HOSPITAL GOWN
Abstract: The present invention is a hospital gown that is designed with an overlapping, adjustable wrap front and back, open-top sleeves and an adjustable length, among other things, to address the needs of patients and medical providers in a medical setting.
This application is a PCT International Application claiming priority to U.S. Provisional Application Serial No. 63/017,847, filed on Apr. 30, 2020, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION Field of the InventionThe present invention relates to hospital gowns.
Description of Related ArtThe design of hospital gowns has seen very few advances and, in retaining the status quo of gown design, also has retained the less-than-desirable features of hospital gowns, including the open back. The modern hospital gown continues to bear a striking resemblance to its 14th century nightgown counterpart and the original “johnny” gown, which was designed in the 20th century for anesthetized, bedbound patients. Limited data exists to justify this hospital gown design beyond rationales like infection control and emergent access for resuscitation. However, there is a plethora of data suggesting negative physical and emotional effects of current gown designs for patients, nurses and physicians. Additionally, there is are no minimum standards or quality controls for the design of patient apparel.
“Don’t let the gown get you down[.]” was the advice a 26-year-old gentleman with leukemia offered in a study investigating the psychosocial impact of hospital gowns on patients and providers. See Lucas C, Dellasega C., and Smith C. “Don’t Let the Gown Get You Down: How Patients and Providers Perceive Hospital Gowns” (Abstract published at Hospital Medicine 2019, March 24-27, National Harbor, MD). In this study, patients were found to be resigned to their “uncomfortable,” “expos[ing],” “nightmare-[ish]” “uniform,” afraid to even ask to wear more dignified attire for fear of appearing to be difficult to providers and potentially harming the therapeutic relationship. One 64-year-old woman with terminal cancer detailed, “I have my own pajamas at home, but I don’t bring them because you can’t wear them here... [wearing a gown] is really not fun, but hey, this is what [providers] have to do, so it’s what you have to do.” See generally Lucas et al. “Don’t Let the Gown Get You Down: How Patients and Providers Perceive Hospital Gowns”; Lucas C and Dellasega C. “You don’t have to be dying to do comfort measures.” See generally, Patients and Physicians Perceptions of Inpatient Attire.” (Abstract published at ACP Internal Medicine Meeting 2019, April 11-13, Philadelphia, PA); and Lucas C and Dellasega C. Finding common threads: How patients, physicians, and nurses perceive the patient gown (Patient Experience Journal. 2020;7(1): 51-64. doi: 10.35680/2372-0247.1387). Research has shown that patients are vulnerable to dehumanization and loss of identity in the hospital, often exacerbated by wearing the standard hospital gown. Case in point, a mixed-methods study by Cogan, Morgan, and Georgiadis revealed that hospital gowns may lead to an increased sense of exposure, discomfort, disempowerment and embarrassment for patients during a period of potential vulnerability while undergoing medical intervention. See Cogan N, Morton L, and Georgiadis, E. “Mixed methods study exploring the impact of the hospital gown on recovery and wellbeing: implications for policy and practice.” (The Lancet. 2019;394(Suppl.).doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(19)32829-6).
Hospital gowns strip autonomy from individuals seeking medical assistance. The gown has become a linchpin of transition, initiating the dehumanizing progression from “person” to “patient.” One of the main problems with the hospital gown is its exposing nature, often made light of with the joke, “Do you know who invented the hospital gown?...See-more Hiney!” The joke continued in two Super Bowl LIII commercials for a large academic healthcare system and insurance provider in Pennsylvania, depicting a construction worker and businessman clad in hospital gowns, mooning their less-than-pleased co-workers, to inform patients of expanded insurance coverage, i.e. “completely covered.” Hospital gowns are also a source of comedic fodder on sitcoms.
