Displaying 261 - 270 of 785 results for "silicone tape for scars"
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The path of making things right
Trauma services, community rehabilitation and kaupapa Māori providers are taking part in a quality improvement project focused on strengthening post-acute rehabilitation and support for patients (tūroro) with major trauma.
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5 questions to ask about your medications – consumer safety poster
Consumer poster available in English and te reo Māori to help patients, caregivers, families and whānau talk about medication with their health care providers.
- Assisted dying | Tauwhiro mate (Frailty care guides 2023)
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Safe Medication Management newsletters - 2010
Newsletters from the SMM programme for the year 2010
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Maternal morbidity review toolkit: Example of a trigger list
The example of a trigger list is part of the maternal morbidity review toolkit for maternity services.
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Well Child/Tamariki Ora Atlas
The Well Child/Tamariki Ora Atlas is an online tool that gives clinicians, patients and providers a clear overview of how early childhood health services work for children and their families.
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Paediatric early warning system
The national paediatric early warning system (PEWS) helps clinicians identify hospitalised tamariki with the potential to become more unwell, so they can respond quickly.
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National review of avoidable deaths
Our role is to reduce avoidable deaths in New Zealand. We examine what contributes to a person’s death, and work with families and whānau, communities, clinicians, health services and other parts of government to prevent avoidable deaths.
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Disability data gaps leave health inequities hidden, new report finds
New report exposes major gaps in NZ health data, leaving disabled people’s needs invisible. Linked data reveals systemic barriers, poorer outcomes, and urgent need for better data to drive equitable care improvements.
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Adverse events exception reporting 2020/21: Thematic analysis involving Māori and Pacific peoples
This paper presents a thematic analysis of severity assessment code (SAC)-1 and 2 adverse events involving Māori and Pacific peoples reported to Te Tāhū Hauora Health Quality & Safety Commission from 1 July 2017 to 30 June 2021.