Refugee Health Nurse Program
Information for the community on RHS' Refugee Health Nurse Program
Important information for Proposers
Information for Proposers about health checks for newly arrived refugees and other health services
Wok for Health Social Tile
The social tiles support the promotion of the Wokforhealth website: http://www.wokforhealth.com.au/ which has been made with young people of Chinese backgrounds.
Mental Health Care for Immigrants
Information that might be useful to help you identify if you, or someone you know, needs help with mental health and to find treatment options.
When to come to hospital in labour
When to Come to Hospital in Labour is essential to ensure women are aware in advance of who to contact, when and why to come to hospital, and what would be alert and their partner / support person to the signs of labour. It also provides women with information to ensure early and timely access, especially if complications arise. Translations of these resources were funded through SESLHD Multicultural Health Funding Program 2017-2018.
Contraception After You Have Had a Baby
Contraception After You Have Had a Baby. This resource summarises options for suitable contraception after giving birth, including suitable options for breastfeeding mothers. Translations of these resources were funded through Multicultural Health Funding Program 2017-2018
Legionnaires’ disease
Legionnaires' disease is an infection of the lungs (pneumonia) caused by Legionella bacteria. Infection occurs when a person breathes in these bacteria. It can usually be cured by treatment with antibiotics.
COVID-19 Self-Isolation change
From 14 October 2022 it is not mandatory to self-isolate if you test positive to COVID-19, but it is recommended you stay home and take steps to protect others. The flyer explains the new changes and the support services.
Long COVID factsheet
Long COVID factsheet explains the symptoms of 'long COVID', where to seek support, and how to protect yourself.
What to expect after Head and Neck Cancer treatment
These animations are designed to help educate and empower people living with Head and Neck Cancer in multicultural, multilingual communities to self-manage their care and improve quality of life after treatment for HNC. They are translated into the five most common non-English languages in Western Sydney Health and South Western Sydney Local Health District: Arabic, Chinese, Hindi (Latin and Devanagari alphabets), Korean and Vietnamese.