The Scale in a Doctor's Office
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We recently switched doctors and my husband got weighed not long before the change at the previous office, and as usual was about 5 lbs off. The new docs office weighs him at 26 lbs more than our home scales, and the same with me. I refuse to weigh myself at their office anymore, because there simply is no way that all the other scales in town are wrong and theirs are right.
Normally mine at home weighed about 5 lbs lighter than the docs office, which I can handle because the doctors office scales are always like that.0 -
I think I need a new scale. Got on mine yesterday and it spun around and said "to be continued" .....
BAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!
Mine says, "one at a time, please!"0 -
We recently purchased a digital scale to place our old analog one. The first time I stepped on, I was 5 lbs heavier. Not knowing which was more accurate to my actual weight, I decided to measure the precision (yes, I geek out on numbers). So for a week, I measured myself with both and consistently there was a 5 lb difference even as my weight fluctuated normally. So while I may not know my "true weight", I can still see trends. Am I losing, gaining, or maintaining?
If you have weights at home just put those on the scale to see how accurate it is, that's what I do.0 -
typically most people weigh themselves at home with little or no clothes on and in the morning before eating/drinking. At the doc's you have the added weight of your clothes and shoes plus you may have eaten and drank something.0
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Every scale will weigh you different. I have gained 2kgs just walking from one room at the doctors office to another.0
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We recently purchased a digital scale to place our old analog one. The first time I stepped on, I was 5 lbs heavier. Not knowing which was more accurate to my actual weight, I decided to measure the precision (yes, I geek out on numbers). So for a week, I measured myself with both and consistently there was a 5 lb difference even as my weight fluctuated normally. So while I may not know my "true weight", I can still see trends. Am I losing, gaining, or maintaining?
If you have weights at home just put those on the scale to see how accurate it is, that's what I do.
This is exactly what I was thinking. I will try this when I get home. I may not like the results though.0 -
When the RN says, "Hop on the scale" I just say, "No thanks, I'm not into that kind of thing, but I'm totally flattered." They usually just look at you like you're nuts and move on. I'll weigh myself at home, where no one can see my tears.0
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I've always found the doctor's scales to be high.0
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I always take my weight first thing on Monday mornings wearing light jammies. I always weigh nearly 5 pounds more at the doc's office, due to clothes, I've eaten at least one meal, and it's usually later in the day. I don't pay attention to that weight. It just gives the doc a reference since I am usually dressed about the same when I go for a visit. Try weighing yourself first thing in the morning, then weigh again right before you go to bed or right after dinner. That's why it's important to weigh the same time of day for your records.0
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I judge my weight loss by the difference between what I originally weighed on the scale at home pushed right up to that line in the tile on the floor. It's ability to weigh me remains constant and consistent. I'm happy I didn't take my beginning weight at the doctor's office because I'd want to go there weekly to weigh in and that's not gonna happen.
Now the odd thing is that I just had my physical and I'm 1 inch shorter than at my last physical. I made the Physicaian's Assistant measure me again because it was wrong. So either I shrunk an INCH in the last 16 months, their measuring thing on the wall is off, or my head and feet got thinner and I'm effectively shorter.
I've been this height for the last 24 years.0 -
We recently purchased a digital scale to place our old analog one. The first time I stepped on, I was 5 lbs heavier. Not knowing which was more accurate to my actual weight, I decided to measure the precision (yes, I geek out on numbers). So for a week, I measured myself with both and consistently there was a 5 lb difference even as my weight fluctuated normally. So while I may not know my "true weight", I can still see trends. Am I losing, gaining, or maintaining?
If you have weights at home just put those on the scale to see how accurate it is, that's what I do.
What a great idea! Just need to find something I know weighs a certain amount and then use that to test it! Thanks...0 -
It could be where it's at in their office. If it's on a slant or not. What time of day you went. It could be a number of things.0
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I turn backwards so I don't even see the scale. They are always different and I don't need the let down!0
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Why, oh why does the doctor office scale show me weigh more at their office than at home?
