30/01/2026
Today — like yesterday, and like many days — I stood in theatre from morning until evening, assisting in orthopaedic surgery.
Scrubbed. Gowned. Focused. Present.
What is often unseen outside the operating theatre is the physical weight we carry — quite literally.
In spinal and orthopaedic procedures, wearing lead gowns for radiation protection is essential.
These gowns can weigh 6–9 kg or more, and when worn continuously for hours, the impact on the body is real:
Cervical and lumbar strain, shoulder and thoracic fatigue, compressive load on the spine, long-term musculoskeletal wear....
We hold retractors, maintain static postures, anticipate the next step, and support surgical precision — all while carrying that additional load, hour after hour.
Yet we do it silently.
Because patient safety comes first.
Because the operation must go on.
Because teamwork in theatre is NON-NEGOTIABLE !!!
Moments like these always remind me of something many of us in surgery don’t often speak about.
Last summer,( not job related), I experienced a period of significant back and spinal pain.
It limited my movement and some of the activities I love, and it gave me a deeper, very personal understanding of spinal strain — not just clinically, but physically.
So yesterday in theatre, standing for hours, assisting in orthopaedics and spinal surgery, wearing a lead gown for radiation protection, holding static positions and supporting precision throughout the procedure we were involved(was a laborious revision in spinal), that understanding felt very real.
The weight is real.
The impact on the body is real.
This post is not a complaint — it is recognition:
Recognition of the physical endurance required in surgery.
Recognition of the resilience of theatre teams.
Recognition of the importance of protecting not only patients, but also the professionals who care for them.
Respect to every scrub nurse, surgical first assistant, radiographer, and surgeon who carries this weight — seen and unseen — every day.
🩺💙
Today — like yesterday, and like many days — I stood in theatre from morning until evening, assisting in orthopaedic surgery. Scrubbed. Gowned. Focused. Present. What is often unseen outside the operating theatre is the physical weight we carry — quite literally. In spinal and orthopaedic proc...