ENT Nursing · GCC Specialty Guide 2025

ENT Nursing
in the GCC

A fast-paced surgical specialty with one of the highest paediatric caseloads in the world. From adenotonsillectomy and cochlear implants to head & neck oncology, rhinoplasty, and DISE procedures — ENT is booming across the Gulf.

#1
Most common paediatric surgery in GCC is adenotonsillectomy
40%
of Gulf population suffers allergic rhinitis (dust, sand, climate)
Govt funded
Cochlear implant programmes in Saudi, Qatar & UAE
SAR 18K+
Head & Neck CNS monthly salary in Saudi tertiary hospitals
Home Clinical Guides ENT Nursing
Why ENT is Booming in the GCC

Six powerful forces are driving unprecedented demand for ENT-specialist nurses across all Gulf states — and the trajectory is only going upward.

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High Paediatric ENT Caseload
Adenotonsillectomy is the single most common paediatric surgical procedure performed in GCC hospitals. Large family sizes, high rates of recurrent tonsillitis, and adenoid hypertrophy driving mouth-breathing create a relentless paediatric ENT workload in every hospital.
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Allergic Rhinitis Epidemic
Dust storms, sand particulate, extreme UV, air-conditioning dependence and rapid climate change have made allergic rhinitis one of the most prevalent chronic conditions in the Gulf. Septoplasty, inferior turbinate reduction and immunotherapy nursing are all growth areas.
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Head & Neck Oncology
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is significantly more prevalent in South Asian and South-East Asian expat populations — now a major demographic across all GCC countries. Oral cavity, oropharyngeal and thyroid cancers also add to the head & neck surgical burden.
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Medical Tourism & Cosmetic ENT
Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Riyadh host world-class cosmetic ENT programmes. Rhinoplasty demand from the wealthy GCC population and regional medical tourists is among the highest globally. Septorhinoplasty, otoplasty and blepharoplasty combine aesthetic and functional indications.
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Cochlear Implant Programmes
Government-subsidised cochlear implant programmes in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and UAE are among the most generously funded in the world. Specialist implant nurses manage pre-assessment, surgical support, device activation (mapping), and long-term audiological follow-up.
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Sleep Apnoea & UPPP
Obesity rates above 30% in some GCC countries — combined with genetic predisposition to craniofacial anatomy — have made obstructive sleep apnoea a public health crisis. Drug-Induced Sleep Endoscopy (DISE), UPPP surgery and continuous follow-up create specialist nursing roles.
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Career insight: ENT is one of the few surgical specialties where a nurse can work across theatre (scrub/circulating), ward, OPD, cochlear implant unit, and head & neck oncology — each with its own distinct skill set and salary premium. Breadth of ENT exposure makes GCC-trained ENT nurses highly competitive globally.
ENT Clinical Settings

ENT nurses can specialise across five distinct environments — each requiring a different skill set, competency framework and career trajectory.

Post-Tonsillectomy Care

Most common admission. Close monitoring for primary haemorrhage (within 24 hours) and secondary haemorrhage (5–10 days post-op). Airway vigilance is paramount. Maintain patent IV access and cross-match blood on admission. Pain management with paracetamol and opioids; NSAIDs generally avoided in the immediate post-operative period for tonsillectomy.

Post-Mastoidectomy Care

Patients return with mastoid dressing/bandage in situ. Monitor for facial nerve function (ask to raise eyebrows, close eyes, show teeth). Observe wound site for haematoma. Assess for dizziness and nystagmus — labyrinthine disturbance is common post-mastoidectomy and requires vestibular monitoring. No nose-blowing instruction is critical.

Tracheostomy Patients

ENT wards frequently care for patients with temporary or permanent tracheostomies post-laryngectomy or airway obstruction. All nursing staff must be competent in tracheostomy inner cannula management, suction technique, emergency tube change, and humidification. Mandatory tracheostomy competency sign-off required in most GCC tertiary hospitals.

Epistaxis Admissions

Nasal packing (anterior and posterior), nasal balloon catheter (e.g., Rapid Rhino, Brighton Balloon), and Foley catheter balloon for posterior bleeds. Regular neurovascular observations, airway assessment, and blood pressure management. Posterior packs require high-dependency monitoring and may need ENT surgeon attendance at short notice.

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Typical ENT ward nurse:patient ratio in GCC: 1:4–1:6 in government hospitals; 1:3–1:5 in private. Post-tonsillectomy children require closer observation ratios — many GCC hospitals place paediatric ENT patients in a combined ENT/paediatric ward for enhanced monitoring.
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Post-tonsillectomy haemorrhage red flags: repeated swallowing, tachycardia, anxiety, bright red vomit, or obvious bleeding in throat. Any suspected bleed — call ENT registrar immediately. Never leave child unattended if haemorrhage is suspected.
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Microlaryngoscopy (MLB)
Scrub for suspension laryngoscopy with operating microscope. Laser safety protocols (CO2 laser common). Instruments: laryngoscope sets, micro forceps, Jako laryngoscopes. Patient positioning: neck extended, shoulder roll. Laser safe ETT mandatory (Laser-Flex or equivalent). Fire risk protocol must be rehearsed.
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Myringotomy & Grommets
Usually short day-case procedure, most often in children under GA. Scrub with operating microscope or Karl Storz endoscope. Grommet insertion sets, myringotomy knife, suction. Post-operative water precautions education is a key nursing responsibility before discharge. Bilateral procedures common.
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Septoplasty & FESS
Functional endoscopic sinus surgery (FESS) and septoplasty are high-volume procedures. Scrub with Storz or Stryker 4mm 0° and 30° endoscopes, powered shaver (microdebrider), Blakesley forceps. Nasal splints and packing inserted at close. Post-op epistaxis monitoring and nasal saline irrigation teaching.
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Parotidectomy
Facial nerve monitoring is critical — continuous EMG facial nerve monitor throughout case. Scrub for major parotid dissection using nerve stimulator probes, bipolar diathermy, and fine scissors. Post-operative facial nerve weakness assessment is a primary nursing responsibility. Drain management post-op.
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Thyroidectomy
High-volume in GCC due to iodine-related thyroid pathology and nodule surveillance. Intraoperative nerve monitoring (IONM) for recurrent laryngeal nerve. Post-op: hypocalcaemia monitoring (Chvostek's sign, Trousseau's sign), hoarseness assessment, haematoma vigilance. Drain care and wound assessment.
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Major Neck Dissection & Free Flap
Radical or modified radical neck dissection for head and neck cancers. Radial forearm free flap, ALT free flap, or fibula free flap used for reconstruction. Theatre scrub time can exceed 8 hours. Post-op free flap monitoring — hourly Doppler checks — begins in recovery and continues on ward.
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Laser safety in ENT theatre: ENT is one of the highest-risk specialties for operating theatre fires. Mandatory laser safety officer designation, laser-safe endotracheal tubes, FiO2 kept below 30% during airway laser use, wet swabs around the tube cuff, eye protection for all staff and patient. Zero-tolerance non-compliance in GCC tertiary hospitals.

