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Guidance programme

Advice programme

Showing 16 to 30 of 32 results for irritable bowel syndrome

  1. Herbal medicines:- Are Chinese and non-Chinese herbal medicines safe and effective as first-line therapy in the treatment of [Irritable bowel syndrome] (IBS), and which is the most effective and safe option?

    safe and effective as first-line therapy in the treatment of [Irritable bowel syndrome] (IBS), and which is the most...

  2. Research is needed to establish the nature of bile acid malabsorption and whether bile acid malabsorption is a primary or secondary condition in people diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D) or Crohn's disease without ileal resection.

    is a primary or secondary condition in people diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-D) or Crohn's disease without...

  3. Diverticular disease: diagnosis and management (NG147)

    This guideline covers the diagnosis and management of diverticular disease in people aged 18 years and over. It aims to improve diagnosis and care and help people get timely information and advice, including advice about symptoms and when to seek help.

  4. Interim process and methods guide for the clinical guideline updates using standing committees pilot programme 2013 (PMG17)

    Interim process and methods guide for the clinical guideline updates using standing committees pilot programme 2013

  5. Inflammatory bowel disease (QS81)

    This quality standard covers diagnosing and managing inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis) in adults, young people and children. It describes high-quality care in priority areas for improvement.

  6. Chronic pain (primary and secondary) in over 16s: assessment of all chronic pain and management of chronic primary pain (NG193)

    This guideline covers assessing all chronic pain (chronic primary pain, chronic secondary pain, or both) and managing chronic primary pain in people aged 16 years and over. Chronic primary pain is pain with no clear underlying cause, or pain (or its impact) that is out of proportion to any observable injury or disease.

  7. Faecal incontinence in adults (QS54)

    This quality standard covers managing faecal (bowel) incontinence in adults (aged 18 and over) in the community (at home and in care homes) and in all hospital departments. It includes assessment of bowel control problems, advice and support, and treatment options. It describes high-quality care in priority areas for improvement.

  8. Food allergy (QS118)

    This quality standard covers diagnosing, assessing and managing food allergy in children and young people (under 19) and adults. It describes high-quality care in priority areas for improvement.

  9. Myalgic encephalomyelitis (or encephalopathy)/chronic fatigue syndrome: diagnosis and management (NG206)

    This guideline covers diagnosing and managing myalgic encephalomyelitis (or encephalopathy)/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) in children, young people and adults. It aims to improve awareness and understanding about ME/CFS and when to suspect it, so that people are diagnosed earlier. It includes recommendations on diagnosis, assessment and care planning, safeguarding, access to care and managing ME/CFS and its symptoms.

  10. Irritable bowel syndrome with constipation in adults: linaclotide (ESNM16)

    This evidence summary has been updated and replaced by NICE guideline CG61.

  11. Eluxadoline for treating irritable bowel syndrome with diarrhoea (TA471)

    We have withdrawn this guidance. Allergan has stopped marketing eluxadoline (Truberzi) for commercial reasons and its marketing authorisation has been withdrawn.

  12. Constipation in children and young people: diagnosis and management (CG99)

    This guideline covers diagnosing and managing constipation in children and young people up to 18. It provides strategies to support the early identification and timely, effective treatment of constipation which will help improve outcomes for patients. It does not cover constipation caused by a specific condition.

  13. Research recommendations

    history of progression to colorectal cancer in people with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) or adenomas? CG118/2