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Survey: Do you think hospitals should require a uniform code for nurses?



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  #1  
Old Nov 18, 2003, 10:14 PM
brian's Avatar
brian (Male)
Admin/Founder
Join Date: Mar 1998
Survey: Do you think hospitals should require a uniform code for nurses?

Here are the results of last months survey question
Do you think hospitals should require a uniform code for nurses? :



Please feel free to read and post any comments that you have right here in this discussion thread by clicking the "Post Reply" button.

Thanks


Last edited by brian : Jan 05, 2004 at 07:47 PM.
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  #2  
Old Nov 19, 2003, 12:03 AM
VivaLasViejas's Avatar
Proud Army Mom
Join Date: Sep 2002

Beyond being clean and functional, I don't believe nurses' clothing choices should be dictated by the workplace. Those who want nurses to wear white should wear white themselves; the same goes for those who think nurses should wear only solids. We already have few enough choices as it is; our selection of scrubs shouldn't be limited by people who subscribe to the corporate group-think that already permeates so much of the world.

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  #3  
Old Nov 19, 2003, 12:11 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2003

I do not necessarily think that all nurses should wear white ( I wonder who thought of white as THE color. I for one could walk into a sterile operating room in white and come out looking like I had been walking the sewers of a large metro area for a month.)
I do not particularly care for seeing wrinkly dirty scrubs. I think that nurses should dress professionally not so much because the hospitals dictate it but because we need to portray our profession in a dignified manner. My theory is that you should dress for the circumstances of the job. If you are a nurse that goes on outings to the amusement park you should dress casually. If you are selling DME then a suit. I do not think it would be out of the ordinary to say neat casual clothes with a lab coat
What I would ban if I were ruling the world is the wrinkly scrubs that look like pajamas. It's hard to look professional in your pjs.
that is my two cents worth and not meant to offend anyone

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  #4  
Old Nov 19, 2003, 12:51 AM
chris_at_lucas_RN's Avatar
(I'm a girl.)
Join Date: Nov 2003
uniform uniforms for RNs

I suspect white worked because it was bleachable.

I like being able to tell who's one of us and who isn't.... but I think white can be disturbing to patients (and it's hard to keep clean since we're not wearing 100% cotton much anymore).

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  #5  
Old Nov 19, 2003, 07:40 AM
Brita01 (Female)
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2001

Hospitals need to be happy that nurses want to work there at all instead of worrying about requiring things like uniform codes.

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  #6  
Old Nov 19, 2003, 09:52 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2003
Question dress code

The hospital where I work has been in the process of changing to a uniform - dress code. In the past each unit had their own color of scrubs. We are now going to color by profession. All nurses are to wear navy &/or white. It can be all navy, all white or navy bottom white top, but NOT white bottom navy top. Aids & unit clerks ar to wear all teal or teal bottom white top. Xray techs will wear maroon or evergreen, etc. The idea is so the patient can identify who's who. I like that idea but as a nurse I think it's nitpicky not to be able to wear white bottom, navy top. No mention of shoes or socks----yet.

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  #7  
Old Nov 19, 2003, 10:08 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003

This has been a hot topic for many many years. Putting aside our own personal feelings about what color to wear to work, let's look at it from the patient's perspective. My elderly mother was recently a patient in a hospital. She was never certain at any point in time who was providing care for her. We all operate off of visual queues and everyone who came into her room was wearing scrubs in a variety of colors, with badges turned around backward or hanging from the hem of the scrub top. (although I am certain none of us have ever done that) She was frustrated with asking someone for assistance or instruction only to be told "I'm the physical therapist or I'm the respiratory therapist". Once mom finally got to the correctly "scrubbed" person, she was frustrated and took it out on the "real nurse". Bottom line is if you a nurse, wear white. It directly affects your patients. Thanks for the opportunity to vent.

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  #8  
Old Nov 19, 2003, 10:14 AM
SmilingBluEyes's Avatar
Temper-MENTAL Redhead
Join Date: Apr 2002
Not necessarily...but..

I would LOVE every hospital to mandate NO fake/long nails, ban the use of perfume and smoking on the job, and have SOMETHING to say about loud makeup/hair and GUM POPPING!!!. I don't care the uniform (LONG AS IT IS CLEAN!!!), the UNIFORM does make the nurse really to me. But these other pet peeves of mine bug me more than silly uniforms do. I can't stand the above....they are annoying, sometimes hazardous, and definately detract from a professional image...they have NO place in professional nursing, period.

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  #9  
Old Nov 19, 2003, 10:16 AM
SmilingBluEyes's Avatar
Temper-MENTAL Redhead
Join Date: Apr 2002

A CLEAR NAME TAG and PROFESSIONAL demeanor and ANNOUNCEMENT of who the person is and his/her title, will let patients KNOW WHO is CARING for them.....all white is not necessarily practical in all areas of nursing, especially where some of us have to go into the O.R. for csections/tubal ligations.

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  #10  
Old Nov 19, 2003, 10:35 AM
mother/babyRN (Female)
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2002

Nope, not unless the plan is to do the same with every other profession....

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Survey: Do you think hospitals should require a uniform code for nurses?

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