Search Results

Showing 1 to 10 of 514 for search: title%3A%22urinary catheter care %22


Having Your Baby - Your Hospital Stay (Fraser Health) [Punjabi] Permalink Under Revision

Having a baby is a very exciting time! Our goal is to help you and your family welcome this baby in a safe and caring environment. Read this booklet carefully. It is meant to help you plan your stay and know what to expect when you come to the hospital to have your baby. Bring this booklet with you when you come to the hospital. (Punjabi) Colour

Other Languages (See All Related)

English, Chinese - Simplified (266618), Punjabi (266557)

Catalogue Number:
266557
More Detail
Share
Feedback

Having Your Baby - Your Hospital Stay (Fraser Health) [Chinese - Simplified] Permalink Under Revision

Having a baby is a very exciting time! Our goal is to help you and your family welcome this baby in a safe and caring environment. Read this booklet carefully. It is meant to help you plan your stay and know what to expect when you come to the hospital to have your baby. Bring this booklet with you when you come to the hospital. (Chinese - Simplified) Colour

Other Languages (See All Related)

English, Chinese - Simplified (266618), Punjabi (266557)

Catalogue Number:
266618
More Detail
Share
Feedback

Placing a Peritoneal Dialysis Catheter [English] Permalink Public

Describes how to care for yourself after a peritoneal dialysis catheter has been put in place either in the Peritoneal Dialysis Unit or the Operating Room. (English) Colour

Other Languages (See All Related)

English (267488), Chinese - Simplified (267490), Punjabi (267571)

Catalogue Number:
267488
More Detail
Share
Feedback

Placing a Peritoneal Dialysis Catheter [Punjabi] Permalink Public

Describes how to care for yourself after a peritoneal dialysis catheter has been put in place either in the Peritoneal Dialysis Unit or the Operating Room. (Punjabi) Colour

Other Languages (See All Related)

English (267488), Chinese - Simplified (267490), Punjabi (267571)

Catalogue Number:
267571
More Detail
Share
Feedback

Placing a Peritoneal Dialysis Catheter [Chinese - Simplified] Permalink Public

Describes how to care for yourself after a peritoneal dialysis catheter has been put in place either in the Peritoneal Dialysis Unit or the Operating Room. (Chinese - Simplified) Colour

Other Languages (See All Related)

English (267488), Chinese - Simplified (267490), Punjabi (267571)

Catalogue Number:
267490
More Detail
Share
Feedback

After Carotid Stenting - Catheterization Lab (Royal Columbian Hospital) [English] Permalink Public

This set of instructions contains information on how patients need to care for and protect the insertion site. Levels of permitted activity and symptoms to be aware of are included in this resource. (English) Colour

Catalogue Number:
257082
More Detail
Share
Feedback

Looking after your ASEPT Chest Catheter at Home [English] Permalink Public

This booklet tells you about your ASEPT® Chest Catheter and how to care for it at home. Your Community Health nurse will help you to understand the information and how to care for the catheter. (English) Colour

Catalogue Number:
266726
More Detail
Share
Feedback

Looking after your ASEPT Abdominal Catheter at Home [English] Permalink Public

This booklet tells you about your ASEPT® Abdominal Catheter and how to care for it at home. Your Community Health nurse will help you to understand the information and how to care for the catheter. (English) Colour

Catalogue Number:
266725
More Detail
Share
Feedback

Inserting Your Own Urinary Catheter - Self-Catheterization Instructions for Men (Fraser Health) [English] Permalink Public

Your family practitioner (family doctor or nurse practitioner) has told you that your bladder can not completely empty urine on its own. Because of this, you will need to learn how to drain the urine from your bladder to keep it from getting too full. We call this ‘Self-Catheterization’. The reason we want you to drain urine from your bladder regularly is to keep your kidneys and bladder healthy. It also decreases the chance of you getting a bladder or kidney infection. (English) Colour

Other Languages (See All Related)

English (251611), Arabic (265631), Chinese - Simplified (265628), Farsi (265632), French (265684), Korean (265630), Punjabi (265627), Vietnamese (265629)

Catalogue Number:
251611
More Detail
Share
Feedback

Inserting Your Own Urinary Catheter - Self-Catheterization Instructions for Women (Fraser Health) [English] Permalink Public

Your family practitioner (family doctor or nurse practitioner) has told you that your bladder can not completely empty urine on its own. Because of this, you will need to learn how to drain the urine from your bladder to keep it from getting too full. We call this ‘Self-Catheterization’. The reason we want you to drain urine from your bladder regularly is to keep your kidneys and bladder healthy. It also decreases the chance of you getting a bladder or kidney infection. (English) Colour

Other Languages (See All Related)

English (251612), Arabic (265625), Chinese - Simplified (265622), Farsi (265626), French (265683), Korean (265624), Punjabi (265621), Vietnamese (265623)

Catalogue Number:
251612
More Detail
Share
Feedback

Showing 1 to 10 of 514 for search: title%3A%22urinary catheter care %22

Narrow Search

About Fraser Health Patient Education

This catalogue serves the people using Fraser Health programs and services in communities from Burnaby east to Hope and surrounding areas.

Our goal is to provide you with reliable information in a way that you can find what you need, understand what you find, and use it to make decisions about your health.

Contact

Patient Education
Professional Practice
Fraser Health
#400, 13450 102nd Ave.
Surrey, BC  V3T 0H1


Go to fraserhealth.ca

You are using an outdated and possibly insecure browser. For full site functionality, please upgrade.