Ward Details
Service Of Ward Details
A hospital contains one or more wards that house hospital beds for inpatients. It may also have acute services such as an emergency department, operating theatre, and intensive care unit, as well as a range of medical specialty departments.
• Male General Ward (Medicine)
• Male General Ward (Surgery)
• Female General Ward (Medicine)
• Female General Ward (Surgery)
• Paediatric Ward
• Intensive Care Unit (ICU)
• Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU)
Paediatric
Paediatric neurology research patients, rehabilitation patients, and surgical and research patients needing round-the-clock care are treated at the Paediatric Ward. Some of the patients are admitted for a procedure based on an invitation, others are admitted via the Emergency Department.
Treatment includes various examinations and procedures which are performed as painlessly and safely as possible. Medication, monitoring and guidance of the patients and parents are a part of the treatment.
ICU
An intensive care unit (ICU), also known as an intensive therapy unit or intensive treatment unit (ITU) or critical care unit (CCU), is a special department of a hospital or health care facility that provides intensive care medicine. Intensive care units cater to patients with severe or life-threatening illnesses and injuries, which require constant care, close supervision from life support equipment and medication in order to ensure normal bodily functions. They are staffed by highly trained physicians, nurses and respiratory therapists who specialize in caring for critically ill patients.
NICU
NICU stands for newborn intensive care unit. This is a nursery in a hospital that provides around-the-clock care to sick or premature babies. It has health care providers who have special training and equipment to give your baby the best possible care. When babies are born early, have health problems, or a difficult birth they go to the hospital’s NICU. There, babies get around-the-clock care from a team of experts. Most of these babies go to the NICU (NIK-yoo) within 24 hours of birth. How long they stay depends on their health condition. Some babies stay only a few hours or days; others stay weeks or months.
Treatment includes various examinations and procedures which are performed as painlessly and safely as possible. Medication, monitoring and guidance of the patients and parents are a part of the treatment.
The child’s age, mental, physical and social needs, and the family’s circumstances are taken into account when planning and implementing the treatment. Parents may stay with their child at the ward, which has a craft and play area.
The ward’s treatments include
1.Various infectious diseases
2.Breathing difficulties
3.Fluid balance disorders
4.Diabetes and heart, liver, and kidney diseases
5.Convulsions and poisoning