What's the Right Thing?

Author
Discussion

TheDrownedApe

Original Poster:

1,032 posts

56 months

Tuesday 21st March 2023
quotequote all
Scenario, been mulling over this for a week now. I'm male BTW.

Had many MRI scans. Had one on the 15th March, head and neck. Know the drill no metal etc so wear my jogging trousers with not metal content etc.

Get to the appt and nurse (female) tells me to strip down to pants and put a gown on. Been here before and explained its not the usual routine as its just neck I usually keep my bottoms on. She dismisses my concerns as routine behaviour; OK no worries.

As I'm waiting to go in the previous patient comes out, a female, fully clothed in a dress and leggings.

I go in, my legs are facing the window where there are 3 staff, all female. Spend 40 mins conscious that I need to be careful with relaxing my legs even though they are slightly elevated on a pillow.

When I walk out there is another female patient waiting to go in, she is fully dressed with leggings on, but in a wheel chair.

Am I wrong to feel ....wronged? What would a female feel/do in this situation. Should I report it, is there anything to report?

Spoken to family and they kinda agreed with me but reticent to speak up.

poo at Paul's

14,147 posts

175 months

Tuesday 21st March 2023
quotequote all
Are you sure the females were in the machine in the same clobber that you saw them in, or could they have been changed from gown etc when you saw them?
I’ve had a few MRIs and there is always a changing room and lockers etc.

Sebring440

2,011 posts

96 months

Tuesday 21st March 2023
quotequote all
TheDrownedApe said:
Scenario, been mulling over this for a week now. I'm male BTW.

Had many MRI scans. Had one on the 15th March, head and neck. Know the drill no metal etc so wear my jogging trousers with not metal content etc.

Get to the appt and nurse (female) tells me to strip down to pants and put a gown on. Been here before and explained its not the usual routine as its just neck I usually keep my bottoms on. She dismisses my concerns as routine behaviour; OK no worries.

As I'm waiting to go in the previous patient comes out, a female, fully clothed in a dress and leggings.

I go in, my legs are facing the window where there are 3 staff, all female. Spend 40 mins conscious that I need to be careful with relaxing my legs even though they are slightly elevated on a pillow.

When I walk out there is another female patient waiting to go in, she is fully dressed with leggings on, but in a wheel chair.

Am I wrong to feel ....wronged? What would a female feel/do in this situation. Should I report it, is there anything to report?

Spoken to family and they kinda agreed with me but reticent to speak up.
Are you serious? Report it?

For God's sake. Get a grip!

scorcher

3,986 posts

234 months

Tuesday 21st March 2023
quotequote all
I had a chest mri and only had to remove my belt from my jeans. They weren’t worried about the metal button or studs.

dundarach

5,037 posts

228 months

Tuesday 21st March 2023
quotequote all
The nurse made you strip to your underpants because they wanted to see your legs?




Ham_and_Jam

2,204 posts

97 months

Tuesday 21st March 2023
quotequote all
Did you tell them about your Prince Albert?

Pica-Pica

13,793 posts

84 months

Tuesday 21st March 2023
quotequote all
Ham_and_Jam said:
Did you tell them about your Prince Albert?
biglaughbiglaughbiglaughbiglaugh

QuickQuack

2,201 posts

101 months

Tuesday 21st March 2023
quotequote all
Next time wear some leggings then.

dudleybloke

19,826 posts

186 months

Tuesday 21st March 2023
quotequote all
It would make a nice change from them telling me to put it away.
Just think of it as free advertising.

RSTurboPaul

10,374 posts

258 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Was the MRI a private appointment or an NHS appointment? Was it at a new (to you) scanning venue?

Perhaps it would be possible to request the 'operating procedures' to clarify the usual/expected arrangements.

TheDrownedApe

Original Poster:

1,032 posts

56 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Changing rooms are separate to the scanning room so I saw their scan clothes

Been in this machine twice before, last time wore trackies. Can't recall dress for the previous appt

NHS



Taita

7,603 posts

203 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Genuinely,have a cup of tea and move on with your life.

Riley Blue

20,955 posts

226 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Maybe the nurse failed to spot that your joggers didn't have metal in them (some joggers have eyelets for the waist tie or a zipped back pocket) and was simply following routine.


Henz

210 posts

102 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
As unflattering as the gowns are, they're more than enough to maintain modesty. I had a chest MRI a couple of weeks back and it was boxers and gown. Can't say I felt at all exposed and didn't think twice about it in all honesty.

