In fact, taking off underwear is also because there is metal inside. If there is metal in the clothes outside, it will also make you take them off, otherwise it will be dangerous. It is understandable to take off your clothes now, but why not put the hospital clothes on your body?
First of all, while waiting in line (or in the waiting area), I was told to remove the metal objects from the inspection site before the inspection. Before the inspection, I will also ask these women if they are wearing metal hairpins and other accessories. It can be said that there is enough time and opportunity to avoid inappropriate clothes before inspection. You may need to take off your coat, but you can't be sure that the clothes are inappropriate, just let them take off.
Does it matter to wear thick clothes for X-ray? If you have a CT scan, it doesn't matter whether you wear thick clothes or not. CT scanning uses radiation scanning to scan the body through clothes. However, it should be noted that there should be no metal objects in the examination area when the patient is examining. If there are metal objects, metal artifacts will appear in the image, which leads to poor image quality and can not be diagnosed. Therefore, metal objects should be removed before inspection.
CT examination is a tomographic image, mainly axial scanning. It observes the cross-section of human body into slices with high density resolution and low spatial resolution, and can examine all tissues and organs of the body.
What do you think of 19-year-old girls who are required to take off their shirts to take a chest X-ray, especially women? Many underwear will have sequins/loops, which will directly affect the result of chest radiograph. This will also affect the difficulty of doctors who can diagnose by watching films (basically, the chest is full of sequins and iron rings, so it is impossible to diagnose accurately). Therefore, patients will be asked to take off their bras. If the clothes outside also have this hard substance, to be honest, they will also take off their bras.
But what I want to say here is that the problem with this doctor is that, first of all, he didn't explain clearly what influenced him to see clearly. Sometimes, I will ask the patients who are filming if there are any metals or other hard objects on their clothes, and most of them will understand and cooperate. In addition, when the patient has doubts, it is necessary for her to see where the doctor's "inability to see clearly" affects.
Secondly, each department has some disposable sheets that can be wrapped around girls, or doctors can directly use their white coats to say, "If there are no other clothes, you should put on my clothes first", which will warm your heart and let patients understand that there will be no follow-up problems at all.
So I think, whether the shooting at that time was really influenced by sweaters or not, the doctor's practice was wrong and there was nothing wrong with being punished.