Clinic Nursing & Triage

ENT OPD nurses triage patients presenting with ear pain, hearing loss, nosebleeds, sore throat, neck lumps, voice changes, and facial swelling. Vital signs, allergy documentation, and pre-clinic assessment. Documentation in electronic systems (Cerner, Meditech, Oracle Health common in GCC).

Nasal Endoscopy Assistance

Assist ENT surgeon with flexible nasendoscopy in clinic. Topical anaesthetic application (co-phenylcaine spray — lignocaine/phenylephrine). Scope handling and light source setup. Laryngoscopy assistance for assessment of vocal cord pathology. Documentation of findings. Scope decontamination (high-level disinfection with Cidex/Tristel).

Audiometry & Hearing Tests

Pure tone audiometry (PTA) support, tympanometry, and acoustic reflexes. Some ENT OPD nurses are trained to perform basic audiometry independently. Preparation of patients for electrophysiology tests (ABR/BERA). Accurate documentation for MRC or disability assessment purposes — critical in GCC for medicolegal and insurance claims.

Ear Syringing & Microsuction

Removal of impacted cerumen by electronic syringing or ENT microsuction under microscope. Contraindications: perforated tympanic membrane, previous ear surgery, active infection. Warm water syringing technique, olive oil pre-softening advice. Document pre- and post-procedure hearing assessment. Microsuction is preferred in post-surgical ears.

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OPD nursing skills in high demand in GCC private clinics: ENT OPD nurses who can perform independent nasal endoscopy assistance, basic audiometry, and ear microsuction command a significant salary premium in Dubai and Abu Dhabi private sector. These skills are increasingly listed as essential requirements in GCC ENT job postings.

Pre-Implant Assessment Nursing

Patients require comprehensive pre-surgical assessment: audiological testing (ABR, ASSR, speech perception tests), CT/MRI review for cochlear anatomy, immunisation history (meningococcal, pneumococcal vaccines mandatory pre-implant), and psychological readiness assessment. Nursing coordinates the multi-disciplinary team pathway.

Surgical & Post-Operative Care

Cochlear implant surgery is typically 2–3 hours under GA. Post-operative care: wound monitoring behind ear, facial nerve assessment, vertigo management, dizziness (temporary, expected). Device wound dressing, electrode integrity concerns reported to audiologist. Discharge planning includes protecting device from moisture and physical trauma.

Device Programming (Mapping) Sessions

Cochlear implant nurses assist audiologists during mapping sessions — initial activation typically 4 weeks post-surgery. Nursing role: patient support, paediatric behaviour management during mapping, documentation, appointment scheduling, parent/carer education. Nurse-led mapping sessions exist in some advanced programmes (Qatar, UAE).

Family Counselling & Rehabilitation

Particularly important for paediatric implants. Families need guidance on device maintenance, processor battery changes, processor care, school liaison, speech therapy referral, and realistic expectations for auditory development. In GCC, many families are from Arabic, South Asian or South-East Asian backgrounds — interpreter services are critical for equitable care.

Cultural Context: Cochlear Implants in the GCC

Government funding for cochlear implants in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and UAE reflects the high cultural and religious value placed on communication and Quranic learning. Families may seek religious opinion (fatwa) on implant acceptability — ENT nurses should be aware that Islamic scholars broadly support cochlear implants as restoring natural human function. Early implantation (under 2 years) is strongly advocated by GCC cochlear implant centres for optimal language development.

Post-Total Laryngectomy Care

Total laryngectomy creates a permanent end-tracheostome (laryngectomy stoma) — the patient breathes entirely through this stoma and can never have an endotracheal airway via the mouth. Stoma care includes daily cleaning, stoma filter/HME (heat moisture exchanger) application, and bibs. Emergency airway management differs completely from standard tracheostomy — all staff must be aware.

Neck Dissection Care

Monitoring post-neck dissection surgical drains (Redivac/Jackson-Pratt), wound inspection, neurovascular assessment of the face and neck. Risk of chyle leak (milky drain fluid if thoracic duct injured) — report immediately. Shoulder dysfunction post-spinal accessory nerve sacrifice: physiotherapy referral. Haematoma: surgical emergency.

Free Flap Monitoring

Hourly free flap assessment: colour (pale → arterial compromise; blue/purple → venous congestion), turgor (soft vs tense), temperature (cool flap = vascular compromise), capillary refill, and Doppler signal. If Doppler signal absent or flap changes colour — immediate surgical team notification. Window of intervention: typically 6 hours. Brown marker to mark Doppler site at handover.

Radiotherapy Sequelae Nursing

Most head and neck cancer patients receive post-operative radiotherapy. Nursing management: mucositis care (oral hygiene, mouthwash regimens, pain management), xerostomia (dry mouth, saliva substitutes, Biotene), dermatitis protocols (aqueous cream, barrier creams, avoiding sun), dysphagia monitoring, nutritional support coordination, dental liaison (pre-RT dental clearance mandatory).

