A sick patient enters the emergency department. Feeling faint, he looks for a nurse. As he scans the room, he notices men and women in colored scrubs. He looks again, trying to find a female in head-to-toe-white. This is his image of nursing. Many years ago, this might have been a logical place to begin when looking for a nursing professional. However, today you might find nurses in solid or patterned scrubs, street clothes, or in a lab coat that looks more like the traditional physician attire.
Nursing uniforms don't end with clothing. It used to be understood that nurses had no visible tattoos, piercings only in their ears and that naturally colored hair would be pulled back or kept short. Hospitals have become more lenient on the clothing nurses wear and these other aspects of their attire, too.
Have you ever wondered how we made it to this point? Whether you feel that your body is not your resume or that the way you dress as a nurse is linked to professionalism, here is a historical view of nursing uniforms from the past to the present.
Uniforms from the 1800s looked similar to a nun's habit, consisting of floor-length dresses in drab colors with white aprons over the front. Many of the first people to care for the ill were nuns, which is why the uniforms were similar.
In the 19th century, Florence Nightingale revolutionized nursing. She entered the profession against her family's wishes because nursing was not seen as a worthy career choice at that time. Florence is known for molding nursing into a respected discipline, writing multiple books, and establishing the Nightingale Training School at St. Thomas Hospital.
Florence had a vision for herself and those she trained. She understood the importance of creating a professional image that also served a purpose. She created uniforms to separate nurses from those still in nursing school, and that protected them from illness, weather elements, and the advances of male patients. The first recognizable nursing uniform included a long dress, apron, and frilly cap.
During World War I the nursing uniform underwent some of the first changes. Working on battlefields become difficult in long dresses. Nurses needed to be efficient and move quickly to assist the wounded. The aprons disappeared, and hemlines shortened. Tippets - short, cape-like garments - were added to the war uniforms. Nurses began displaying badges on their tippets to show rank.
As nursing became a popular career choice in the 1950s, attire needed to be easier to clean and produced in large quantities. Skirts and caps remained a staple of the standard dress code. But, the need for more flexibility caused hemlines and shirt sleeve length to shorten. Many nurses wore starched white dresses with white hose and shoes as the standard hospital uniform.
It's possible that the most recognizable part of a nurses uniform was the crisp white cap that was worn up until the late twentieth century. An article on Medscape Nurses reports that this change brought about changes from patients who said they could no longer tell the nurse from other hospital staff.
Caps were worn to show dignity and pride in the nursing profession. Many nursing schools ended with capping ceremonies to celebrate the induction of new nurses into the trade. However, lacking practicality was likely the main reason for the demise of the nursing cap, which was no longer required by most hospitals by the 1970s.
Scrubs began in the operating room. In the 1940s physicians started wearing white uniforms rather than their own clothing. By the 1960's surgical scrubs changed to the traditional green that you see today to lessen eye strain experienced by surgical staff from white uniforms and bright operating room lights.
As nurses became responsible for the cost and care of their uniforms, they also started to request more comfortable options from manufacturers. This prompted the modern day scrub. By the 1980s and 90s, the traditional nursing uniform was replaced with scrubs in most healthcare facilities across the U.S.
Scrubs are easy-to-care-for, come in a variety of styles and colors, and offer nurses comfort and mobility during long workdays. You can choose styles with multiple pockets, elastic waistbands, drawstrings, and other options and still meet most hospital policies. Some facilities might require nurses to wear a specific color or pattern to help distinguish them from other clinicians. Other employers such as home care, hospice, or other community health providers may wear a combination of scrubs and street clothes to care for patients in their homes.
Not only has the appearance of the nursing uniform changed over the years, but the look of the workforce has changed, too. Finding images of men in traditional nursing uniforms is difficult. Many nursing schools provided men with a shirt made of the same dense fabric that women wore, and no caps were required.
Some hospitals required men to wear uniforms worn by physicians or dentists because there wasn't a standard male attire. As scrubs became acceptable, men followed suit, choosing scrubs in multiple colors and patterns.
For years, many nurses have covered tattoos and refrained from coloring their hair in unnatural colors to conform with facility policies across the U.S. A 2015 article in Minority Nurse even reported hospitals and nursing schools banning all nail polish colors, unusual hairstyles, and earlobe gauges.