It is common knowledge that hospital gowns are flawed, but very little has been done to change them. Little is known about the origin of hospital gowns. Perhaps the best way to understand the hospital gown over time is to watch depictions of patients in television sitcoms, dramas, and movies, ranging from the days of black-and-white into the modern era and view artistic depictions of hospitals across eras. Case in point, depictions of fourteenth century hospital wards in art show that all patients wore night shirts, under which they also wore some type of underclothing. By the end of the 1800s and beginning of the 1900s, pajamas for men became more common as hospital attire. Although it is not known who originally invented the traditional hospital gown, the original gown was designed around a century ago with an open back for use on patients admitted the night prior to surgery, who were sedated prior to transfer to the anesthetic room while half-asleep. In general, the most common reasons that hospitals began to provide, require or offer clothing to patients was to reduce infection and improve hygiene, as clothing can be ruined by leakage of bodily fluids from various examinations, treatments and procedures. Additionally, in certain settings where lifesaving measures require access to the naked body to allow equipment, like a defibrillator, to be connected to the patient, a gown can be removed quickly (theoretically). The simple, open-backed “johnny” gown of the early 20th century became the standard of care with minimal meaningful modifications in the last hundred years. One possible explanation for the persistence of the “johnny” gown is that, in past eras of medicine, patients in gowns were expected to be bedbound for recovery, keeping their bare bottom under wraps, and this norm became the status quo. Today, ambulation is encouraged in patients as part of venous thromboembolism (“VTE”) prophylaxis but gown design has fallen behind medical norms.
Modern medicine emphasizes, values and even advertises evidence-based medicine, patient-centered care and high-quality care, yet the hospital gown stands as a stark contrast to this pledge to move forward as beacons of change. Hospital gowns have fallen outside of the scope of evidence-based research. One may ask why the gown remains decades behind modern medicine. It appears that this apathy stems from (1) accepting medical tradition and choosing to overlook the flaws of the current hospital gown; and (2) believing that changing the hospital gown would cost money. Still, several institutions have attempted change, including Hackensack University Medical Center partnering with Cynthia Rowley and Nicole Miller (1999), Cleveland Clinic partnering with Diane von Furstenberg (2010) and Henry Ford Health System of Detroit’s “Model G” gown (2016). In spite of these efforts to revamp the hospital gown at academic medical centers, change has been neither long-lasting nor widely disseminated. A professor at the North Carolina State University college of textiles reasoned that, “There are number of pressures in the hospital environment that influence what they purchase and when they purchase. Cost management, inventory management, storage space... There’s more value coming with the apparel item if it also becomes something that replaces or enhances other equipment that’s used in the hospital environment. Like a gown that can also keep an eye on your blood pressure or measure your heart rate.” See Limbong A. “Can A Patient Gown Makeover Move Hospitals To Embrace Change?” (NPR. https://www.npr.org/sections/healthshots/2018/02/11/582830491/can-a-patient-gown-makeover-move-hospitals-to-embracechange. Published Feb. 11, 2018.)
Finally, the current hospital gown can unintentionally put a patient in harms’ way, posing a fall-risk for patients with petite frames overwhelmed by the bulk of the gown and also inhibiting fast access to the chest for placement of defibrillation pads in a code. Therefore, a need exists for a hospital gown that satisfies current expectations and standards for patient dignity while accommodating current medical care and hospital environments. The present invention addresses this need among others.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe invention is a hospital gown having an overlapping, adjustable wrap front comprised of two front panels, each front panel having a fastened side and a seamed side, wherein each front panel is sewn at the seamed side to an adjacent back panel creating a side seam, wherein each front panel is secured at the fastened side to the gown using a fastener, and wherein each front panel has a bottom front hem This gown also has an overlapping back comprised of the two back panels and an adjustable neckline, wherein each back panel has a bottom back hem. There are a first set of fasteners comprising at least one fastener located on each of the two front panels near the bottom front hem of each of the two front panels and at least a second set of fasteners comprising at least one corresponding fastener located on each of the two front panels near a front horizontal midline of the gown, a third set of fasteners comprising at least one fastener located on each of the two back panels near the bottom back hem of each of the two back panels, and a fourth set of fasteners comprising at least one corresponding fastener located on each of the two back panels near a back horizontal midline of the gown. The gown also has two sleeves, wherein each sleeve has a sleeve opening that runs the length of the sleeve.
