RLE 9 O.R Requirements
RLE 9 O.R Requirements
RLE 9 O.R Requirements
If you are the scrub corpsman, you will have opened your sterile gown and glove
packages in the operating room before beginning your hand scrub. Having completed
the hand scrub, back through the door holding your hands up to avoid touching anything
with your hands and arms. Gowning technique is shown in the steps of figure 2-4. Pick
up the sterile towel that has been wrapped with your gown (touching only the towel) and
proceed as follows:
1. Dry one hand and arm, starting with the hand and ending at the elbow, with one end
of the towel. Dry the other hand and arm with the opposite end of the towel. Drop the
towel.
2. Pick up the gown in such a manner that hands touch only the inside surface at the
neck and shoulder seams.
3. Allow the gown to unfold downward in front of you.
7. Another person (circulatory) who is not scrubbed will pull your gown onto you as you
extend your hands through the gown cuffs.
Continue the process by opening the inner glove packet on the same sterile surface on
which you opened the gown. The entire gloving process is shown in the steps of figure
2-5.
1. Pick up one glove by the cuff using your thumb and index finger.
2. Touching only the cuff, pull the glove onto one hand and anchor the cuff over your
thumb.
3. Slip your gloved fingers under the cuff of the other glove. Pull the glove over your
fingers and hand, using a stretching side-to-side motion.
4. Anchor the cuff on your thumb. With your fingers still under the cuff, pull the cuff up
and away from your hand and over the knitted cuff of the gown.
2. Offer the gown to the surgeon. Once the surgeon's arms are in the sleeves, let go of
the gown. Be careful not to touch anything but the sterile gown. The circulator will tie the
gown.
3. Pick up the right glove. With the thumb of the glove facing the surgeon, place your
fingers and thumbs of both hands in the cuff of the glove and stretch it outward, making
a circle of the cuff. Offer the glove to the surgeon. Be careful that the surgeon's bare
hand does not touch your gloved hands.