The OR patients are vulnerable

All OR patients are vulnerable.

Think about it. We take their clothes, their electronics, their glasses, their hearing aids, their family members, their dignity (at times). They are left with warm blankets, an electronic signature on an electronic consent, and a gown that doesn’t fasten in the back. And non-skid socks.

Sometimes there’s even a pillow!

There is always an IV.

Of course, the OR patient feels vulnerable. Some react by lashing out and being unpleasant. Some react by being meek. It takes all kinds of patients. The trick is knowing when they are acting out because they feel vulnerable and when they are in actual fear. A soothing hand and a soothing voice go a long way to defusing the situation.

The reason I write about this is because I was defending my dissertation interest of the OR during an assignment. The assignment was to write about a measurement tool that is being given to a vulnerable population and how it is translated into another language. There are MANY steps to the translation of a measurement tool. The professor looked surprised when I claimed that OR patients are vulnerable. I think I will incorporate the first paragraph explaining why the OR patient is vulnerable into the assignment paper. I just have to de first-person it.

I can do that.

During a session at AORN, the presenter echoed my thoughts that the OR patient is a member of a vulnerable population. I felt very smug because she was making all the points that I did.

Often when other nurses consider the vulnerable patient, they think of mothers, and children, and prisoners, and the mentally unwell, and they don’t even consider the OR patient. They are vulnerable as well.

And we should consider them. Imagine if I took away your glasses, your hearing aids, your clothes and your family. Think how you would feel.

We also speak another language that not many people know or understand. There is another vulnerability there.