For the purpose of facilitating understanding of the invention, the accompanying drawings and descriptions illustrate preferred embodiments thereof, from which the invention, various embodiments of its structures, construction and method of operation and many advantages may be understood and appreciated. The accompanying drawings are hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention will be understood more readily by reference to the following detailed description of the invention and the accompanying figures, which form a part of this disclosure and are hereby incorporated by reference. This invention is not limited to the specific devices, methods, processes, elements or parameters described and/or shown herein and the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments and is by way of example only and not intended to be limiting of the claimed invention. Any and all patents and other publications identified in this specification are incorporated by reference as though fully set forth herein. In the event of inconsistent usages between this document and those documents so incorporated by reference, the usage in the incorporated reference(s) should be considered supplementary to that of this document; for irreconcilable inconsistencies, the usage in this document controls.
Also, as used in the specification including the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include the plural, and reference to a particular numerical value includes at least that particular value, unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Ranges may be expressed herein as from “about” or “approximately” one particular value and/or to “about” or “approximately” another particular value. When such a range is expressed, another embodiment includes from the one particular value and/or to the other particular value. Similarly, when values are expressed as approximations, by use of the antecedent “about,” it will be understood that the particular value forms another embodiment.
SUMMARY OF RESEARCH. The various embodiments of the present invention were informed by research into doctors’, nurses’ and patients’ opinions on hospital gowns that are currently used in medical settings. For this research, thirty participants were selected from patients and providers at an academic medical center and interviewed from December 2017 to March 2018. Participants were at least 18-years-old and fluent English-speakers recruited in person from the hematology-oncology unit if deemed medically stable. Eligible providers with at least one year of experience in their respective roles were recruited. The participants included ten patients (5 women, 5 men), ten nurses (9 women, 1 man) and ten physicians (6 women, 4 men). The data, which is described and relied upon below, is set out in
Patient Themes. The research revealed that patients believed that hospital gowns were designed for provider convenience. Patients expressed resignation at having to wear gowns that are immodest and unenjoyable. Two patients viewed gowns therapeutically, i.e. making the illness-treatment process official. Numerous patients disclosed the negative impact of gowns on their self-esteem, identity and dignity. Donning a gown was a marker of illness, stripping away self-identity and dignity when patients had to hand over their clothing.
Additionally, the research disclosed that gowns were problematic for most patients, who described them as uncomfortable, restricting and difficult to manage independently. Patient participates noted that existing gowns (1) are restrictive in the neck area; (2) are difficult to tie by oneself; (3) are uncomfortable; and (4) often do not cover most of a patient’s body. Existing gowns also proved to be difficult and embarrassing when toileting with, among other things, gowns hanging too low and ties falling into the toilet.
Not all patients found gowns to be problematic. One patient preferred the oversized gown. Another patient preferred the gown for sanitary reasons.
Patients revealed that they had developed strategies for overcoming the various problems with current hospital gowns. Some of these strategies involved methods for navigating the bathroom and keeping their room doors shut unless they were in bed.
Patients expressed individuality by adding leggings or pajama pants to hospital gowns. Some chose to wear their own clothing. The most common strategy was “double-gowning,” i.e., having one gown worn forward and one gown worn backward. Double-gowning enabled modesty and helped to improve patients’ confidence because the double gown ensured that both the front and the back of a patient’s body was concealed. The final patient strategy was acceptance of having to wear a gown.
The patient responses also revealed that patients consistently affirmed the power of color. Patients explained that brighter colors improved their moods and outlook and helped to distract from the health problems that they were facing.
Provider Themes. Nurses and physicians described existing gowns as “drab,” “one-size-fits-none,” “doll-like,” etc. Providers also described gowns as exposing, uncomfortable and inducing vulnerability. In spite of these negative perceptions, providers found utility in gowns, which ensured access and safety (e.g., easily identifying patients in emergencies). However, providers often contradicted these perceptions as interviews progressed, citing inconveniences and extra time that current gowns required because, among other things, some patients do not put existing gowns on correctly. This then makes the patients even more embarrassed and/or the provider embarrassed.
Both physicians and nurses agreed that snaps and ties, meant for quick access, made their job more difficult. Two nurses even noted that the characteristically oversized gowns are a fall-risk. A nurse described witnessing patients with continuous infusions who got MRIs having to drag an extra gown attached to their IV pole until the infusion was complete.
