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Sims' position
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The Sims position, or left lateral Sims position, named after the gynaecologist J. Marion Sims, is usually used for rectal examination, treatments, enemas, and examining patients for vaginal wall prolapse.[1][2]
The Sims Position is described as in the person lying on the left side, left hip and lower extremity straight, and right hip and knee bent. It is also called lateral recumbent position.[3] Sims' position is also described as the person lying on the left side with both legs bent.[4]
This position was used originally on enslaved women, by Sims, without their consent in the United States. Sims conducted these unethical procedures on black women without anesthesia.[citation needed]
Detailed description
[edit]
The position is described as follows:
- Patient lies on their left side.
- Patient's left lower extremity is straightened.
- Patient's right lower extremity is flexed at the hip, and the leg is flexed at the knee. The bent knee, resting against bed surface or a pillow, provides stability.[5]
- Arms should be comfortably placed beside the patient, not underneath.[6]
Common uses:
- Administering enemas
- Postpartum perineal examination
- Per-rectal examination
- Osteopathic manipulative treatment techniques
See also
[edit]- Recovery position – First aid technique
- Sigmoidoscopy – Medical examination of the large intestine from the rectum to the sigmoid colon
References
[edit]- ^ Pamela J. Carter; Susan Lewsen (2005). "11. Positioning, lifting, and transferring patients and residents". Lippincott's Textbook for Nursing Assistants: A Humanistic Approach to Caregiving. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 188. ISBN 978-0-7817-3981-8.
- ^ Naftalin, Alan (2012). "4. Women". In Michael Glynn (ed.). Hutchison's Clinical Methods : An Integrated Approach to Clinical Practice, 23/e. Elsevier. p. 47. ISBN 978-81-312-3288-0.
- ^ "Sim's position : Definition". The Free Medical Dictionary. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
- ^ Bendon, Charlotte; Price, Natalia (2011). "Sims Speculum Examination" (PDF). The Journal of Clinical Examination (11): 57–68. S2CID 29205507. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 October 2016.
- ^ "Patient positioning : Sim's position". MoonDragon. Archived from the original on 25 August 2012. Retrieved 27 August 2012.
- ^ Doyle, Glynda Rees; McCutcheon, Jodie Anita (2015-11-23). "3.5 Positioning Patients in Bed". Clinical Procedures for Safer Patient Care.
Sims' position
View on GrokipediaSims' position, also known as the lateral recumbent or semi-prone position, is a patient positioning technique in which the individual lies on the left side with the left arm extended posteriorly along the body, the right arm flexed anteriorly, the left leg extended straight, and the right leg flexed at the hip and knee, often supported by pillows for comfort and stability.[1] This configuration, developed by American surgeon J. Marion Sims in the mid-19th century, facilitates improved visualization and access to the perineal area during gynecological examinations, rectal procedures, enemas, and certain surgical interventions by leveraging gravity to separate the buttocks and vaginal walls.[2][3] Originally devised during Sims' experimental work on vesicovaginal fistula repairs—procedures that addressed obstetric complications previously deemed inoperable—the position enabled clearer exposure of pelvic structures without the need for more invasive supports, contributing to advancements in operative gynecology.[3][4] Sims, who performed dozens of such operations refining his techniques, documented the position's utility in allowing the patient to assume a relaxed posture that minimized muscular resistance, though initial applications involved unanesthetized subjects, reflecting the era's limited pharmacological options despite emerging use of ether elsewhere.[3][5] Today, it remains a standard in clinical practice for its relative ease of assumption by patients, reduced risk of vena cava compression compared to supine positions in pregnancy, and applicability in resource-limited settings for vaginal deliveries or digital rectal exams.[6][7] While the position's efficacy is empirically supported by its widespread adoption and low complication rates in procedures like speculum insertion, its association with Sims has drawn scrutiny due to his reliance on enslaved women for iterative surgeries without consent or analgesia, practices that succeeded in curing fistulas after failures by contemporaries but violated modern ethical standards.[3][5] Primary historical accounts from Sims' own writings and peer validations affirm the position's causal role in enabling precise instrumentation, underscoring its foundational value in gynecologic surgery despite the moral failings of its originator's methods.[4][3]
