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Showing 1396 to 1410 of 2853 results for process
Showing 1396 to 1410 of 2853 results for process
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in over 16s: diagnosis and management (NG115)
This guideline covers diagnosing and managing chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or COPD (which includes emphysema and chronic bronchitis) in people aged 16 and older. It aims to help people with COPD to receive a diagnosis earlier so that they can benefit from treatments to reduce symptoms, improve quality of life and keep them healthy for longer.
Chronic anal fissure: 2% topical diltiazem hydrochloride (ESUOM3)
Summary of the evidence on 2% topical diltiazem hydrochloride for chronic anal fissure to inform local NHS planning and decision-making
This guideline covers identifying and caring for adults who are malnourished or at risk of malnutrition in hospital or in their own home or a care home. It offers advice on how oral, enteral tube feeding and parenteral nutrition support should be started, administered and stopped. It aims to support healthcare professionals identify malnourished people and help them to choose the most appropriate form of support.
Palopegteriparatide for treating chronic hypoparathyroidism [ID6380]
In development Reference number: GID-TA11454 Expected publication date: 23 July 2026
Toripalimab with chemotherapy for untreated recurrent or metastatic nasopharyngeal cancer [ID6406]
In development Reference number: GID-TA11341 Expected publication date: 02 December 2026
NICE's business plan, annual report, charter, transformation story, gender pay gap report, framework agreement and other publications.
Our stakeholders are involved in the development of NICE guidance and quality standards to ensure that the recommendations are relevant, practical, and meet the needs of those affected by the health or social care issues addressed.
Our stakeholders are involved in the development of NICE guidance and quality standards to ensure that the recommendations are relevant, practical, and meet the needs of those affected by the health or social care issues addressed.
Agenda and papers of the NICE public board meeting on 20 March 2024
and Medicines Policy Blogs 26 February 2026 NICE's prioritisation process explained – what healthtech developers need to know Understand...
This guideline covers identifying children, young people and adults with symptoms that could be caused by cancer. It outlines appropriate investigations in primary care, and selection of people to refer for a specialist opinion. It aims to help people understand what to expect if they have symptoms that may suggest cancer.
Show all sections
Sections for NG12
- Overview
- Introduction
- Recommendations organised by site of cancer
- Recommendations on patient support, safety netting and the diagnostic process
- Recommended actions organised by symptom and findings of primary care investigations
- Terms used in this guideline
- Recommendations for research
- Rationale and impact
We want you to be involved in our work - whether you’re commenting on our draft recommendations, taking part in guidance development or attending a committee meeting, your voice is important to us.
In development Reference number: GID-TA10868 Expected publication date: 15 July 2026
This guideline covers a set of principles that can be used to help people change their behaviour. The aim is for practitioners to use these principles to encourage people to adopt a healthier lifestyle by, for example, stopping smoking, adopting a healthy diet and being more physically active.
Neuropathic pain in adults: pharmacological management in non-specialist settings (CG173)
This guideline covers managing neuropathic pain (nerve pain) with pharmacological treatments (drugs) in adults in non-specialist settings. It aims to improve quality of life for people with conditions such as neuralgia, shingles and diabetic neuropathy by reducing pain and promoting increased participation in all aspects of daily living. The guideline sets out how drug treatments for neuropathic pain differ from traditional pain management.