Inpatient attire provoked biases and even judgmental comments from nurses and physicians. A patient in a hospital gown was “sicker,” dependent and resigned to the role of a patient by both groups of providers. Nurses also viewed patients in gowns as lacking social support and motivation. Alternatively, a patient in his/her own attire was seen as “healthier”, motivated to do well, independent and “getting back to normal”.
Physicians and nurses viewed patients in their own attire as not “really need[ing] to be in the hospital,” “on their way out the door,” and possibly pain-medication seeking. One physician admitted that seeing patients wearing their own attire could cloud thinking by giving him the impression that the patient did not need to be in the hospital.
Providers were acutely aware of the vulnerability patient gowns induced and how the perceived need for access trumped patient-preference. Nurses expressed guilt for giving patients an unattractive garment, saying it felt like taking a piece of a patient’s identity away. Nurses developed strategies to cope, including apologizing, presenting the gown, and talking people through the process. Physicians agreed that gowns were a threat to identity and caused a loss of patients’ autonomy. In addition, physicians (but not nurses) described a lack of pride, even embarrassment, when recycled and over-worn gowns appeared on their patients.
Like the nurses, physicians also developed ways to cope with the negative emotions associated with seeing and caring for patients in gowns. One strategy was to avoid looking at anything below the patient’s face to focus on seeing the person as an individual and not as a patient. Many physicians were delighted to see patients in home-attire, even seeing the attire as an opportunity to build rapport. Physicians were also focused on enhancing patient autonomy, acknowledging that patients feel a loss of control in hospitals, which could be remedied by offering choices in clothing.
Converging Themes. Participants agreed that gowns were uncomfortable, exposing, vulnerability-inducing and visually unappealing; 39 of the 46 connotations described were attributed as negative. Patients found gowns to be uncomfortable physically and psychologically and felt vulnerable from the lack of modesty and privacy. All participant groups felt that gowns precipitated a loss of dignity, identity and self-esteem. Providers’ first impressions of gowns also focused on the negative visual appearance and confirmed patients’ distress.
Subsequent Study - Design. An online “Patient Gowns Opinions Survey” was created by adapting several items from the “Questionnaire for Hospital Caregivers” created by Swetambali Jha, MS at the North Carolina State University College of Textiles in 2009. Additionally, eleven with Likert scaled items were developed to assess the purpose, function, and comfort of patient gowns in addition to evaluating the impact of gowns on the patient experience and emotional wellbeing. Options for the Likert-scale were: (1) not at all; (2) a little bit; (3) some; (4) quite a bit; and (5) always/very much. All participants were shown the 11 items with Likert scales. Free-response sections were added to obtain qualitative data in addition to quantitative data. Utilizing a series of checkboxes, all participants were asked to report any styles of patient gowns that they have encountered, any condition of the gown they had encountered, and desired changes to patient gowns. Additionally, participants were asked, “If given the choice, which patient gown would you prefer?” and prompted to view ten options for patient attire with descriptions and rank their top three using a drop-down menu. Images for options 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, and 10 were obtained via an Internet search engine using the terms “patient gown,” “hospital gown,” and “patient attire.” Options 3 and 7 reflected the U Matter design. The sample size for this study was 197 participants.
Subsequent Study - Participants. Participants were provided with a Research Participation Summary and the eligibility criteria of being at least 18 years old, fluent in English, and able to consent for themselves for review and asked if they met eligibility and consented to participate. If they selected “no,” the survey was automatically terminated. There were 250 online survey records initiated during a 4-week period between April 2020 and May 2020, and 197 (79%) were completed. Of the 197 participants who completed the survey, 144 were female (73%), 68 identified as lay community members (34%), and 185 (94%) had experience wearing a patient gown in the inpatient and/or outpatient setting. Of the 129 (66%) belonging to the medical community, there were 27 physicians, two APPs, ten nurses, 53 other healthcare professionals, and 37 professional school students enrolled in MD, DO, or PA programs. “Other healthcare professionals” described roles as radiology imaging technologists (66%), clinical pharmacists, paramedics, child life specialists, sonographers, psychologists, speech language pathologists, and healthcare administrators. The majority of the participant pool completing the survey, i.e. 55%, belonged to the 25 to 34 years age group, and 74% had at least a bachelor’s degree. Data from this study is provided in
As shown in
Suggested Improvements. Based upon the initial research, nine physicians and nine nurses preferred patients to wear regular clothing in the hospital, specifically separates with layering. The only physician opting for a gown sought one of “those Nicole Miller gowns”. The only nurse preferring the gown cited hygiene, feeling a fresh gown daily motivated patients to care for themselves. Participants agreed that inpatient attire should be “patient-specific, patient-dependent” with the opportunity to wear one’s clothing when able. Through interviews and sketching it was determined that the “ideal” hospital attire would be separates with choices of color/pattern, fabric and size. Zippers and Velcro® were proposed as alternative closures.