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Laryngectomy emergency airway alert: A total laryngectomy patient is a "neck breather." In emergency situations, BVM ventilation must be applied to the neck stoma — NEVER the mouth. All staff on wards caring for laryngectomised patients must have this training. Laryngectomy alert wristbands and bedhead notices are mandatory in GCC hospitals.
ENT Clinical Skills

Master these core ENT competencies to progress into specialist, senior, or CNS roles across the GCC. Each accordion covers the clinical detail you need.

Post-Tonsillectomy Care +

Primary haemorrhage occurs within 24 hours of surgery. Maintain IV access, keep patient NBM until surgeon review, cross-match blood. Secondary haemorrhage (days 5–10) is often caused by local infection and clot dissolution — typically the more dangerous and unpredictable bleed.

  • Bleeding observation: Check throat every 15–30 minutes in the first 4 hours. Signs of covert bleeding: repeated swallowing, tachycardia, pallor, anxiety, dark coffee-ground emesis or bright red blood.
  • Airway management: Have airway trolley at bedside. Suction, Yankauer, oxygen. Know your escalation pathway — paediatric ENT bleed can deteriorate rapidly.
  • Pain control: Regular paracetamol (IV/oral per body weight in children) is first-line. Codeine is increasingly avoided in children post-tonsillectomy due to CYP2D6 ultra-metaboliser risk (fatal cases reported). NSAIDs generally avoided in the immediate post-operative period due to platelet effects — follow local protocol.
  • Nausea and vomiting: PONV is very common post-tonsillectomy (swallowed blood, opioid effect). Ondansetron first-line antiemetic. Dehydration from poor oral intake in children requires active management — encourage cold fluids, ice pops. IV fluids if oral intake insufficient.
  • Discharge criteria: Tolerating oral fluids, adequate analgesia with oral medication, no bleeding, apyrexial, child accompanied by competent carer with written discharge instructions including when to return to ED.
Tracheostomy Nursing +

Tracheostomy nursing is one of the highest-risk clinical skills on an ENT ward. GCC hospitals expect all ENT ward nurses to hold a tracheostomy competency certificate.

  • Tube types: Cuffed tracheostomy tubes (protect airway from aspiration — used in ventilated/post-surgical patients), uncuffed tubes (long-term airway/laryngectomy patients), fenestrated tubes (allow voicing via upper airway). Know your tube at every patient handover.
  • Inner cannula care: Double-lumen tubes have a removable inner cannula — clean every 4–8 hours or as secretion load dictates. Do not leave tube without inner cannula except briefly during cleaning. Disposable or reusable cannula per local policy.
  • Humidification: Bypassing the nose removes natural humidification. Swedish nose (HME filter), saline nebulisers, or heated humidified circuits prevent secretion drying and tube blockage. Blocked tracheostomy tube is a life-threatening emergency — first action: remove inner cannula.
  • Suction technique: Aseptic technique. Measure catheter depth (tip of tracheostomy tube + 1–2 cm). Apply suction only on withdrawal — not insertion. Limit suction duration to 10–15 seconds. Pre-oxygenate if SpO2 borderline. Document colour, consistency, amount of secretions.
  • Tube changes: First change typically performed by ENT surgeon at 5–7 days (tract not established). Subsequent changes may be nurse-led per protocol. Emergency tube change kit at bedside always (same size + one size smaller, tracheal dilators, tracheal hook).
  • Decannulation criteria: Resolution of reason for tracheostomy, patient can maintain airway and protect from aspiration, adequate cough, successful capping trial (48–72 hours), ENT surgeon and MDT decision. Post-decannulation monitoring for stridor and desaturation for minimum 24 hours.
Epistaxis Management +

Epistaxis (nosebleed) is one of the most common ENT emergencies. The vast majority (90%) of bleeds are anterior from Little's area (Kiesselbach's plexus).

  • Initial management: Sit patient forward (not back — avoids swallowing blood and aspiration). Pinch soft part of nose firmly for 10–15 minutes continuous pressure. Apply ice pack to bridge. Do not release early. Time the compression — it is almost always released too soon.
  • Silver nitrate cautery preparation: Cotton-tipped applicator with silver nitrate stick or silver nitrate-impregnated cotton. Apply topical LA (co-phenylcaine spray) first. Nurse assists with light, suction, and patient cooperation. Cauterise only one side per session to prevent septal perforation.
  • Anterior nasal packing: Merocel nasal tampon (expand with saline on insertion) or Rapid Rhino balloon catheter. Lubricate with KY jelly or BIPP. Pack directed horizontally along the floor of the nose — not upward. Bilateral packing may be required. Antibiotics prescribed with packs in situ per local protocol (BIPP packs are self-antibiotic). Remove at 24–48 hours.
  • Posterior nasal packing / Brighton balloon / Foley catheter: For posterior bleeds not controlled by anterior packing. Foley catheter (10–14 Fr) inserted via nostril, inflated in post-nasal space with 7–10 mL saline, then pulled forward and secured with umbilical clamp padded with gauze. Requires high dependency monitoring (risk of airway compromise, vasovagal, hypoxia).
  • Blood pressure management: Hypertension commonly accompanies epistaxis (cause and effect). IV antihypertensives may be required for persistent systolic >180 mmHg. Liaise with medical team — many GCC epistaxis patients are elderly, anticoagulated, or have uncontrolled hypertension.
  • Anticoagulated patients: Document and report warfarin, NOAC, aspirin or clopidogrel use. INR if on warfarin. Reversal may be required for life-threatening bleeds — requires senior clinician decision.
Mastoid & Ear Wound Care +

Post-mastoidectomy patients present with a mastoid dressing (Jelonet/paraffin gauze packing of the mastoid cavity, covered by a wool and crepe bandage). Care must be meticulous to prevent infection and to assess facial nerve function.

