Procedures and guidelines can help guide certain practices and professions. While there may be national guidelines, if you are on placement or in a workplace, you can always check if they have established local or institution-specific resources.
Google Advanced Search (and other grey literature) to source other policy and guideline resources
Otherwise, you may find general guideline/service comparisons/evaluation from the databases you are searching for your literature e.g. Medline, CINAHL etc.
Rehabilitation Reference Center (RRC) is clinical reference tool for use by rehabilitation clinicians at the point-of-care. RRC provides therapists and students with the best available evidence for their information needs in the areas of: Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Speech Therapy and more. RRC is designed to deliver current valid and relevant information at the point-of-care so that rehabilitation specialists can build customized treatment regimens for patients, using the best available evidence.
Joanna Briggs Institute Evidence Based Practice allows you to search a wide range of summarized and appraised evidence, to inform your practice. This comprehensive range of resources includes records across publication types: Evidence Based Recommended Practices, Evidence Summaries, Best Practice Information Sheets, Systematic Reviews, Consumer Information Sheets, Systematic Review Protocols, and Technical Reports.
BMJ Best Practice is a point of care tool that combines the latest research evidence, guidelines and expert opinion. Structured around the patient consultation, it covers diagnosis, prognosis, treatment and prevention.