cloth hats

Specialties Operating Room

Published

  1. Scrubs hats

    • Allowed to wear them free
    • Allowed to wear but must have covered
    • No allowed to wear at all
    • We have no set rules...

17 members have participated

So we all have the cute scrub cloth hats that we LOVE!

I am curious. Where do you work? Are you allowed to wear them? Do you have to keep them covered??

Curious! Very Curious!

(I am in Santa Fe, NM. We are allowed to wear them but have to wear disposable hats over...)

Specializes in OR, Nursing Professional Development.

We used to be able to wear them. Then they decided they were an infection risk and they were completely forbidden- can't even wear a cloth hat with a disposable over top. Our infection rate has stayed the same, so looks like they were blaming the wrong thing...

We used to be able to wear them. Then they decided they were an infection risk and they were completely forbidden- can't even wear a cloth hat with a disposable over top. Our infection rate has stayed the same, so looks like they were blaming the wrong thing...

Wow. That's just crazy to me! I could see if you we're touching your hats then doing surgery or somethin.... wild!!!

The elastic on our disposable hats irritates me so I wear it over my scrub hats.

We can wear them but have to cover them with paper hats.

Specializes in OR, Nursing Professional Development.
The elastic on our disposable hats irritates me so I wear it over my scrub hats.

The elastic on our disposables is completely worthless. My hair would be better controlled with my old cloth hats that have an adjustable cord.

Specializes in NICU, Infection Control.

As a former Infection Control Nurse, I'd feel better if I knew those hats were washed after each day; bring a clean one in every day. Hot water and bleach. If you get body fluids on it, change it. Yes, they're very cute, but you wear fresh scrubs every day, same principle. Hair is germy.

I work in a small hospital with 5 operating rooms. We are able to wear cloth hats, the hospital washes them for us daily along with our scrubs.

Specializes in Operating Room.

Allowed to wear them free. Infection control just loves to go after the cloth hats but there is nothing backing this. Our infection rate is well below the national standard.

In places where everyone had to wear the paper hats, we had several instances of finding hair from staff in trays, on drapes etc. Just saying...

generally it is an infection control issue unless your policy states. Cloth or personal cover hats need to be covered with the disposable one time bouffant caps

We are allowed to wear them, but they must be covered with the disposable bouffant caps.

I have long hair that I only wash every two or three days, but I wear a fresh cloth cap under my bouffant cap daily, so in my opinion, it's more sanitary than wearing the bouffant directly over my hair.

Since some hair sheds daily, I think two layers of protection from that is better than one. I notice that some people that only wear the bouffant caps frequently have hair strands coming out of the sides of the bouffant. The cloth caps help prevent this from happening. It reduces the need to touch your hair and tuck it back in.

Specializes in hospice, HH, LTC, ER,OR.

Everyone wears the cloth hats in our OR but they must be covered with a the disposable hat.

Per AORN Standard, the advice they give on cloth hats is:

A reusable cloth cap that is contained within a disposable cap may be home laundered, just as other personal clothing (e.g.,T-shirts) contained within the scrub attire are home laundered.

Even more important, in my humble opinion, is the guideline AORN give regarding removal of hair coverings, which states:

Personnel wearing scrub attire should not remove the surgical head covering when leaving the perioperative area. The purpose of the head covering is to contain hair and minimize microbial dispersal. When the head covering is removed, hair and microbes may be shed onto the scrub attire.

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