Common terms used during the elective surgery.
A drug used for cervical dilation and softening before gynaecology surgery.
Patients undergo the procedure and are discharged on the same day, without needing to stay overnight.
Elective surgery is a medical procedure that is scheduled in advance and is not immediately necessary to preserve life (eg. Caesarean).
A type of anaesthesia that puts you in a sleep-like state during surgery.
A small tube placed in your vein to give fluids or medication.
A type of anaesthesia that numbs only the operated area.
This is where operations take place.
The area where patients are received just before surgery. Here, final identity checks are done, and staff may ask a few last confirmation questions.
Patients are transferred to the Recovery Ward (PACU - Post-Anaesthesia Care Unit) immediately after operation, and will be closely monitored before they are moved to the stepdown ward.
Staff who helps to transfer patient safely from one place to another (e.g. from PACU to ward).
Patients who will be admitted to ward after a surgical procedure.
Sedation is medication that keeps a person calm and relaxed during a procedure, often allowing them to stay awake but feel drowsy or have little memory of it afterward.
A type of anaesthesia that numbs the lower half of your body.
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