  • Mastoid cavity packing: First dressing change typically at 1 week by ENT surgeon in clinic. Cavity gradually reduces over months (epithelialisation). Nursing teaches patient to recognise signs of infection (offensive discharge, increasing otalgia, facial swelling) and when to seek help.
  • Facial nerve monitoring: Post-mastoidectomy, assess House-Brackmann grade at every observation round. Ask patient to: raise eyebrows, close eyes tightly, show teeth, puff cheeks. Any new weakness requires immediate ENT registrar contact — may indicate haematoma compressing the nerve.
  • No nose-blowing instruction: Critical post-ear surgery. Nose-blowing dramatically increases middle ear pressure and risks disruption of ossicular chain reconstruction or tympanoplasty graft. Written and verbal patient education on this point is a core nursing responsibility.
  • Grommet (ventilation tube) insertion: Day-case procedure, usually in children. Post-procedure: instil prescribed antibiotic/steroid ear drops if prescribed. Discharge education: no water in ear (cotton wool with Vaseline for showering; swimming avoided or ear plugs used). Follow-up appointment for audiometry and grommet check at 3–6 months.
  • Myringoplasty/tympanoplasty care: Ear packing removed at 2–3 weeks. Water strict precaution. Avoid flights for 4–6 weeks (pressurisation risks graft dislodgement). Nurse educates on modified Valsalva if ears need clearing.
Free Flap Monitoring +

Free flap reconstruction is used after major head and neck cancer resection. The flap is a living tissue transfer with its own arterial and venous blood supply anastomosed to neck vessels. Flap failure is catastrophic — early detection by nursing observation is life-saving for the reconstruction and may save the patient's airway.

  • Hourly checks (first 48–72 hours): Colour, turgor (tissue tension), temperature, capillary refill, and Doppler signal. Use unidirectional Doppler probe to auscultate over the marked vascular pedicle. Mark the Doppler site with a permanent marker and document at each handover.
  • Arterial compromise signs: Flap becomes pale/white, cool, non-turgid, slow capillary refill (>3 seconds), weak or absent Doppler signal. This requires immediate surgical team notification — the anastomosis may be thrombosing and surgical re-exploration is time-critical (ideally within 6 hours).
  • Venous congestion signs: Flap becomes dark blue/purple, tense, warm, brisk capillary refill. Venous outflow is obstructed. Also requires urgent surgical review — often more reversible than arterial compromise if caught early.
  • Environmental management: Keep patient normothermic (avoid hypothermia, which causes vasoconstriction). Head of bed elevated 30–45 degrees to reduce neck oedema. Avoid constrictive dressings or tracheostomy ties pressing on the neck pedicle. No neck extension — keep head in neutral or slight flexion.
  • Monitoring period: Intensive 1:1 or 1:2 nursing during first 24–48 hours is standard in GCC tertiary hospitals. Frequency of checks reduces to 2-hourly at 72 hours, then 4-hourly if stable. High dependency or HDU care is typical in the first 24 hours post major head and neck reconstructive surgery.
Total Laryngectomy & Stoma Care +

Total laryngectomy creates a permanent tracheostome — the trachea is disconnected from the pharynx and brought to the neck surface. The patient breathes, coughs, and all airway management occurs via this stoma exclusively. This fundamentally changes emergency care protocols.

  • Stoma care: Daily stoma cleaning with normal saline and gauze. Inspect for crusting, irritation, skin breakdown around the stoma. Stoma dilators may be required if stoma begins to narrow. Laryngectomy bibs or HME (heat moisture exchanger) filters worn over the stoma to warm, humidify and filter inhaled air.
  • Tracheo-oesophageal voice prosthesis (TEP/Provox): Surgically created fistula between trachea and oesophagus, fitted with a one-way silicone valve (Provox, Blom-Singer). Patient occludes stoma with thumb/valve, diverts air into oesophagus for speech. TEP voice is highest quality voice restoration option. Nurse must know how to manage a leaking or dislodged prosthesis — can cause aspiration pneumonia.
  • Electronic voice aids: Electrolarynx (vibrating device held to neck skin) produces robotic but intelligible voice. Used when TEP not possible or as interim voice. Nurse demonstrates use and supports practice.
  • Emergency airway protocol: Cardiac arrest and emergency airway management via the stoma ONLY. First responders must be trained — apply BVM to the stoma, not to mouth/nose. Suction via stoma with appropriately sized suction catheter. Do not occlude the stoma during CPR.
  • Nutritional support: Post-total laryngectomy patients are NBM for 7–10 days (pharyngeal suture line healing). NG tube or PEG for enteral nutrition. Speech and language therapist-led swallow assessment before oral feeding commenced. Progression from puree to normal diet may take weeks and is guided by swallow endoscopy (FEES).
  • Psychological support: Loss of natural voice is a profound change, with particular cultural significance in Muslim populations (inability to recite Quran aloud in the natural voice). Psychological support, chaplaincy, and peer support from established laryngectomee support groups (available in Saudi, UAE) are essential components of holistic care.
ENT Drugs Reference

Common medications used across ENT settings in the GCC — with GCC brand names, doses, and nursing considerations.

