A practical, surgery-specific guide to what to wear on the day you leave the hospital — covering hip, knee, shoulder, abdominal, mastectomy, and cardiac patients. Built from real discharge-day patient feedback and hospital social-worker recommendations across multiple surgical specialties.
The discharge-day outfit has to do four things: be easy to put on with limited mobility (often with help), keep you comfortable for a 30-90 minute hospital exit + car ride home + walk into the house, accommodate any drains, dressings, or medical devices, and not require you to lift, bend, or twist. The universal answer: pull-on pants, a button-front or zip-front top, slip-on shoes, soft cotton underwear, and a button-front or zip cardigan layer. Below: by surgery type, with the small additions that matter.
The universal discharge outfit
| Layer | What to pack |
|---|---|
| Pants | Pull-on, elastic-waist, soft fabric, NOT skinny |
| Underwear | Cotton, 1 size up, high-rise if abdominal incision |
| Top | Button-front OR zip-front, NOT pullover |
| Outer layer | Cardigan or zip jacket, NOT pullover |
| Shoes | Slip-on, non-slip sole |
| Socks | Compression hospital-issue + non-slip slipper socks for around the house |
By surgery type
Add: long-handled shoehorn, sock aid, walker
Loose pull-on pants, button-front shirt, slip-on shoes via shoehorn. The walker comes with you. The hospital provides the abduction pillow for the car ride; sit on a regular cushion, the abduction pillow goes between your legs. Take the back seat with the operative leg straight.
Add: ice pack for the car ride, walker
Loose shorts or pull-on pants (shorts if warm — knee accessibility for ice). Button-front or pullover shirt (no chest restriction). Slip-on shoes. Bring the walker. Many patients have the knee elevated on a pillow during the ride; sit with the operative leg extended diagonally if the back seat allows.
Add: snap-shoulder shirt OR loose button-front, sling pillow
The hospital sling stays on for the ride. Snap-shoulder shirt or loose button-front goes around the sling. Pull-on pants below. Slip-on shoes. Seatbelt: avoid having the operative shoulder strap directly across the operative arm; some patients tuck a small pillow between belt and shoulder.
Add: pillow for the seatbelt, high-rise underwear
Pull-on pants (high-rise above incision), high-rise cotton underwear, button-front shirt. The seatbelt across the abdomen will hurt over the incision; bring a small pillow to splint between belt and abdomen. Many patients describe the pillow as the most-used post-discharge item.
Add: front-zip soft bra, drain-management camisole or pocketed top
Front-zip soft bra (no underwire), button-front or front-zip top, pull-on pants. If drains are in, a drain-management camisole or top with internal pockets keeps them organized for the ride home. Inspired Comforts mastectomy collection has post-mastectomy tops designed for this exact situation.
Add: button-front shirt only, pillow for sternal splinting
After CABG or valve surgery, sternal precautions are absolute: no lifting overhead, no pushing or pulling with the arms, no lifting more than 5 lbs for 6-8 weeks. Button-front shirt only (no pullovers). Pull-on pants. Pillow over the sternum during the car ride; clutch when coughing or laughing — “splinting” — is universally taught at discharge.
— composite of recurring sentiment in abdominal-surgery diaries
The discharge process
- Morning rounds: Surgeon clears you. Discharge instructions reviewed. Prescriptions sent.
- Wait for transport: Often 1-3 hours. Get dressed in your discharge outfit during this window.
- Wheelchair to the curb: Hospital policy at virtually all facilities. You don’t walk out.
- Car ride home: Back seat, pillow as needed, slow driver, no quick turns.
- Walk into the house: Shortest path from car to wherever you’ll spend the day (usually the recliner).
The “wait for transport” outfit-changing window
Many patients describe the change-into-discharge-clothes process as harder than expected. Tips that come up consistently:
- Have your partner / family help. Don’t try to do it alone if you don’t have to.
- Sit on the bed for everything. Don’t stand to dress.
- Take 20 minutes minimum. Rushing causes pain spikes.
- Keep the hospital gown on under the cardigan if you can’t get the upper body fully changed; nobody will see.
- Save the lower body for last. Pants are usually the hardest piece.
The discharge bag
Pack into a small bag the night before surgery: discharge outfit, slip-on shoes, soft cotton underwear (extras), pillow for seatbelt, lip balm, phone charger, a snack and water for the ride home. The Inspired Comforts post-surgery collection has the tops, pants, and camisoles most patients pack.
FAQ
Sources
- American College of Surgeons — Recovering from Surgery
- American Heart Association — Sternal Precautions
- AAOS — orthoinfo.aaos.org