22

2,303 posts

137 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
My wife has had lots of scans for broadly the same stuff and been told to wear/remove different clothing on occasion. The nurse may not have known it was a planned scan with you wearing metal-free clothing.

Years ago I had a sleep apnea test and a nurse was properly inappropriate, including some 'inadvertent' touching (through pyjamas) in areas that could have raised temperatures (she was minging and I'm no oil painting). Can imagine that would have been horrendous with roles reversed, but there was certainly no happy ending.

Sixsixtysix

2,700 posts

166 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Sebring440 said:
TheDrownedApe said:
Scenario, been mulling over this for a week now. I'm male BTW.

Had many MRI scans. Had one on the 15th March, head and neck. Know the drill no metal etc so wear my jogging trousers with not metal content etc.

Get to the appt and nurse (female) tells me to strip down to pants and put a gown on. Been here before and explained its not the usual routine as its just neck I usually keep my bottoms on. She dismisses my concerns as routine behaviour; OK no worries.

As I'm waiting to go in the previous patient comes out, a female, fully clothed in a dress and leggings.

I go in, my legs are facing the window where there are 3 staff, all female. Spend 40 mins conscious that I need to be careful with relaxing my legs even though they are slightly elevated on a pillow.

When I walk out there is another female patient waiting to go in, she is fully dressed with leggings on, but in a wheel chair.

Am I wrong to feel ....wronged? What would a female feel/do in this situation. Should I report it, is there anything to report?

Spoken to family and they kinda agreed with me but reticent to speak up.
Are you serious? Report it?

For God's sake. Get a grip!
Would you say the same thing if the patient was female and the nurses all male?

Vantagemech..

5,728 posts

215 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Christ, woe betide you have to have a camera up into your bladder to check your kidneys... I had 3 female nurses and 1 male. It truly is bizarre having someone else handling your bits, then watch your internal workings on a screen next to you.... I wish they had told me to remove my trousers, as they were rather embarrassingly round my knees and when the tube came out some of the 2 litres of water you drink beforehand soaked them.....

E-bmw

9,220 posts

152 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Or a camera up the other end with 3 present!

Really embarrassing when the camera (and the air they pump into you to allow the camera in) all comes out together!

Orang

21 posts

31 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Vantagemech.. said:
Christ, woe betide you have to have a camera up into your bladder to check your kidneys... I had 3 female nurses and 1 male. It truly is bizarre having someone else handling your bits, then watch your internal workings on a screen next to you.... I wish they had told me to remove my trousers, as they were rather embarrassingly round my knees and when the tube came out some of the 2 litres of water you drink beforehand soaked them.....
Now that is interesting. When I had a camera up there to look at my kidneys they gave me a general anesthetic both times (although they also inserted and removed a stent as well a camera and a laser to break up stones).

At the hospital I currently attend they give you a dressing gown to put over the "tie up at the back" garment, but I remember at another hospital around 20 years ago watching other, elderly, patients who were unable to tie up the ribbons, walking down the corridor with no underwear on and the back of the garment flapping open!

If the OP is really concerned he might consider speaking to the PALS (if the hospital has one). This is the Patient Advice & Liaison Service staffed by volunteers and is not part of the hospital staffing. They should be able to speak to the department on the OP's behalf and express concern at their procedures and report back to him.

98elise

26,601 posts

161 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Sixsixtysix said:
Sebring440 said:
TheDrownedApe said:
Scenario, been mulling over this for a week now. I'm male BTW.

Had many MRI scans. Had one on the 15th March, head and neck. Know the drill no metal etc so wear my jogging trousers with not metal content etc.

Get to the appt and nurse (female) tells me to strip down to pants and put a gown on. Been here before and explained its not the usual routine as its just neck I usually keep my bottoms on. She dismisses my concerns as routine behaviour; OK no worries.

As I'm waiting to go in the previous patient comes out, a female, fully clothed in a dress and leggings.

I go in, my legs are facing the window where there are 3 staff, all female. Spend 40 mins conscious that I need to be careful with relaxing my legs even though they are slightly elevated on a pillow.

When I walk out there is another female patient waiting to go in, she is fully dressed with leggings on, but in a wheel chair.

Am I wrong to feel ....wronged? What would a female feel/do in this situation. Should I report it, is there anything to report?

Spoken to family and they kinda agreed with me but reticent to speak up.
Are you serious? Report it?

For God's sake. Get a grip!
Would you say the same thing if the patient was female and the nurses all male?
Wearing pants and a gown? How is that a problem?