Name - test

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Intravenous Therapy and Vascular Access Device (VAD) Policy - Adults (P47)

The use of intravenous medicines has many healthcare benefits for patients. Intravenous medicines are increasingly commonplace within the community setting and the need for an intravenous medicine is often a reason for patient’s being admitted to secondary care. Following the implementation of national and local policy, there is a new direction for community care providers such as DCHS to develop services that can be provided within the community hospital or community setting to accommodate patient’s being able to receive more complex care. The aims of this policy are: To prevent unnecessary acute hospital admission and to facilitate early discharge from the acute hospital setting by enabling patients to receive IV medicines safely within their own home or a community health care setting. To ensure an IV medicine is the most appropriate treatment for the patient and that it is administered via the most appropriate Vascular Access Device, the most appropriate vascular access site is chosen and the IV medicine is administered at the right time. To reduce the risk of complications by ensuring registered practitioners’ practice safely and consistently in relation to the administration of IV medicines, Vascular Access Device Insertion and the care and maintenance of Vascular Access Devices (VADs), through the implementation of evidence-based practice and by providing staff with the necessary guidance on clinical practice and training. To preserve and promote patient vessel health in the short and long term by ensuring any Vascular Access Device inserted is the most appropriate device for the treatment being administered and that it is placed by the most appropriately qualified practitioner.

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Ward-Decoration-Guidelines.docx

Christmas 2021 - IP&C guidance

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DCHS Community Podiatry eligibility leaflet (2020).pdf

DCHS Community Podiatry eligibility leaflet (2020)

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Community services visiting you at home _1.pdf

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Appendix 6 - Local Leg Ulcer Pathway (Seamless Care) (P66).docx