Displaying 81 - 90 of 502 results
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Information to help answer patient questions about the patient experience surveysThe information in these documents will help you answer questions from patients about the patient experience surveys.
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Poster: How to hand rubPoster showing the correct steps to take when using alcohol-based hand rub to clean your hands, available in Arabic, English, Hindi, Samoan, Simplified Chinese, te reo Māori, Tongan and Traditional Chinese.
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Let’s plan to leave hospital | Me whakamahere i te wehenga i te hōhiperaHospital staff want you to leave feeling well informed and with answers to any questions you may have. This sheet will help.
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Let’s plan for your next health care visit | Me whakamahere i tō toronga haumanu hauoraThis resource is to help you plan your next health care visit. Planning and asking questions will help you understand more about your health and treatment for an illness or injury.
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The prevalence of healthcare-associated infections in New Zealand public hospitals 2021This article presents the findings from the first national point prevalence survey of all district hospitals, undertaken by the Health Quality & Safety Commission in 2021.
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Adverse events exception reportingThese documents summarise adverse event exception reporting for the 2020/21 and 2021/22 financial years.
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Guide to recording blood pressure in acutely unwell tamariki | He aratohu hei tuhi i te taukapa o te toto i te tamariki e māuiui anaThis guide covers the common questions raised by paediatric teams during the national rollout of the Aotearoa New Zealand paediatric early warning system about the routine measurement of blood pressure in acutely unwell children.
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Patient experience survey core question handbookThis handbook explains the purpose of the patient experience survey core question set and how it fits within the national survey questionnaires. It also outlines some issues to consider when using the set in your own local data collection activities.
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Frailty care guides | Ngā aratohu maimoa hauwarea (2023 edition)As Aotearoa’s aged population increases, the recognition and treatment of frailty has become crucial to all health care environments. Frailty is a recognised clinical syndrome that requires specialised assessment and interventions.