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Abdominal Pain (Fraser Health) [English] Permalink Public
Your abdomen extends from below your chest to your groin. Some people call it the stomach, but your abdomen contains many other important organs. Pain in the abdomen can come from any one of these organs. The pain may start somewhere else, such as your chest. Severe pain does not always mean it is a serious problem. However, mild pain does not always mean the problem is not serious. (English) Colour
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English (254290), Arabic (262844), Chinese - Simplified (262841), Chinese - Traditional (262840), Farsi (262845), Korean (254410), Punjabi (262842), Vietnamese (262843)
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254290Angina Chest Pain (Fraser Health) [English] Permalink Public
We have determined that your chest pain is coming from your heart. This is called angina (sounds like ann-j-eye-na). Angina is caused by not enough oxygen getting to your heart muscle. (English) Colour
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English (253981), Arabic (262949), Chinese - Simplified (262946), Chinese - Traditional (262945), Farsi (262950), Korean (254406), Punjabi (262947), Vietnamese (262948)
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253981Chest Pain - Non-Cardiac (Fraser Health) [English] Permalink Public
Pain in your chest can be scary but is does not always mean you are having a heart attack. We have done some tests and determined your chest pain is not coming from your heart. (English) Colour
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English (253986), English (253986), Arabic (262918), Chinese - Simplified (262915), Chinese - Traditional (262914), Farsi (262920), Korean (262919), Punjabi (262916), Vietnamese (262917)
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253986Using Methadone for Pain in Palliative Care (Fraser Health) [English] Permalink Public
Methadone is an opioid (sometimes called narcotic) like morphine and codeine. Methadone is used to help treat complex pain often related to nerve pain. It should only be used when pain control is needed all the time. (English) Colour
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265791How to Take Short-Acting Opioid Pain Medicine: Palliative Care (Fraser Health) [English] Permalink Public
This handout has information on how to take opioid pain medicine for palliative patients. Opioids are one type of medicine used to treat pain, or to help when feeling short of breath. pioids are available in short and long-acting forms. (English) Colour
Catalogue Number:
265895How to Take Long-Acting Opioid Pain Medicine: Palliative Care (Fraser Health) [English] Permalink Public
This handout has information on how to take opioid pain medicine. Opioids are one type of medicine used to treat pain, or to help when feeling short of breath. Opioids are available in short and long-acting forms. People taking long-acting pain medicine may need short acting pain medicine if they still have pain. (English) Colour
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265814Frequently Asked Questions about Opioid Pain Medicine: Palliative Care (Fraser Health) [English] Permalink Public
This handout covers frequently asked questions about opioid pain medicine including how to get the best pain relief and how to use breakthrough medicine. (English) Colour
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265894Before AND After Procedural Sedation (Adult) (Fraser Health) [English] Permalink Public
We give this information out after various procedures and sometimes as part of a package for a specific procedure. Procedural sedation means we gave you medicines so we could do a test or procedure without you feeling pain. This is called ‘sedation’. The medicines will make you feel sleepy, dizzy, faint, clumsy, or unsteady. It can also cause you to not think clearly. (English) Colour
This factsheet is part of Colon Screening Program Package (268083).
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English (254259), Arabic (262830), Chinese - Simplified (262827), Chinese - Traditional (262826), Farsi (262832), Korean (262831), Punjabi (262828), Vietnamese (262829)
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254259Before AND After Procedural Sedation (Adult) (Fraser Health) [Chinese - Traditional] Permalink Public
We gave you medicines so we could do a test or procedure without you feeling pain. This is called ‘sedation’. The medicines will make you feel sleepy, dizzy, faint, clumsy, or unsteady. It can also cause you to not think clearly. (Chinese - Traditional) Colour
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English (254259), Arabic (262830), Chinese - Simplified (262827), Chinese - Traditional (262826), Farsi (262832), Korean (262831), Punjabi (262828), Vietnamese (262829)
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262826Before AND After Procedural Sedation (Adult) (Fraser Health) [Chinese - Simplified] Permalink Public
We gave you medicines so we could do a test or procedure without you feeling pain. This is called ‘sedation’. The medicines will make you feel sleepy, dizzy, faint, clumsy, or unsteady. It can also cause you to not think clearly. (Chinese - Simplified) Colour
Other Languages (See All Related)
English (254259), Arabic (262830), Chinese - Simplified (262827), Chinese - Traditional (262826), Farsi (262832), Korean (262831), Punjabi (262828), Vietnamese (262829)
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262827Showing 1 to 10 of 43 for search: *:*
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