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Guidance programme

Advice programme

Showing 121 to 135 of 557 results for women's health

  1. Neonatal infection (QS75)

    This quality standard covers preventing bacterial infection in newborn babies, treating pregnant women and pregnant people whose babies are at risk of infection, and treating newborn babies with suspected or confirmed bacterial infection. It includes when to give antibiotics to prevent and treat neonatal bacterial infection and describes high-quality care in priority areas for improvement. This includes early-onset (within 72 hours of birth) and late-onset (between 72 hours and 28 days following birth) neonatal infection.

  2. Updated guideline recommends more treatment choices for menopause symptoms

    New evidence shows that cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) can help reduce menopause symptoms including hot flushes and night sweats, depressive symptoms and problems sleeping NICE has said in its draft updated guideline on menopause published today (17 November 2023).

  3. NICE recommends life changing technology is rolled out to people with type 1 diabetes

    Thousands of people with type 1 diabetes could be offered wearable technology to help them manage their condition following the publication of final draft guidance by NICE.

  4. New NICE quality standard identifies improvements in UTI diagnosis for women

    Health professionals should diagnose women under 65 with a urinary tract infection (UTI) if they have two or more key urinary symptoms.

  5. Chemotherapy-free treatment option to be offered to patients with England's most common leukaemia

    Acalabrutinib, taken as a twice daily tablet, is recommended as an option for adults with untreated chronic lymphocytic leukaemia.

  6. Women should be offered induced labour earlier than previously advised

    Induced labour should be offered earlier than previously advised to make birth safer for women and their babies, according to draft guidelines published by NICE today (25 May 2021). The updated recommendations strengthen previous advice in the light of new evidence on induction timings.

  7. NICE calls for further research into the treatment of chronic lipoedema

    NICE has today issued interventional procedures guidance on the use of liposuction for the treatment of chronic lipoedema.

  8. NICE sets out further details on menopause guideline update

    NICE has outlined what aspects of menopause care will be updated in upcoming guidance, including areas where more research is needed.

  9. NICE recommends treatment options for severe pregnancy sickness

    Nausea and vomiting, often referred to as morning sickness, is common in pregnancy. Close to 80% of pregnant women experience these symptom.

  10. NICE recommends several treatment options to help with rheumatoid arthritis

    Around 25,000 people with moderate rheumatoid arthritis that has not responded to conventional therapies are set to benefit from the recommendations announced today.

  11. NICE recommends offering PrEP to people at high risk of HIV for first time

    People at the highest risk of catching HIV should be offered Pre Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), NICE has recommended for the first time.

  12. NICE recommends innovative treatment for severe blood disorder for NHS use

    Caplacizumab, with plasma exchange and immunosuppression, will be used to treat acute acquired thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura.

  13. Epilepsies in children, young people and adults (QS211)

    This quality standard covers diagnosing and managing epilepsies in children, young people and adults. It describes high-quality care in priority areas for improvement.

  14. Hybrid closed loop systems for managing blood glucose levels in type 1 diabetes (TA943)

    Evidence-based recommendations on hybrid closed loop systems for managing blood glucose levels in type 1 diabetes.

  15. Acne vulgaris: management (NG198)

    This guideline covers management of acne vulgaris in primary and specialist care. It includes advice on topical and oral treatments (including antibiotics and retinoids), treatment using physical modalities, and the impact of acne vulgaris on mental health and wellbeing.