Research Conclusions. It is well-reported in the literature that patients often lose dignity in hospitals and the traditional patient gown is often a provoking factor. Gowning physically turns a person into “the patient,” denigrating identity and agency and forces patients into sameness with a one-size-fits-all gown. In this study, patient-participants described how the dreary, exposing gown negatively impacted their self-esteem, identity and motivation. The demoralizing effect of the patient gown on providers was surprising. Providers acknowledged and expressed frustration about their roles, both passive and active, in initiating the dehumanizing funnel of the hospital with the transformative act of gowning. Nurses apologized for the gown and physicians expressed guilt for making patients wear them.
Recurring participant suggestions for patient gown redesign is shown in the tables shown in
Patients and providers in this study described numerous opportunities for inpatient attire improvement to help bring identity, personality and humanity back into healing to truly provide patient-centered and evidence-based care. One way would be to encourage patients to wear their own clothes in the hospital whenever possible in a “patient-specific, patient-dependent” manner, to quote one internist. Also, providers and patients expressed preferences for separates in their “ideal” hospital attire. Participants’ ideal inpatient attire was separates for modesty and added warmth with color options. Choices, through color, fabric or design, could re-build autonomy and be vital to a patient’s overall physical and emotional health. Participants acknowledged that patient gowns are a “necessary evil” because there will always be instances in which patients cannot safely wear their own attire or separates, with providers citing the ICU as prime evidence. Still, providers felt that improvements, which would boost both patient and provider morale, were long-overdue.
Notably, there were prominent disconnects between patients’ and providers’ perceptions. Patients described gowns as the undisputed “normal procedure” and an expectation upon admission. Providers also felt that “policy” prohibited personal attire, but in fact, there was no institutional mandate for patient gowns. Patients, when accepting a gown, were resigned to wearing it and most felt they had no choice. Providers suggested that by wearing the gown, some patients were viewed as being sicker, dependent, “playing into their illness,” and not invested in recovery. Providers agreed that if they were a patient, they would prefer to wear their own attire in the hospital, which may be why they viewed patients in clothing as healthier and more motivated. Patients interviewed wanted to wear their own attire in the hospital, but believed they were “not allowed” to do so.
It is time to challenge the status quo of the centuries’ old open-backed patient gown in this modern healthcare environment, which is dedicated to preserving patient autonomy, focusing medical care around a patient’s unique needs and developing care plans rooted in objective evidence. Current inpatient attire offers a tremendous opportunity for improvement in the healthcare system; even the smallest of changes, like the addition of brighter colors or offering a scrub-pant bottom, could bring hope to patients resigned to their “uniform” by showing that the hospital listened to and cared for them as individuals.
Changes to attire could also serve to humanize and dignify patients in the eyes of providers, who express distress from offering threadbare, cold, drab, naked gowns they abhor to those seeking care. The present invention addresses these long felt patient and provider needs and wants.