Drug Indication in ENT GCC Brand Name Typical Dose Nursing Notes
Co-amoxiclav (Amoxicillin-Clavulanate) Post-tonsillectomy infection, sinusitis, otitis media, nasal packing prophylaxis Augmentin (GSK), Clavumox 625 mg PO TDS; paeds 25 mg/kg/day divided doses Check penicillin allergy before administration. Give with food to reduce GI upset. Most widely used ENT antibiotic across GCC hospitals.
Metronidazole Anaerobic infection post-tonsillectomy, peritonsillar abscess, dental-related ENT infections Flagyl (Sanofi), Metrozine 400–500 mg PO/IV TDS; 7–10 day course Warn patient about alcohol avoidance (disulfiram-like reaction). IV infusion over 20 minutes. Metallic taste common — reassure patient.
Dexamethasone Peri-operative airway oedema, croup, post-endoscopy laryngeal oedema, post-tonsillectomy PONV prophylaxis Decadron, Dexamethasone Injection (various) 0.1–0.4 mg/kg IV (max 8–12 mg adults); peri-op single dose Monitor blood glucose (especially in diabetics — can cause transient hyperglycaemia). Document as steroid administration. Single peri-operative dose does not require steroid card.
Ondansetron Post-operative nausea and vomiting (PONV) — very high incidence in ENT surgery (tonsillectomy, ear surgery) Zofran (GSK), Ondansetron Fresenius 4–8 mg IV/PO; paeds 0.1 mg/kg (max 4 mg) per dose Administer IV slowly over 2–5 minutes. QTc prolongation risk — check ECG in patients with cardiac history. Effective for both chemotherapy and post-operative nausea.
Paracetamol (Acetaminophen) Post-tonsillectomy pain (preferred over NSAIDs), post-ENT surgery analgesia, fever management Panadol (GSK), Paramol, Perfalgan IV 1g PO/IV QID (adults); 15 mg/kg per dose QID (paeds) Weight-based dosing critical in paediatrics. IV Paracetamol (Perfalgan) infused over 15 minutes. Never exceed maximum daily dose. Hepatotoxicity risk in malnourished patients.
Codeine Phosphate Moderate ENT pain (adults); historically used post-tonsillectomy but now restricted in children Codeine Linctus, Codeine Phosphate tablets 15–60 mg PO every 4–6 hrs adults only CONTRAINDICATED post-tonsillectomy/adenoidectomy in children under 18 (FDA black box warning — deaths from ultra-metaboliser phenotype). Use only in adults. Monitor for excessive sedation and respiratory depression.
Oxymetazoline Nasal decongestion pre-endoscopy, epistaxis vasoconstriction, pre-FESS application Afrin Nasal Spray, Drixine (Bayer) 2–3 sprays each nostril; max 3 days continuous use Warn patients against prolonged use — rhinitis medicamentosa (rebound congestion) occurs after more than 3 days. Not recommended in young children. Used in theatre to decongest nasal cavity before FESS.
Saline Nasal Spray / Irrigation Post-FESS nasal care, allergic rhinitis, chronic sinusitis maintenance, grommet post-op hygiene Sterimar, Neilmed, ISOMAR, Simply Saline Isotonic (0.9%) or hypertonic (2.3%); 2–3 times daily ongoing Teach correct head positioning for Neti pot/squeeze bottle irrigation (bend forward, tilt head). Hypertonic saline more effective for thick secretions. Widely available OTC in all GCC countries. Core post-FESS nursing education.
Betahistine Ménière's disease, vertigo, tinnitus management Serc (Solvay/Abbott), Betavert 8–16 mg PO TDS with food Long-term medication for Ménière's — compliance counselling important. Advise taking with food to reduce nausea. Does not cause sedation (important for driving). Contraindicated in phaeochromocytoma.
Prochlorperazine (Stemetil) Acute vertigo, Ménière's attack, BPPV acute phase, post-operative dizziness Stemetil (Sanofi), Prochlorperazine injection 12.5 mg IM acute; 5–10 mg PO TDS ongoing Can cause extrapyramidal side effects (oculogyric crisis, acute dystonia) especially in young women. Have procyclidine available. Not recommended long-term for vestibular rehabilitation — can impair central compensation.
Proton Pump Inhibitors (PPIs) Laryngopharyngeal reflux (LPR) — major ENT condition causing chronic throat clearing, hoarseness, globus, posterior laryngitis Nexium (Omeprazole/Esomeprazole), Losec, Pantoloc Omeprazole 20–40 mg OD before breakfast; 8–12 week course for LPR LPR often requires twice-daily PPI dosing (morning and evening). Patient education: avoid trigger foods (spicy, fatty, caffeine, carbonated drinks), elevate bed head, avoid eating within 3 hours of sleep. Document dietary advice given.
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GCC prescribing note: In Saudi Arabia and Qatar, codeine-containing products require specific controlled drug documentation. Opioid prescribing in paediatric ENT is significantly more regulated than in many Western countries. Always verify controlled drug documentation requirements for your specific GCC country and institution before dispensing.
Head & Neck Oncology Nursing

Specialist nursing care for patients undergoing surgery, radiotherapy and rehabilitation for head and neck cancers — with particular attention to the unique cultural and psychological needs of patients in the GCC.

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Communication After Laryngectomy

Three main communication options, each requiring nursing support:

  • Writing board / tablet: Immediate post-operative communication. Laminated boards with common phrases (Arabic and English) should be available at the bedside in all GCC hospitals.
  • Electrolarynx: Vibrating device against the neck. Produces robotic voice but is immediately available. Nurse teaches placement, volume control, and articulation technique.
  • Tracheo-oesophageal voice (TEP/Provox): Best voice quality — surgical valve placed in tracheo-oesophageal fistula. Requires patient to occlude stoma and practise speech with SLT. Takes weeks to months to develop proficiency.
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Nutritional Support

Malnutrition is prevalent in head and neck cancer patients due to dysphagia, pain, and treatment effects.

  • NG tube: Standard for short-term enteral nutrition post-operatively (up to 4–6 weeks). Nurse confirms placement before each feed (pH testing/X-ray). Fine-bore tubes preferred for comfort. Risk of tube dislodgement during neck movements.
  • PEG (Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy): Preferred for long-term nutritional support (>4–6 weeks) or where NG tube poorly tolerated. PEG site care: daily cleaning, rotation to prevent skin adhesion, checking balloon volume (Foley-type PEGs).
  • Parenteral nutrition: Reserved for patients with inaccessible or non-functioning GI tract. CVAD care, TPN line management, strict glucose monitoring. Rarely required in head and neck cancer unless significant GI complications.
Radiotherapy to Head & Neck: Nursing Care

Mucositis Care

Radiation mucositis (Grade 2–4) is the most painful side effect of head and neck radiotherapy. Oral hygiene every 4 hours minimum: sodium bicarbonate/saline mouthwash, soft toothbrush, avoid commercial mouthwash containing alcohol. Topical analgesics (Gelclair, mucoadhesive agents). Systemic analgesia ladder — some patients require opioids. Nutritional support escalation if unable to swallow.

Xerostomia (Dry Mouth)

Salivary gland damage from radiotherapy causes profound chronic dry mouth. Saliva substitutes (Biotene spray, Oralieve gel), sugar-free gum to stimulate remaining salivary function, frequent small sips of water. Pilocarpine eye drops (oral use) may be prescribed by oncologist. Dental hygiene education critical — xerostomia dramatically increases caries risk.

