Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Nurse taking advantage?
A friend went to the doctors last night for a checkup, and when it came to weighing her the nurse (male) asked her to strip down to her underwear. After weighing and measuring height she got dressed again, and he asked her id she wanted to go for a drink sometime and gave her his phone number which she declined because she's married.
The rest of the girls in the office have never had to strip off to be weighed apparently, and I'm wondering if the nurse may have been behaving inapropriately. My friend didn't feel uncomfortable at all though throughout the whole thing.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Not the best of scenarios to be in really though, come on, however flattering it may have been to be asked out by someone that you've just stripped in front of is, apart from vary bad timing, just plain creepy, sorry, just my view.
it is definately something the surgery will be impressed with. i work in a local hospital and everyone is weighed fully clothed, minus shoes. everytime i have been weighed at a practice/surgery i have been clothed.
it depends on how your friend wants to proceed. he did not 'touch' her so it is not an assault but she was violated. if she just wants to make the practice aware she should write to the practice manager of the surgery. if she wants to proceed past that then i would still offer the practice manager a chance to answer if this is standard practice.
I think this incident is totally unacceptable, and your friend should make a point of complaining to the doc surgery immediately. In the past, when I have been examined by a mail doctor, they state there must be a another female present at the time - for the patient's benefit. I would be appauled if what happened to your friend happened to me.
No assault has taken place. What has occurred is unprofessional behaviour, which would more than likely be frowned upon by the surgery, and by the NMC (Nursing and Midwifery Council)
Asking a patient to remove their clothing to be weighed can be justified in order to reduce the number of variables for further weigh-ins. THEN asking the patient for a date is in rather bad taste, and very poorly timed, considering he'd just seen her in a state of undress.
I'd say a letter both to the nurse AND the surgery might be appropriate under the circumstances.
That would definitely ring alarm bells for me ....... unless it had been clearly explained beforehand why I needed to strip down - and - the answer given was professional and relevant to my case.
I have never been asked to take my clothes off yet have been weighed on many many occasions .... during pregnancy, post natal, consultations for the pill etc.
I'm glad your friend didn't feel uncomfortable but maybe that's because, like many of us, we place our trust in health professionals and tend to give them the benefit of the doubt .... which, of course, is how many of them get away with it. However, if only for the sake of future - possibly more vulnerable - patients, i'd urge her to make a formal complaint.
I went for physiotherapy on my leg and it gets very very physical, halfway between wrestling and foreplay, it's really very strange. After about 5 sessions, it became abundantly clear (but not very very overtly) that they physio was trying it on. I found it quite funny, but for some strange reason just stopped going...dunno, it just doesn't feel too nice, they're supposed to be fixing my leg! One time, as i was getting physio, the 'curtain' was thrown open by some doctor, then thrown closed again. I assume I wasn't the first this had happened to. Pretty funny, now I think of it.
http://www.nmc-uk.org/nmc/main/advice/practitioner-clientRelationships.html
Found this (NMC site) which may be useful as might be the rest of the site (not much time to check it out for you).
May be worth ringing them to ask what to do in a confidnetial sense at first?
Thanks to everyone for their posts, it was very helpful in trying to pursuade her that this kind of behaviour is at best inapropriate, and at worst a worrying breach of trust from a healthcare professional.
Unfortunately she's adamant that becasue it wasn't 'sleazy' and he was 'sweet' (ridiculous I know) she's not going to report the incident.
Again, many thanks to all those who posted answers, and I'll persist.