Originally Posted by Kate RN
Now I am reading "Nursing- Against the Odds" by Suzanne Gordon. She criticizes Nursing for not Looking professional in our pajamas, and that we do not stand out as nurses because of what I describe above. I am not done with the book yet- but again I am wondering where we should be going with our "uniform" as a profession.
What are all of you thinking??
I think it's true that a lot of scrubs don't look super tidy, but then again the job isn't super tidy either. Manolo Blahniks and suits probably wouldn't work too well

There will always be a few people who look plain sloppy, but that's always the case anywhere. Nurses work hard, long hours... part of me says let 'em be comfortable at least, part is not sure because there probably is a reasonable middle ground.
By the way, has anyone
ever said that MD's look unprofessional in their scrubs? I think there's more to the issue than clothes. And maybe, if anything, nurses dress codes are a sign of backward progress and submission/
lack of power.
As far as clients are concerned, I don't think anyone cares as long as you are a good nurse and you can be identified. Being able to tell who is who is a pain - I can say that from personal experience when my husband was in the hospital for 8 days... I couldn't tell anyone apart, and no, name tags don't do it- half the time they are backwards plus you can't read them from a distance.
There was an article in one of my local papers with quotes from one of the local hospital CEO's, which stated in part that the nurses should or would be wearing white to look professional and that they should have more family friendly schedules (i.e. not 12 hour shifts)... it didn't say if in fact that hospital is going to implement those things, but it sounded like it!