Skin Care Protocol

Radiation dermatitis in neck and face treated with aqueous cream or prescribed barrier cream (Miaderm, Cavilon). Avoid sun exposure, tight clothing, shaving over irradiated area. No ice packs or heating pads. Moist desquamation (wet skin breakdown) requires wound care nurse assessment. Document weekly skin grading (RTOG scale).

Cultural Sensitivity: Voice Loss in GCC Patients

For Muslim patients, the loss of natural voice carries profound spiritual significance beyond the obvious communication disability. The ability to perform Adhan (call to prayer), recite the Quran aloud, pray in the mosque, and communicate one's faith verbally is deeply embedded in Islamic practice and GCC cultural identity. Nurses caring for post-laryngectomy patients in the GCC should:

  • Acknowledge this dimension of loss early and openly — do not avoid the subject
  • Connect patients with hospital chaplaincy (religious affairs departments exist in most GCC tertiary hospitals)
  • Reassure patients that silent prayer and mental recitation of Quran are religiously valid — seek guidance from Islamic scholars if needed
  • Many laryngectomised patients learn to recite Quran through TEP voice or electrolarynx — peer support from other laryngectomees who have achieved this is enormously powerful
  • Involve family, especially male family members who may be the patient's primary decision-makers in many GCC families, in all communication rehabilitation planning
  • Provide all written materials and communication aids in Arabic as well as English — never assume English literacy
Paediatric ENT in the GCC

GCC countries have one of the highest paediatric ENT surgical volumes in the world — underpinned by large family sizes, high rates of adenotonsillar disease, and well-funded childhood hearing programmes.

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Post-Tonsillectomy Parent Education

Discharge education must be culturally adapted for the GCC context:

  • Provide written instructions in Arabic and English — many GCC families are non-English speaking
  • Diet: Cold fluids, ice cream, yoghurt, ice pops for first week. Avoid hard, sharp foods (crisps, toast) until white slough resolves (10–14 days)
  • Secondary bleed risk: days 5–10. If any bleeding: go to nearest Emergency Department immediately — do not wait at home
  • Pain: Regular paracetamol syrup as prescribed. Continue even if child appears comfortable — prevents pain escalation and poor oral intake
  • School: Avoid for 10–14 days. No contact sports for 2 weeks. Avoid crowded, dusty environments during Hajj/Umrah season if recently operated
  • Return indicators: Any blood from mouth or nose, fever above 38.5°C, refusing all fluids for more than 4 hours, increasing rather than decreasing pain
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Adenoid Hypertrophy

Enlarged adenoids are extremely common in GCC children due to high rates of recurrent upper respiratory infection.

  • Signs: Persistent mouth breathing, nasal tone to speech, snoring, recurrent otitis media with effusion (glue ear), hyponasal speech, adenoid facies (open mouth, elongated face)
  • Symptoms: Disrupted sleep, behavioural problems, reduced concentration at school, recurrent ear infections, daytime fatigue
  • Surgical option: Adenoidectomy (often combined with tonsillectomy and/or grommet insertion). Nurse prepares parents for overnight stay and post-adenoidectomy care. Nasal speech may persist for a few weeks post-operatively — reassure parents this is normal (temporary velopharyngeal insufficiency)
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Grommets (Ventilation Tubes)

Most commonly inserted for otitis media with effusion (glue ear) — very prevalent in GCC children.

  • Post-insertion care: Ear drops as prescribed (antibiotic/steroid — e.g., Ciloxan, Sofradex) for 5–7 days if discharge present
  • Water precautions: Avoid submersion in water — no swimming unless fitted with custom ear plugs. Showering generally safe with cotton wool and Vaseline ear plug. No diving or water sports
  • Follow-up: Audiometry and otoscopy at 6–8 weeks post-insertion. Grommets extrude naturally over 9–18 months. Parents instructed to report discharge from ear, sudden hearing change, or ear pain
  • Grommet blockage: Wax or discharge can block tube — topical drops usually sufficient. Do NOT attempt to syringe an ear with a grommet in situ
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Sleep Apnoea in GCC Children

Obese children in the GCC are at particularly high risk of obstructive sleep apnoea — a growing epidemic with serious cardiovascular and neurodevelopmental consequences.

  • Screen every overweight child presenting with snoring for sleep apnoea symptoms: witnessed apnoeas, excessive daytime sleepiness, behavioural changes, bedwetting (nocturnal hypoxia)
  • Polysomnography (sleep study) remains the gold standard for diagnosis — available in major GCC paediatric ENT centres
  • Adenotonsillectomy is first-line surgical treatment. Obesity management remains essential even after surgery — without weight management, OSA often recurs
  • Post-adenotonsillectomy observation in OSA children: SpO2 monitoring overnight mandatory, first-night in hospital, HDU if severe OSA (AHI >20) or young (<3 years)

Paediatric Cochlear Implant: Family Support Framework

Post-Implant Activation Care

Initial device activation (switch-on) at 4 weeks post-surgery. Child's response to sound may be surprising to families — explain that the child hears for the first time and all sounds are unfamiliar. Monitor for distress, unusual behaviour, or balance disturbance in first days after activation. Provide family helpline contact.

Family Counselling

Set realistic expectations: cochlear implant is not a cure for deafness — it provides access to sound, but speech development requires intensive auditory verbal therapy (AVT). Bilingual families (Arabic + another language) can raise implanted children bilingually. Connect families with established CI parent support networks in Saudi Arabia, UAE and Qatar.

Device Maintenance Education

Teach parents: daily processor check (battery/charging), keeping processor dry (Dry & Store kit), avoid MRI unless specifically advised (some CI devices are MRI-conditional, not safe), carry CI medical ID card. School integration support letter from ENT nursing team is helpful for Saudi, UAE, and Qatari school systems.

ENT Nurse Salary Guide 2025

Monthly salary ranges in local currency. All figures are tax-free. Government packages typically include additional benefits (housing, transport, flights, health insurance).

