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Polysomnography Technician

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

You are a polysomnography technician working in a sleep clinic. The clinic is located in a multicultural community. Many of the patients who come to you for testing do not speak English very well. However, the clinic has a policy that a translator must accompany a patient who doesn't speak English.

That's important because many patients are frightened and do not understand what is going on. It's your job to calm their fears and help them understand that the testing will not hurt.

There are no needles, electric currents or any other painful procedures. You simply ask the patient to go to bed, and then you attach various electrodes to their face and head. The electrodes monitor functions like brain waves and breathing. Once the electrodes are in place, you shut off the lights and hope the patient will go to sleep. In the morning, you remove the electrodes and analyze the data.

Tonight a patient shows up to be tested. He does not understand English very well, but he has no translator. The clinic secretary tells you that the translator has just phoned and said she is sick and cannot make it. The clinic director will not object if you do the test so long as you can find some way of communicating what you are going to do, so the patient is not afraid.

How might you let the patient know what you are doing?

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