Solution. Responding to the results of this research, the various embodiments of the present invention hospital gown 1 utilize several novel elements and novel combinations of design details including, but not limited to, an optional faux collar 74 with an access point for central lines/ports; a petal sleeve 60 enabling patient independence in donning/doffing the gown 1; double-backed construction; an optional snap-line down the front 10 of the gown 1 to improve exam access and minimize exposure; the ability to convert the gown 1 from full-length 2 to tunic-length 4; a wrap front 10; and a variety of securing options including snaps, ties and Velcro® 54.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention hospital gown 1 are illustrated in
The various embodiments of hospital gowns 1 also have a plurality of sets of fasteners 50 positioned to make the length of the gown 1 adjustable. A first set of fasteners 50 is comprised of at least one fastener 50 located on each of the two front panels 12 near the bottom front hem 18 of each of the two front panels 12. A second set of fasteners 50 is comprised of at least one corresponding fastener 50 located on each of the two front panels 12 near a front horizontal midline 20 of the gown 1. These two sets of fasteners 50 enable the front 10 of the gown 1 to be shortened from a full length gown 2 to something shorter, potentially approximating a shirt-length gown 6 or a tunic-length gown 4.
This embodiment of a hospital gown 1 also has a third set of fasteners 50 comprised of at least one fastener 50 located on each of the two back panels 30 near the bottom back hem 38 of each of the two back panels 30. A fourth set of fasteners 50 comprises at least one corresponding fastener 50 located on each of the two back panels 30 near a back horizontal midline 40 of the gown 1. These two sets of fasteners 50 enable the back 30 of the gown 1 to be shortened from a full length gown 2 to something shorter, potentially approximating a shirt-length gown 6 or a tunic-length gown 4.
Alternative embodiments of the present invention incorporate additional sets of fasteners 50 to create numerous different lengths to which the gown 1 may be adjusted. For example, a fifth set of fasteners 50 can be located on each of the two front panels 12 below the front horizontal midline 20 of the gown 1 to enable the bottom of the gown 1 to be shortened to a length in between full- 2 and shirt-length 6, such as to a tunic-length 4. Additionally, a sixth set of fasteners 50 can be located on each of the two back panels 30 below the back horizontal midline 40 of the gown 1 to accomplish the same thing on the back 30 of the gown 1. Any number of sets of fasteners 50 can be placed along the front and back of the gown 1 to enable the length of the gown 1 to be adjusted to any length.
The primary embodiment of a hospital gown 1 also has two sleeves 60. In the preferred embodiments, each sleeve 60 has a sleeve opening 62 that runs the length of the sleeve 60. The preferred embodiments of the gown 1 also have at least one fastener 50 along the back adjustable neckline 40 of the overlapping back 30 for adjusting the size of the back adjustable neckline 40. In one embodiment this fastener 50 is one or more plastic snaps 52. Various embodiments also have at least one telemetry pocket 70 on an upper portion 13 of at least one front panel 12.
There are a variety of alternative embodiments of the hospital gown 1 that incorporate one or more of a variety of different features. One alternative embodiment of the hospital gown 1 also comprises at least one fastener 50 located along each sleeve opening 62 to hold the sleeve opening 62 closed. A hospital gown 1 can also have at least one side seam 22 having at least one side seam opening 24 in the side seam 22. These side seam openings 24 allow for the passage of tubes, wires, and other medical equipment through the side of the gown 1.
Any of the embodiments of a hospital gown 1 according to the present invention can be used with a pair of hospital pants 100 designed according to the present invention. The preferred embodiments of these hospital pants 100 have an elasticized open waistband 102, a drawstring 104 threaded through the waistband 102, a fastener 50 to close the waistband 102, and an overlapping fly 106.
The fasteners 50 for the present invention can be any of a wide variety of fasteners 50 as described in more detail herein. These fasteners 50 may be connected (by being sewn, glued, or adhered in any manner appropriate to the type of fastener 50) directly to the gown 1 or they may be connected to a tab 80 of material which is also attached to the gown 1. Some examples of fasteners 50 for use with the various embodiments of the present invention include, without limitation, ties, Velcro® 54, snaps, hooks and eyes, buttons and button holes, zippers, etc. In choosing appropriate fasteners 50 for various parts of the gown 1, consideration should be given to the purpose of the fastener 50, the need for quick medical release of the fasteners 50, the desire for the fasteners 50 to not interfere with X-rays or other imaging technologies, the strength, durability, cost, or manufacturing attributes of the fasteners 50, etc. When using snaps in any of the embodiments of the present invention, the ideal style of snap include the attributes of being lead- and/or metal-free and being able to withstand high heat. These attributes will help to eliminate x-ray artifacts, make the snaps more durable and enable the snaps to survive sanitation and washing.