In recent years, many facilities have started to change their policies on nursing dress codes. Indiana University Health, the state's largest health system adopted a relaxed policy on tattoos and hair color in 2018. The hospital reported that the changes were made to reflect "authenticity" of their staff. A Becker's Hospital Review article from December 15, 2017, stated that the Mayo Clinic changed their policy on showing tattoos for both nurses and doctors in January 2018. This came just three years after the hospital ended a rule that required female employees to wear pantyhose.
These rules, lodged in societal norms, continue to change and evolve. However, some feel that the uniform is more than just functional attire. It's part of the nurse's expression of self, and it's also one component of the patient experience.
The nursing uniform has long been positioned as a way to keep nurses safe. The functionality of the first long-sleeved and floor-length frocks met the safety standards of the day. As the need to become more mobile emerged, changes began to happen that made the uniform more functional. With the emergence of infection control practices, other equipment was added to the attire that is now considered standard, such as gloves, masks, and even isolation gowns, when needed.
As nursing gained popularity, nurses found their voice and demanded respect in many forms. The choice of wearing a uniform, changing their hair color and even showing their ink is a part of self-expression and acceptance that many nurses have welcomed with open arms.
Where do we go from here? Will nurses one day be roaming the halls of hospitals in street clothes while they care for patients? Or, will nursing "whites" come back into style either on their own or at the requirements of employers?
It's hard to tell what's next for nursing uniforms. We have come a long way indeed. How do you feel about your current nursing uniform policy? Do you want more leniency or do you think that we've gone too far?
7 hours ago, YuHiroRN said:Personally, I don't go to work trying to stand out or feel special. That being said, our hospital supplies color-coded uniforms with our discipline embroidered on the chest. The RNs are very obvious by the fact of the sheer number of people in navy blue scrubs with RN embroidered on the top walking around during any given shift.
I am new-school. Been wearing scrubs since I was 19. I am not a hat person on the best days, least of all the kind that nurses of yesteryear used to wear. I don't wear dresses, ever, nor panty hose... so I am certainly a fan of the modern fashion sensibilities of our profession now.
Well that's what things all come down to today isn't it? You'd have all sorts of heck breaking loose if any facility even remotely tried today to get even a largely female nursing staff back into starched whites and certainly caps.
Happily for the Millennial age nurses and those near or coming after them in many local areas dress code decisions have been made for healthcare facilities by local governments.
Here in NYC for instance it would be nearly impossible to mandate caps unless a place agrees/wants male nurses to wear them as well. Ditto for dresses/skirts and anything else that is gender specific. https://www.newyorkcitydiscriminationlawyer.com/dress-codes-uniforms-and-grooming-standards.html
Mandating whites alone (dresses, pants or whatever) is still around for some facilities; mostly LTC, nursing homes and such. IIRC one of the last NYC hospitals that had their floor nurses in whites was Lenox Hill. This was before the place was bought by North Shore-LIJ. Now nearly everyone wears the standard "Northwell" (as NS-LIJ is now known) uniform of blue pants with white top.
Ironically the housekeeping staff at then NS-LIJ (who are 1199 union IIRC) voted to wear the same blue dress with white bib that was standard student nurse uniform for many NYC schools for ages.
I Always did my work laundry separately from my family and I dont think super germs live on a food cart,nor TB and ebola.I liked the white because you knew as soon as it was dirty.When they took our green scrubs away and returned to white,I wore my old clean scrubs to work and changed there to the white and reverse to go home .Oh well I was a fan of Howard Hughes.
I was capped when I graduated from nsg way back in 73. I watched all the changes come and go and the one I like the most was the change from white uniforms to scrubs. I was the first in my hospital to wear scrubs. At first it was only solid one color top and bottoms. When the change came to wearing patterns/themes, I was working peds....now that was a fun time for scrubs. Remember Barney? I wore him. LOL
21 minutes ago, ataymil8 said:My mother is 92 and I have her cape, just like the one in the picture. My grandmother would be approximately 120 yrs of age if she were living and I have HER cape which is floor length. You can’t imagine how well made these capes are.
WOW, that is amazing, ataymil8. I know you cherish those.
1965 When I graduated we wore white dresses and a cap at all times unless pt. was in isolation. Wore that for every job I had. Did take my uniforms to the cleaners for pressing and starching!!!
