Ungowning instructions

July 22, 2014

SP awaiting a heart & lung exam.
[Madeleine dans le désert via wikimedia]


Actors are not generally modest. But most patients are. "There will be some patients who would sacrifice their health and lives in order to preserve their physical modesty."

So I care quite a lot about standardizing ungowning instructions because they have a huge effect on patient trust and confidence. Checklists often contain a question about appropriate draping, but it is rarely clear how SPs should score this except on a vague sense of personal taste. But again, that makes specific feedback difficult. So for me, good ungowning instructions have four parts:
First: confidence My discomfort rises in direct proportion to student discomfort. Being able to address vulnerable exams with confidence makes me feel less anxious. 
Second: expectations management Student doctors often assume I know that certain exams will require ungowning. As a patient, why would I know a heart or lung exam requires ungowning? When a student doctor tells me s/he is going to check my heart, as a patient I imagine a stethoscope will be used over my gown on what I think of as my heart: the left side of my chest above my breast tissue. So without further understanding, asking me to ungown at that point seems strange and awkward because I have no idea what's coming next. Best practice: "I'll be checking your heart and lungs in several places. To do that, I'll need to use the stethoscope on your skin." 
Third: simple, clear instructions Don't make me guess how far you want me to bring the gown down. When a student doctor tells me to lower the gown "a little," it makes me anxious: as a patient, I would be very embarrassed if I took my gown down too far and the doctor corrected me -- or if I didn't bring it down far enough and I had to keep guessing. Ambiguity is excruciating in vulnerable situations. Best practice for first year students: "Would you please untie your gown and lower it to your waist?" Adding the instruction to untie makes me have to think less about the order of steps, which makes the whole process more fluid and gives me more confidence in the student doctor. Don't forget to tell me when I can put my gown back up! 
Fourth: autonomy & consent Because I am at my most vulnerable, ungowning instructions require even more awareness of autonomy and consent than usual to make me feel safe and respected. Do not begin untying my gown without asking me. If you ask me to lower my gown, don't reach towards me before I complete the action. Allow me to be in control of the ungowning. If you notice I am having trouble untying the gown, offer to help me -- but do not reach for me without my consent.
Advanced studies:
By asking me to untie the gown, it generally becomes loose enough so that the exam can be performed by slipping the stethoscope under the gown, thereby preserving my modesty entirely (assuming the student learner tells me they are going under my gown, at any rate). In other cases, asking me to untie the gown and slipping an arm out is a better compromise than lowering my gown all the way to my waist.

Bonus points:
This all assumes the opening of the gown is in the back. I honestly can't think of a good reason to wear the opening in the front, because it feels so much more exposed and everything can be done by manipulating the gown. But some schools do, so I go along with it. However, if the gown opening is to the back, asking me to turn my opening to the front during the encounter is completely ridiculous. That requires me to get off the table and undress while the student's back is turned, all while eating precious encounter time. Not recommended.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Pretend you're giving feedback to a student. Be calm, kind and constructive. I reserve the right to moderate or remove comments to keep the conversation focused and productive.