New monitors at Burnley hospital will keep check of baby s heart rate in womb during labour
New monitors at East Lancashire hospital will keep check of baby s heart rate in womb during labour Two monitors that will be used to keep an eye on a baby s heartrate in the womb during labour have been donated to Lancashire Women and Newborn Centre. The mobile telemetry monitors, worth more than £16,000 have been donated through East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust’s official charity, ELHT&Me. They are waterproof too, allowing the parent-to-be to move around the birth room and use the birth pool, without being restricted by wires or cables from a monitor.
New monitors at Burnley hospital will keep check of baby s heart rate in womb during labour thisislancashire.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thisislancashire.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
CUDDLES: Staff at the hospital with some of the teddies DONATIONS of new teddies have been gratefully received by a hospital charity. ELHT&Me, the official charity of East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust, supports young patients during their hospital stay. The teddies, which are delivered regularly to the charity by the East Ribble Freemasons, are given to patients on the Children’s Day Case Unit, Ward 27, at Burnley General Teaching Hospital, to comfort them during their stay in hospital. Ward manager Cheryl Fitzgerald said:“Young people up to the age of 16 come to us for surgical procedures, and we also have children who attend the ward regularly for medical investigations and treatment.
CUDDLES: Staff at the hospital with some of the teddies DONATIONS of new teddies have been gratefully received by a hospital charity. ELHT&Me, the official charity of East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust, supports young patients during their hospital stay. The teddies, which are delivered regularly to the charity by the East Ribble Freemasons, are given to patients on the Children’s Day Case Unit, Ward 27, at Burnley General Teaching Hospital, to comfort them during their stay in hospital. Ward manager Cheryl Fitzgerald said:“Young people up to the age of 16 come to us for surgical procedures, and we also have children who attend the ward regularly for medical investigations and treatment.
New technology warns nurses earlier when patients deteriorate thisislancashire.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from thisislancashire.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.