Staying safe during your visit
It’s important to us to prevent the spread of infection in our hospitals and community sites, and keep you safe. To maintain strict standards of hygiene, we:
- follow national guidance for infection prevention
- train our staff and volunteers in how to limit the spread of infection
- keep our theatres, equipment and wards clean
- have extra measures in place to protect vulnerable patients
When you visit or stay in our hospitals, please follow this guidance to help keep everyone safe.
Do
- follow our hand hygiene guidance
- tell the ward or department if you think you have an infectious condition before you visit
- tell a member of staff if you notice that a ward area, toilet or bathroom is dirty, so they can arrange cleaning
Don’t
- ask or allow friends and relatives to visit you if they are unwell
- visit or accompany a patient if you have symptoms such as coughing, sneezing or a sore throat
- visit or accompany a patient at our hospitals if you have had any symptoms of diarrhoea or vomiting in the last 48 hours
- visit if you have a newly discovered rash and haven’t sought advice from NHS111, a GP or Pharmacist
If you have returned from travel abroad (within 21 days) and have a new fever, please seek advice from NHS111, a GP or Pharmacist at the earliest opportunity. If you are seriously unwell and choose to attend the Emergency Department, please be aware staff may have to take extra precautions while delivering care and treatment, please alert staff of your recent travel immediately.
Healthcare professionals may wear personal protective equipment like masks, gloves and aprons when caring for patients in line with our infection prevention and control precautions. We might ask patients to wear masks in certain clinical areas.
Washing your hands
One of the best ways to prevent bacteria and viruses (germs) from passing from one person to another, is by washing our hands.
This video shows the best technique for washing your hands:
There are hand gel dispensers at the entrance to every ward and we ask that anyone entering the department uses it.
To use, place a squirt of the gel onto the palm of one hand then rub your hands vigorously together, covering all areas of your hands and fingers. Keep rubbing your hands together until the gel evaporates. This takes 20-30 seconds.
Always wash your hands with soap and water:
- after using the toilet, changing a nappy or handling a potty
- after sneezing, coughing or blowing your nose
- after contact with blood or body fluid
- before and after handling raw food like meat and vegetables
- before and after eating or handling food
- before and after treating a cut or wound
Outbreaks
Outbreaks of diarrhoea and vomiting can circulate in the winter months. For symptoms of Norovirus (winter vomiting bug) visit NHS – Norovirus.
While at home wash your hands in soap and warm water regularly, especially after toilet visits, and avoid preparing food for others.
These bugs can be very dangerous to vulnerable patients, so it is important that visitors do not enter the hospital if you have had any symptoms of vomiting or diarrhoea in the last 48 hours.
Influenza (flu)
Flu is a serious illness that can be especially harmful to vulnerable patients in our hospitals.
In the winter months: catch it, kill it, bin it.
Use a tissue and dispose of it safely in a bin, washing your hands regularly.
If you have had flu, you are still infectious for up to a week from the day you started to feel unwell. To reduce the risk of spreading the virus in hospital wards, please do not visit until this time has passed.
If you are offered a flu vaccination on the NHS, please take up this offer. Along with good hand hygiene, the annual vaccine remains one of the best ways to protect you and your loved ones.
Advice for visitors
- don’t sit on the beds – use the benches/chairs provided instead. This is because some bacteria survive in skin cells that we shed, and beds are the place we are most likely to shed them. These bacteria can be picked up by your skin or clothing and passed on to you.
- remember to wash your hands and use hand gel when entering and leaving the ward
- do not use patients’ toilet facilities – there are separate toilets for visitors
- help us keep our hospitals clean and tidy: dispose of waste (used tissues or food wrappers) in the bins provided
- do not bring food in from home: we cannot reheat any food that hasn’t been prepared in the hospital, or share it with other patients
Advice for patients
- remember to use the hand wipes provided before eating meals
- don’t sit on other patients’ beds, use the chairs/benches provided
- do not share toiletries with other patients
- try not to touch any wound dressings, stitches, drips, or catheters unnecessarily
- try to avoid bringing lots of personal belongings to hospital – we have limited storage
- help us keep our hospitals clean and tidy by disposing of rubbish (e.g. used tissues or sweet wrappers) in the bins provided
How do we care for those with infections?
Sometimes we need to take extra precautions to care for those with infections, to protect them and others:
- patients may be moved to a room of their own
- staff may need to wear aprons and gloves when they are caring for the patient
- visitors may need to take extra precautions – this should be checked with a staff member
If you have any questions about your care, please speak to staff on the ward.