I'm late, but all the remotes I've seen in hospitals, from ER to Oncology, are attached to the hospital bed itself by very durable wiring. They often have built-in nurse calling buttons and incline/recline options. I also doubt they would have traditional rubber buttons (ones that could be pulled out). Usually they are all covered over by some type of plastic. The picture is too vague for me to tell anything from it, however.
Not necessarily a rule, but something that I've noticed is that pediatric wards tend to have softer, friendlier colors. sometimes they even have wall stickers of cartoon characters. any sort of recovery room is bound to have lighter colors; dark walls can make a room feel claustrophobic.
OHSU is kind enough to have pictures of some parts of their Children's Hospital:
http://www.ohsu.edu/xd/health/servi...rnbecher/maps-and-directions/virtual-tour.cfm
I'm not familiar with Dr. Dugi's methods, but the aftercare instructions of another big name MTF surgeon mention a catheter being present after discharge. (Fair warning: further down are technical discussions of dilation and oozing fluids)
https://marcibowers.com/mtf/your-surgery/post-op-care/
She also has an average three-day turnover from the surgery. There's also mention of liquids only for the first 24 hours after:
https://marcibowers.com/mtf/your-surgery/what-to-expect/
Users here talk about being out of the bed from 18 hours post-op to regain their strength. But again, different doctor.
This woman who had her surgery done by Dugi mentions being stuck in bed for 5 days:
https://www.reddit.com/r/MtF/comments/72k6ng/just_had_srs_with_doctor_dugi_at_ohsu_ama/
I also saw that Dr. Dugi generally has a waitlist of over a year. I'm new to ADF and don't know when the vaginal liberation process began, so I thought I'd mention it.
I don't know why he's not wearing a hospital gown either; usually with such intensive procedures you're in the gown for a while so that the staff has easy access to anything they need.
The biggest question is why not show the bracelet? You get the name, gender, assigned doctor, and department from it. Just blank out the barcode and anything else sensitive.