While it is possible to construct the adjacent front and back panels 30 from one piece of material to avoid having a seam, most embodiments of the hospital gown 1 have the front and back panels 30 cut from different pieces of material. Then the seamed side 16 of each front panel 12 is sewn to an adjacent back panel 30 (at the back panel’s seamed side 36), which creates a side seam 22 (various views of these parts are shown in
As illustrated in
While it is anticipated that the most common length transition will be from a full-length gown 2 to a tunic-length gown 4, it is possible to design the hospital gowns 1 of the present invention to be convertible from a variety of longer lengths to a variety of shorter lengths (and to have a single gown 1 that can be adjusted to multiple lengths). It is the ability to shorten the gown length and secure the gown 1 at that shorter length(s), that is encompassed by the preferred embodiment of the present invention. The original and final lengths are variable. It is conceivable that, in some situations, a medical institution may prefer to have gowns 1 that convert from full-length 2 to shirt-length 6 or from tunic-length 4 to shirt-length 6. Similarly, it is possible to design a gown 1 according to the present invention to convert to multiple shorter lengths by placing a series of snaps (or other fasteners 50) along the length of each panel so that the lower snaps can be secured to any of the corresponding upper snaps thereby creating even more options for length customizations.
Finally, the various gown 1 embodiments of the present invention can be paired with pants 100 to increase patients’ comfort, modesty and self-esteem (an example of which is shown in
For the embodiment of the invention shown in
Similar to the gown 1 shown in
As with the gown 1 shown in
For any and/or all embodiments of the present invention, the various snaps, ties or other fasteners 50 can be color coded to better enable patients to understand how to correctly don, adjust and/or secure the gown 1. Additionally, in the preferred embodiment of the present invention, there is a backing under the snaps (or fasteners 50) to better prevent them from tearing through the gown 1 material. It will be obvious to one skilled in the art that there are a variety of ways to achieve this including, but not limited to, assembling the gown 1 so that the gown 1 material is sandwiched between a piece of interfacing on the underside of the gown 1 material and the snap on the opposite or exterior side of the gown 1 material.
The various embodiments of the present invention are not limited to a particular fabric or category of fabric. The choice of fabric is determined by a variety of factors including, but not limited to, cost, comfort, durability, washability, ability to be sterilized, feel, breathability, etc. However, as discussed above, research in this field revealed that both patients and providers prefer bright colors and fun patterns (examples of which are shown in
While the design of the present invention is compatible with the use of MRIs on patients, the use of a snap line on some embodiments of the present invention creates a significant artifact in x-rays. Thus, the preferred embodiment shown in
To facilitate the mass-production of the present invention, the preferred design pattern utilizes four pieces and a minimal number of snaps (see
It will be obvious to those skilled in the art that the various attributes of the present invention can be combined in a variety of ways and all such combinations remain within the scope of the invention.
Claims
1. A hospital gown comprising:
- an adjustable wrap front comprised of two overlapping front panels, wherein each front panel is comprised of a fastened side, a seamed side, and bottom front hem, and whereby each front panel is sewn at the seamed side to an adjacent back panel creating a side seam, and is secured at the fastened side to the gown using a fastener;
- a back comprised of the overlapping two back panels and an adjustable neckline, wherein each back panel has a bottom back hem;
- a first set of fasteners comprising at least one fastener located on each of the two front panels near the bottom front hem of each of the two front panels;
- a second set of fasteners comprising at least one fastener located on each of the two front panels near a front horizontal midline of the gown corresponding to the first set of fasteners and whereby connecting the first set of fasteners to the second set of fasteners raises the bottom front hem and shortens the front of the gown;
- a third set of fasteners comprising at least one fastener located on each of the two back panels near the bottom back hem of each of the two back panels;
- a fourth set of fasteners comprising at least one fastener located on each of the two back panels near a back horizontal midline of the gown corresponding to the third set of fasteners and whereby connecting the fourth set of fasteners to the third set of fasteners raises the bottom back hem and shortens the back of the gown; and
- two sleeves, wherein each sleeve has a sleeve opening that runs the length of the sleeve.