Role Saudi Arabia (Govt) SAR/mo Saudi Arabia (Private) SAR/mo UAE (AED/mo) Qatar (QAR/mo) Kuwait (KWD/mo)
ENT Ward Nurse (Staff Nurse) 7,000 – 10,000 8,000 – 13,000 9,000 – 15,000 8,500 – 13,500 450 – 700
ENT Ward Senior Nurse / Charge Nurse 11,000 – 15,000 13,000 – 18,000 16,000 – 22,000 14,000 – 19,000 700 – 950
ENT Theatre Scrub Nurse 9,000 – 13,000 11,000 – 16,000 12,000 – 18,000 11,000 – 16,500 550 – 800
ENT Theatre Scrub Nurse (Senior / Team Lead) 14,000 – 18,000 16,000 – 22,000 18,000 – 26,000 16,000 – 22,000 850 – 1,100
ENT OPD / Clinic Nurse 7,500 – 11,000 9,000 – 14,000 10,000 – 16,000 9,500 – 14,000 480 – 720
Cochlear Implant Specialist Nurse 12,000 – 17,000 14,000 – 20,000 16,000 – 24,000 15,000 – 21,000 750 – 1,050
Head & Neck Clinical Nurse Specialist (CNS) 15,000 – 20,000 18,000 – 26,000 22,000 – 32,000 20,000 – 28,000 1,000 – 1,400
ENT Nurse Practitioner / Advanced Practice Nurse 18,000 – 25,000 22,000 – 32,000 26,000 – 38,000 24,000 – 34,000 1,200 – 1,700
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Benefits typically included in govt packages: Housing allowance (or free accommodation), annual return flight home, medical insurance (self and dependants in premium hospitals), annual leave 30 days + public holidays, end of service gratuity (EOSB) accruing 1 month salary per year.
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Theatre scrub premium: ENT theatre scrub nurses with laser safety certification, parotidectomy/facial nerve monitoring experience, or cochlear implant surgical scrub skills command a 15–25% salary premium over general ENT ward nurses in both government and private sectors.
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Highest ENT nursing salaries: Head & Neck CNS and ENT Nurse Practitioners in UAE private sector (Dubai, Abu Dhabi) represent the highest-paid ENT nursing roles in the GCC — often exceeding the equivalent NHS Band 7 and Band 8 salaries by 2–3x on a purchasing power basis.
Entry Requirements

What GCC hospitals and licensing bodies look for in ENT nursing applicants — across ward, theatre, and specialist roles.

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Educational Requirements
  • BSN (Bachelor of Science in Nursing) strongly preferred; Diploma nurses accepted in some government hospitals with experience
  • Post-basic ENT nursing certification is an advantage (UK ENT Nursing courses, Australian ENT nursing programmes, or US AORN perioperative certification for theatre roles)
  • Perioperative Nursing Diploma / Scrub Qualification mandatory for ENT theatre positions in most GCC hospitals
  • Advanced Practice Nurse/NP roles require MSN + relevant advanced practice qualifications
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Experience Requirements
  • ENT ward staff nurse: minimum 2 years post-qualification ENT or surgical ward experience
  • ENT theatre scrub: minimum 2 years dedicated scrub experience (ENT scrub experience preferred; broader surgical scrub considered)
  • Cochlear implant specialist: minimum 3–5 years ENT nursing + relevant audiological nursing training or certification
  • Head & Neck CNS: minimum 5 years head and neck cancer nursing experience; Master's level education increasingly required
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Mandatory Competencies
  • ACLS (Advanced Cardiac Life Support) — mandatory for all clinical roles in GCC tertiary hospitals
  • Tracheostomy care competency sign-off for ENT ward and ICU roles
  • Airway management skills — basic and advanced airway, BVM, supraglottic airways
  • Paediatric First Aid / PALS for nurses working in paediatric ENT settings
  • Scrub qualification (perioperative certificate) for all theatre roles — no exceptions in major GCC hospitals
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Licensing & Dataflow
  • Dataflow primary source verification required for all GCC countries
  • HAAD/DOH exam (Abu Dhabi / Dubai), DHA exam, SCFHS (Saudi), QCHP (Qatar), NHRA (Bahrain), MOH Kuwait
  • Prometric computer-based exam typically required (HAAD, DHA, Saudi Commission)
  • Good Standing Certificate from current / most recent licensing body
  • Police clearance certificate and medical fitness certificate
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Competitive advantage for ENT roles: Nurses with combined ENT ward AND theatre scrub experience are exceptionally rare and highly sought after. Cross-training in tracheostomy management, head & neck oncology nursing, and cochlear implant care further differentiates candidates. Documenting these competencies clearly on your CV with specific case volumes and types strengthens your application significantly.
Top ENT Employers in the GCC

These institutions offer the highest ENT nursing caseloads, best training environments, and strongest career progression for ENT nurses in the region.

