Discharge
Each hospital has its own policy and arrangements for meeting patients. Usually when you are in hospital, professional caregivers will develop a plan for treatment, including dismissal or transfer. This is usually done within 24 hours of arrival.
You can talk to devices for releasing employees. This will help to ensure that everything is back to full recovery at home.
Unloading or transfer date will affect the following factors:
Speed with improved health, while in the hospital
What kind of help they need after returning
The information in this section is a general guide to visiting someone in hospital. Details will vary depending on which hospital you are admitted to, and which test or treatment you are receiving. Check on the website of your hospital for more information. To find contact details for your hospital, use Find and choose services.
Visiting hours
Most hospitals have times at which you can visit your friend or relative. Check with the relevant hospital for information about when you can visit. Bear in mind that different wards often have different visiting times.
If you are unable to attend during visiting hours, talk to the nurse in charge of the ward to arrange an alternative time to visit.
Hospitals encourage relatives and friends to visit patients. However, patients can get tired very quickly. For this reason, the number of visitors each patient is allowed is usually restricted.
Children can be restricted from visiting a patient in the same way that adults are. In some wards, you need to ask permission for children to visit you, and some wards insist that children under 12 are accompanied by an adult.
Hand hygiene
When visiting someone in hospital, always clean your hands using soap and water or alcohol hand rubs. Do this when you enter or leave a patient’s room or other areas of the hospital.
If you are concerned about the hand hygiene of doctors, nurses or anyone else who comes into contact with the patient you are visiting, you are encouraged to ask them whether they have cleaned their hands.
Illness
If you have a cough, cold, diarrhoea, vomiting or any other infectious condition, contact the ward for advice before visiting.
Presents for patients
Patients like to receive gifts while in hospital. Most hospitals encourage visitors to bring gifts such as fruit, sweets, books and magazines. Check with the ward staff before bringing someone a gift of flowers. Some wards do not allow gifts of flowers because they have very strict procedures for controlling infections.
Smoking
Many hospitals do not permit smoking in any part of their buildings or grounds. If smoking is allowed at the hospital you are visiting, only smoke in the designated outdoor areas.
Travel
Parking at hospitals is limited and can be expensive. Where possible, use public transport when visiting someone in hospital.
Violence and aggression towards staff
Violence and aggression towards staff, patients or members of the public is not tolerated in any hospital. Assault is a crime, and hospitals will seek the maximum legal penalties for anyone behaving in this way.
What not to do when visiting someone in hospital
- Don’t sit on the patient’s bed as this can spread germs. Use the chairs provided.
- Don’t put your feet on the patient’s bed.
- Don’t touch the patient’s wounds or any medical equipment they are attached to, such as drips or catheters. This can cause infections.
- Don’t use the patients’ toilets. Ask the ward staff where the nearest public toilets are.
- Don’t share property, such as toiletries, tissues or items of hospital equipment with the patients.
Source: NHS.UK
Go hospitalized
If you are disabled and need hospital treatment, it is important to inform the hospital about the nature of disability and the additional support they need.
If your GP does not apply to treatment, notify the medical staff of their needs. You can discuss your needs with the hospital staff when they complete the registration form on arrival at hospital.
Access form gives medical staff an idea of how much help you might need during your stay in the hospital. You may want to discuss:
All the routines are
Facts - in a typical year:
Up to half of infants under 12 months, a quarter of children who attend A & E
One child in 11 will be referred to the outpatient clinic at the hospital
10-15 children hospitalized
One child in 1000 will require intensive care
One of 10 children born must be admitted to the neonatal unit. Of these, about 2% require intensive care
Children can go to the hospital a scary experience. This is partly related to their treatment, but because the hospital is a strange new environment, full of new sights, smells, sounds and people. If possible, talk with your child before they leave the hospital and explain what to expect.
Optician is a general term that covers both optometrists and dispensing opticians.
Optometrists carry out sight tests to check the quality of your vision and eye health. They look for signs of eye disease that may need treatment from a doctor or eye surgeon and prescribe and fit glasses and contact lenses.
Dispensing opticians fit glasses and contact lenses, but do not test eyes. They can give you advice on types of lens, such as single-vision or bifocal, and help you to choose frames.
When you visit an optician you may have your sight tested by an optometrist or an ophthalmic medical practitioner. They are trained to recognise abnormalities and diseases in the eye, such as cataract and glaucoma.
After the sight test the optician must legally give you your spectacle prescription (whether new or unchanged) or a statement saying that you did not need a prescription. This statement will also say if you are being referred to your GP or ophthalmic hospital.