2. The hospital gown of claim 1, also comprising:
- at least one fastener located along the back adjustable neckline for adjusting the size of the back adjustable neckline.
3. The hospital gown of claim 1, also comprising:
- at least one telemetry pocket on an upper portion of at least one front panel.
4. The hospital gown of claim 1, also comprising:
- at least one fastener located along each sleeve opening to hold the sleeve opening closed.
5. The hospital gown of claim 1, wherein at least one side seam has at least one side seam opening in the side seam.
6. The hospital gown of claim 1, also comprising:
- a pair of pants.
7. The hospital gown of claim 6, wherein the pair of pants is comprised of
- an elasticized open waistband;
- a drawstring threaded through the waistband;
- a fastener to close the waistband; and
- an overlapping fly.
8. The hospital gowns of claim 1, wherein the fasteners are selected from the group consisting of Velcro®, snaps, buttons and buttonholes, hooks and eyes, ties and zippers.
9. The hospital gown of claim 1, also comprising at least one tab to which at least one of the fasteners is attached, which tab is also attached to the gown.
10. The hospital gown of claim 1, also comprising:
- a fifth set of fasteners comprising at least one fastener located on each of the two front panels below the front horizontal midline of the gown corresponding to the first set of fasteners and whereby connecting the first set of fasteners to the fifth set of fasteners raises the bottom front hem and shortens the front of the gown; and
- a sixth set of fasteners comprising at least one fastener located on each of the two back panels below the back horizontal midline of the gown corresponding to the third set of fasteners and whereby connecting the sixth set of fasteners to the third set of fasteners raises the bottom back hem and shortens the back of the gown.
11. A hospital gown comprising:
- a one-piece front having a neckline, a front midline and a bottom front hem;
- a plurality of fasteners running vertically from the neckline to near the midline of the front;
- a back comprised of at least one back panel connected to the one-piece front having a back midline and a bottom back hem;
- two sleeves;
- a first set of fasteners comprising at least two fasteners located on the front near the bottom front hem;
- a second set of fasteners located near the front horizontal midline that corresponds to the first set of fasteners and whereby connecting the first set of fasteners to the second set of fasteners raises the bottom front hem and shortens the front of the gown;
- a third set of fasteners comprising at least two fasteners located near the back bottom hem; and
- a fourth set of fasteners located near the back horizontal midline of the gown that corresponds to the third set of fasteners and whereby connecting the third set of fasteners to the fourth set of fasteners raises the bottom back hem and shortens the back of the gown.
12. The hospital gown of claim 11, also comprising:
- at least one telemetry pocket on an upper portion of the front.
13. The hospital gown of claim 11, wherein each sleeve has a sleeve opening running the length of the sleeve; and
- at least one fastener located along each sleeve opening to hold the sleeve opening closed.
14. The hospital gown of claim 11, also comprising:
- a fifth set of fasteners located on the front of the gown below the front horizontal midline of the gown corresponding to the first set of fasteners and whereby connecting the first set of fasteners to the fifth set of fasteners raises the bottom front hem and shortens the front of the gown; and
- a sixth set of fasteners located on the back of the gown below the back horizontal midline of the gown corresponding to the third set of fasteners and whereby connecting the sixth set of fasteners to the third set of fasteners raises the bottom back hem and shortens the back of the gown.
15. A hospital gown comprising:
- a front having a front midline and a bottom front hem;
- a back having a back midline and a bottom back hem;
- two sleeves;
- a first set of fasteners comprising at least two fasteners located on the front near the bottom front hem;
- a second set of fasteners located on the front above the first set of fasteners that corresponds to the first set of fasteners and whereby connecting the first set of fasteners to the second set of fasteners raises the bottom front hem and shortens the front of the gown;
- a third set of fasteners comprising at least two fasteners located on the back near the back bottom hem; and
- a fourth set of fasteners located on the back above the third set of fasteners that corresponds to the third set of fasteners and whereby connecting the third set of fasteners to the fourth set of fasteners raises the bottom back hem and shortens the back of the gown.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 29, 2021
Publication Date: Aug 3, 2023
Inventor: Christy Marie Lucas (Cranberry Twp, PA)
Application Number: 17/918,936