Today I weighed before I went and there was a 2.2 lb increase.
:mad:
I have a different issue every time i go to my doctor they measure my height on the scale. Every time they say something different. I dont trust anything they say. I went to this hands on science museum a few years back and they had this lazer thing to measure how tall you were thats the one i go by for everything. Drivers license or other forms that needs my height.0 -
I find that the doctor scales are always off. every time i get weighed at the doctor, i'm like 4-5 pounds heavier according to their scale. i don't know why. but i've always noticed this as well.0
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I had the opposite - I went to the doc's and I was 2lb lighter than at home! Result!0
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if they weigh you on those big metal monsters with the sliders at the top; those do weigh heavier... If they are digital, then my only explanation is all scales weigh differently and I wouldn't worry too much about it. Go by the one you use at home to weigh in on...0
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I always weigh lighter at the dr's office. Just go off of your own scale to track your progress. In all reality, our bodies are constantly within a weight range. That 2 lbs could be a cup of coffee and breakfast. Don't stress if their number is higher.0
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I work in a doctors office. My patients always say that our scale weighs about 4lbs heavier. My only explanation is...you probably weigh in at home before you eat or drink anything and you are probably naked. At our office you may have eaten or drank coffee or water and you are dressed. Clothes weigh more than you think. I wouldn't worry too much about it. Just go off of what your home scale says since that is the one you weighed in on in the beginning.0
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My trainer and I both have digital scales. the doctor has the old sliding bar. I go with the accuracy of the digital.0
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Dr office scales are always off. They don't get calibrated as often as they need to and are being used a lot. I went to the dr one day and it showed almost 5 lbs over. I was like "your scales are broke". They just laughed at me and says "that what everyone says". I said no really. I know for a fact cuz I just had weigh in and that scale matches my one at home. A little later I saw someone come in to calibrate the scales. lol So just ignore what they say and use the same scale you have been using.0
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There was an 8lb difference once! i would just go by your scale0
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I had a routine physical yesterday. I weighed on our warehouse scale at work, then on the dr's scale about 30 minutes later. The doc's scale said 1 lb less than the warehouse scale.
Same story six months ago at my previous exam.
At least, it's consistent.0 -
Why, oh why does the doctor office scale show me weigh more at their office than at home?
Today I weighed before I went and there was a 2.2 lb increase.
:mad:
There are several differences between home-weighed me and doctor-weighed me.
1. When I weigh at home, I get up out of bed, sit on the throne, and weigh myself. I have rid myself of a good amount of undigested food, and I am wearing very little and nothing that weighs more than a few ounces.
2. When my doctor weighs me, it's usually in the afternoon on my way home from work or on the way in to work after breakfast (that's when I schedule my doctor's visits). There is usually food in my belly, and almost always food in my colon. There is a decent amount of water. And I don't consider it polite to strip down to my underwear in the doctor's office to get weighed in, so often the only thing I take off is my shoes. So I've got a wallet, leather belt, leatherman tool, large smartphone, blue jeans, keys, and pocket change at a minimum adding extra weight. I've never weighed a change of clothes with all the stuff I have attached, but I bet it's easily 2 pounds.0 -
My weight in my doctor's office is consistently 12 lbs heavier than at home. I'm sure some of that is clothes, shoes, hydration, food, and poop. At home, I always weigh myself naked first thing in the morning after peeing and before eating or drinking. At the doctor's office, I've had breakfast including a glass or two of water and couple cups of coffee.
And yet, the last time I was at the doctor, I got on the balance type scale. The physician's assistant adjusted the weights and announced 208, ten pounds less than the 218 I'd measured that very morning naked, dehydrated, and hungry. I gave the PA a quizzical look as I got off the scale. He could tell I didn't believe it and told me to get back on the scale. This time I was 230 lbs: 22 lbs more, 30 seconds later, same scale, same weigher, same weighee, identically clothed, identically feed, and identically full of crap.0 -
Maybe the darn nurse was behind you with her toes on the scale....lol..yeah they do that!0
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