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Debbie
Debbie has been homeless for 5 years. One night she was assaulted, resulting in damage to her spine. She has some trunk and lower-extremity weakness, but the neurologist believes that the damage will not be permanent. She is to wear a thoracic-lumbar-sacral brace to protect the spine and limit spinal motion when she is upright. Your initial examination is 2 days after her admission to the rehabilitation unit. During your examination, you will need to inspect different areas of her body for additional integumentary damage and will need to assess her mobility out of bed.
How will you initially approach this patient? Does Debbie’s housing insecurity affect the decision-making in your evaluation and treatment plan?
As you inspect her for injuries, how will you position and cover her, and why?
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Draping, or covering, a patient appropriately during a therapeutic intervention is a relatively uncomplicated process, but at the same time, it is one of the most powerful opportunities to create an environment that communicates respect and professional rapport and to establish the patient’s therapeutic expectations.
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For the clinician, draping provides necessary access to specific areas of the body for examination and intervention. For the patient, appropriate draping provides:
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Protection of the patient’s modesty and dignity.
Warmth and comfort: Patients sometimes have conditions that make regulating body temperature difficult. Patients are also often more inactive than usual. Both situations can create a need for additional covering in an environment that already feels warm to the clinician.
Protection of vulnerable skin, such as wounds, surgical sites, scars, and neurologically impaired areas.
Protection of patients’ clothing: Fabric near the treatment site tends to become soiled with perspiration, wound drainage, lubricants, and so on.
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Gaining an understanding of the patient’s personal sense of modesty, dignity, and personal boundaries is essential to effective draping and professional interaction. The greater the amount of exposure necessary during the treatment process, the greater the importance of that understanding.
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Providing Trauma-Informed Care
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Being isolated, having items of clothing removed and parts of the body exposed, and being subject to touch by someone in a position of authority can create a powerful sense of vulnerability, even when the related assessments and interventions seem harmless. For patients who have experienced trauma or abuse, the experience can feel intimidating and even threatening.
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Abuse may be physical, sexual, or psychological, or any combination of these. Despite some stereotypes about who may be a victim of abuse, abuse is not limited to any specific age, gender, or economic group; adult men may be abused by their partners,1 and parents are sometimes abused by their children.1–3
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Loss of trust, violation of boundaries, and disempowerment are common consequences of abuse and trauma among children and adults.4–7 Consequently, bodily exposure, touch, positioning, and particular exercises may trigger ...