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This is a list of current guidelines, guidelines under development and archived guidelines that have been or are being developed or updated by the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network.
- Care of Deteriorating Patients
The guideline replaces SIGN 139: Care of deteriorating...
- Cutaneous Melanoma
Patient and public involvement Patient Network Plain...
- Management of Schizophrenia
Patient and public involvement Patient Network Plain...
- Management of Stable Angina
National guideline for management of stable angina. Despite...
- Pharmacological Management of Migraine
This guideline provides recommendations on the...
- The Sign Discharge Document
The SIGN discharge document was published in 2012 and is now...
- Management of Perinatal Mood Disorders
The guideline provides recommendations based on current...
- Prevention and Management of Venous Thromboembolism in Covid-19
This guideline was developed using SIGN’s rapid guideline...
- Care of Deteriorating Patients
Guidelines provide recommendations for effective practice in the management of clinical conditions where variations in practice are known to occur and where effective care may not be delivered uniformly throughout Scotland.
SIGN produce evidence-based, collaboratively developed clinical guidelines. Our website publishes these.
The guidelines aim to: help health and social care professionals make decisions about care. make sure patients get the best care available, wherever they live. improve health care by focusing on what’s important to patients. Visit the SIGN website for more information on this work.
About the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) SIGN was formed in 1993 to develop evidence-based clinical guidelines for the NHS in Scotland. SIGN was set up as a collaborative initiative, all working to develop and disseminate national clinical guidelines. SIGN produces evidence-based clinical guidelines, using a robust process ...
This guideline provides recommendations based on current evidence for best practice in the primary-care assessment and referral of patients with suspected glaucoma of any subtype, from the community into
The Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) develops evidence based clinical practice guidelines for the National Health Service (NHS) in Scotland.