1979 Started in L&D we wore blue scrub dresses, with a slip and pantyhose. We eventually petioned to wear scrub pants under our dresses because of modesty, considering some of the actions required. From there we shortly got to wear complete scrubs but had to be OB blue. Hospital took care of washing. Everyone got in the habit of raiding the linen cart when it came to the unit so you would have clean scrubs for the next shift. Over time other NURSES in the hospital wanted to wear scrubs and so it began......rapid use of scrubs by everyone. Couldn't tell one position from another. Eventually went to color by position. All RNs in one color, unit clerk in pink, housekeeping in green, dietary in ?, lab tech's, radiology personnel in other colors. Helpful for staff but still confusing for patients. Name tags also inbdicated in large letters under name role, RN, LPN, LAB etc.
Not sure when tats and piercings became acceptable but it happened. I know appearance is not a guarantee of knowledge and performance but I believe it is respectful to dress appropriately. I wouldn't wear shorts to church or flip flops to meet the President.
Yes am old fashion but I am alright with that
When I first went to school for lab technology, my school uniform was white. Scrubs were available, but we weren't allowed to wear them. Had to be button up or something. I was not born to wear white. I cannot keep white clean. There are yellow stains after the first washing. And I had to buy more underwear that weren't visible. Never worked that job.
I was super excited that in my nursing school, we didn't wear white! Pants were navy, and shirts were a light color - but not white!
I was sad to lose the nail polish (I used to LOVE painting my nails ALL the colors!). Granted, even when I do wear nail polish now, they get destroyed by gloves. Such sadness.
I was sad to remove all of my earrings for nursing school, and my first nursing job. My new one is much more lenient than my first in terms of hair color, tattoos and piercings. Subsequently, I think I'm much happier in my 2nd position with those reasons being included. Sure, I'm not going to dye my hair blue like I did when I was 18... but, others do, and it makes me smile. And all my earrings are back in.
I got lucky with my 2nd position. I think it had been less than a year that they got rid of the white in their nursing uniforms. Navy rocks! Even better than ceil. Stains don't exist!
I started my career as a nurses'aide and graduated from nursing school in 1968. In 40 years as an RN i went through many of the uniforms described. Some additional comments - I was very proud of wearing my cap but found it to be in the way, especially when working with a patient with a trapeze over their bed. Our caps were anchored in place with numerous bobby pins, and clipping them on the trapeze bar could remove a patch of hair! Also, where I worked, when we were allowed to start wearing pant uniforms, we were required to have the top long enough to cover the hip area - an interesting concept since short skirts could be worn and they were much more revealing than a pair of pants!
I personally been fond of having a uniform since I think it looks far more professional and in the case of color coordinating, improves communication since positions are easily recognized.
Personally fond of the UK style of uniform, pictured below. The stripes are super subtle but denote rank. The thicker the stripes the more senior the nurse.
On 1/24/2019 at 9:09 AM, Blue_Moon said:Then we were allowed to wear any color or pattern we wanted for years but now we are back to a certain color for each job (RN, CNA, RT, OT, etc) with a color-coded chart for guests so they will know who is who. I don't think the patients remember or feel like looking at that chart all day long if they see a new color.
As a patient/family member/visitor once past the emergency room experience, I want to know who is walking into the room. I pay attention to those color coded charts. I also want to know if that person who is addressing me is a doctor, nurse practitioner, student nurse, nutritionist, physical therapist, etc. The practice of allowing students and nurse practitioners to wear white coats give the patient and family members the impression that they are doctors. I know that from experience. Everyone wears scrubs even house keeping, janitors, it people. The patient should be able to recognize who is coming in their room at a glance when they are the vulnerable person in that room and should be allowed to protect their dignity.
In a hospital setting it should be evident at a glance who to turn to for help. I always disagreed with the white dress, white stockings but I do agree with color coded scrubs and coats for personnel.
YuHiroRN, BSN
58 Posts
Personally, I don't go to work trying to stand out or feel special. That being said, our hospital supplies color-coded uniforms with our discipline embroidered on the chest. The RNs are very obvious by the fact of the sheer number of people in navy blue scrubs with RN embroidered on the top walking around during any given shift.
I am new-school. Been wearing scrubs since I was 19. I am not a hat person on the best days, least of all the kind that nurses of yesteryear used to wear. I don't wear dresses, ever, nor panty hose... so I am certainly a fan of the modern fashion sensibilities of our profession now.