King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre (KFSH)
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Home to the largest ENT department in Saudi Arabia and one of the largest in the Middle East. Full-service ENT: cochlear implants, skull base surgery, head and neck oncology, laryngology, rhinology, and paediatric ENT. World-class training environment with international faculty. Competitive KFSH compensation packages.
Cochlear Implants Head & Neck Paediatric ENT
King Abdulaziz University Hospital (KAUH)
Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Major academic ENT centre in the Western Province. Strong ENT residency programme providing ENT nurses with excellent exposure to complex cases. Active head and neck oncology service including major free flap reconstructions. Rhinology and skull base centre with growing FESS volumes.
Academic Centre Rhinology Skull Base
Sheikh Khalifa Medical City (SKMC)
Abu Dhabi, UAE
Operated by Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi (CCAD). World-class ENT department with international standards of nursing practice. Excellent cochlear implant programme, thyroid and parathyroid surgery, and head and neck oncology. Abu Dhabi DOH nursing standards apply — highest regulatory standards in the UAE.
Cleveland Clinic Cochlear Implants Thyroid
Rashid Hospital — Dubai Health Authority
Dubai, UAE
Dubai's principal trauma and ENT surgical centre. High-volume ENT emergency caseload (epistaxis, airway emergencies, facial trauma) alongside elective ENT. Major ENT ward with dedicated tracheostomy nursing team. DHA licensing required. Good progression pathway in Dubai government sector.
Trauma ENT Emergency Tracheostomy
Hamad General Hospital — HMC
Doha, Qatar
Qatar's main tertiary ENT centre under Hamad Medical Corporation. Government-funded cochlear implant programme is one of the best in the region. Head and neck oncology, paediatric ENT at Al Wakra Hospital, and busy rhinology and sleep apnoea service. QCHP licensing required. Excellent tax-free Qatar package.
HMC Cochlear Implants Head & Neck
King Hamad University Hospital (KHUH)
Muharraq, Bahrain
Bahrain's premier tertiary ENT centre with Bumrungrad International partnership. Growing ENT surgical programme including cochlear implants and head and neck cancer. NHRA nursing registration required. Smaller country but competitive salary, good work-life balance, and strong professional development funding. Gateway to broader Gulf nursing career.
Bahrain International Standards Growth Centre
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Also hiring ENT nurses: Al Ain Hospital (UAE), Mediclinic (multiple GCC locations), Saudi German Hospital Group, Aster DM Healthcare (UAE/Kuwait), NMC Healthcare (UAE), AlMoosa Specialist Hospital (Saudi), Specialized Medical Center Hospital Riyadh, Tawam Hospital Al Ain, and numerous specialist ENT private clinics in Dubai Healthcare City and Riyadh Medical City.
ENT Nursing Career Pathway

A structured progression from staff nurse to advanced practitioner or clinical nurse specialist in ENT — all achievable within 8–12 years of focused GCC ENT nursing experience.

Years 0–2: Staff Nurse — ENT Ward or Theatre
Begin on ENT ward or as circulating nurse in ENT theatre. Complete tracheostomy competency, ACLS certification. Develop clinical skills in post-tonsillectomy care, epistaxis management, and ear dressings. Build comfort with paediatric ENT workload.
Years 2–4: Senior Staff Nurse — ENT Specialist
Progress to scrub qualification (if theatre) or ENT OPD specialist role. Develop nasal endoscopy assistance, audiometry support, and cochlear implant perioperative care. Complete postgraduate ENT nursing course or perioperative specialty certification.
Years 4–7: Charge Nurse / Team Leader
Lead an ENT ward bay, scrub team, or ENT OPD clinic. Develop junior staff mentoring, quality improvement projects, and multidisciplinary team participation. Begin Master's in Nursing if targeting CNS or NP pathway. Laser safety certification for theatre leads.
Years 7+: Head & Neck CNS / ENT Nurse Practitioner
Highest clinical ENT nursing tier. CNS role covers head and neck cancer pathway coordination, complex tracheostomy management, patient and family education, and MDT co-leadership. NP roles include independent clinic consultations, ENT procedures (microsuction, minor nasal procedures), and prescribing in countries permitting nurse prescribing.

Certifications That Add Value

  • AORN CNOR — Certified Nurse Operating Room (USA, widely recognised in GCC)
  • ENB 176 / Level 6 Perioperative Care (UK qualification, respected in GCC)
  • Tracheostomy Care Competency (NTSP or hospital-specific)
  • Laser Safety Officer Certification (LSO) — for theatre leads
  • Head & Neck Cancer Nursing Certificate (NCEI or equivalent)
  • Cochlear Implant Rehabilitation Certificate (Cochlear/MED-EL manufacturer training)
  • ACLS + PALS

Professional Bodies & Resources

  • ENT UK (British ENT nursing section) — extensive clinical resources
  • SOHN (Society of Otorhinolaryngology and Head-Neck Nurses, USA)
  • AORN (Association of periOperative Registered Nurses)
  • Saudi ENT Society — education and conference access
  • Emirates ENT Society — GCC-based network
  • IFHNS (International Federation of Head and Neck Oncologic Societies)
Quick Clinical Reference

Key clinical decision points for ENT nurses — critical for patient safety on ENT wards and in theatre.

🚨 Post-Tonsillectomy Bleed — Call Criteria
  • Any visible blood in mouth or nose
  • Repeated swallowing in a drowsy child
  • HR >120 bpm (paeds) or >100 bpm (adult)
  • Fresh haematemesis (bright red)
  • Sudden drop in SpO2 or respiratory distress
  • Parental concern — always take seriously
🚨 Free Flap Failure — Escalate Immediately If:
  • Flap colour: white/pale (arterial) or blue/purple (venous)
  • Doppler signal absent or changed character
  • Flap becomes cool to touch (more than 2°C drop)
  • Turgor: flaccid (arterial) or tense/rigid (venous)
  • Capillary refill absent or instant (flash refill = venous)
  • Any change from previously recorded baseline
⚠️ Tracheostomy Emergency — First Actions
  • Blocked tube: remove inner cannula first
  • Still blocked: deflate cuff, attempt suction
  • Still blocked: prepare emergency tube change
  • Accidental decannulation: maintain airway, call 2222 (or local code)
  • Laryngectomy patient: airway is STOMA ONLY — never mouth/nose BVM
  • Humidification failure is commonest preventable emergency
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ENT Post-Op Handover SBAR Essentials: Situation — procedure, surgeon, anaesthetic time. Background — indication, comorbidities, allergies. Assessment — vitals, airway status, drains, bleeding, facial nerve status, flap status (if applicable). Recommendation — frequency of observations, specific monitoring (e.g., facial nerve q1h, Doppler q1h), PRN medications, escalation threshold and on-call contact.

GCC ENT Nursing Culture Notes

  • Family presence is expected during post-operative recovery — many GCC families will stay bedside 24/7. Work with families, not against them
  • Gender-concordant care: male family members often prefer male nurses for their female relatives. Accommodate when safe and practicable
  • Privacy around voice rehabilitation: some patients are embarrassed to practise electrolarynx or TEP speech in hospital — private therapy space matters
  • Prayer times: ENT ward nursing schedules should, where possible, allow Muslim staff and patients to observe salah — coordinate care around prayer times respectfully