The attire debate - what should nurses wear?

Nurses General Nursing

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there's been a debate on another thread about the way scrubs, particularly patterned scrubs, are perceived by non-nurses. the original poster's position was that they diminish the respect (or potential for respect) other health care professionals have for nursing. many members argued that patients, particularly paediatric and geriatric patients, prefer them.

research indicates that the public find it harder to identify nurses now that the 'traditional' uniform of whites (plus or minus cap) is the exception. skoruspki and rhea (2006) compared perceptions of four kinds of uniforms and ten characteristics, finding that

the white uniform was the most frequently selected for 5 of the 10 characteristics: confident, reliable, competent, professional, and efficient. the print uniform was most frequently associated with the other 5 characteristics: caring, attentive, cooperative, empathetic, and approachable. in contrast, the solid uniform was least of ten selected for 6 of the 10 characteristics with the print uniform being least often selected for the remaining 4 characteristics.

for overall images, the white uniform was paradoxically the uniform most often selected as the nurse that patients would "not like to take care of you" but also most often selected as being "easiest to identify as a nurse." the print uniform was the most often selected as the nurse "you would most like to take care of you." the solid was the least often selected both as being the nurse "you would most like to take care of you" and as the "easiest to identify."

in other words, the white ensemble allows easy role identification and conveys the professional aspects of nursing care, while a patterned uniform makes identification harder but conveys the human aspects of nursing care and is preferred by patients.

as a student i wore a very traditional uniform, complete with voluminous starched white apron and belt, laundered by the hospital. as a newly registered nurse i wore a pale blue dress (known as the blue sack), until a new don noted that the only other staff who wore uniforms were support staff, while the other professionals wore street clothes (scrubs are reserved for or, ed and icu). i wore, and still wear, black laced shoes, navy or black pants, a white polo shirt or t-shirt and a vest (red, navy or black). i introduce myself to my patients and their visitors as "hi, i'm talaxandra and i'm the nurse caring for you today." i've never yet had a patient or family member voice confusion about my role or status.

i think reducing role fragmentation (so patients have interactions with fewer people), uniforms for support staff, and a policy that all staff introduce themselves would improve identification by families and patients without requiring the regressive step of starched white attire. what do you think?

I agree that you should not differentiate between RN and LPN, please. But I do believe that everyone in the medical field needs to dress in a respectful way. Just two days ago I had to push in a prolapsed uterus, I had to treat a rash under a breast, I put Elimite on the whole body for scabies. How many times did I as a CNA perform post mortum care. The list goes on and on. People in the general public need to know that nurses are above the normal, happy-go-lucky. Individual. Because we cross the boundaries over and over. So use good judgment.

I think the uniform a nurse wears is irrelevant to some degree- if they look put together/clean. Studies like this are difficult because there are outside factors like each individuals personality, amount of eye contact, communication skills, voice, patient/people interaction skills.

To me even putting the different jobs in different colors would be confusing. How is a sick patient to know that a(fill in color of choice) top means RN and/or LPN, a XXX one means housekeeping and a XXX one is a lab person?!

I honestly don't care what color, pattern you wear, but please, please, please if its wrinkled put an iron to it!! Not asking for creases that could cut your throat but get the wrinkles out. I am so tired of seeing CNA's and nurses walking onto the floor at the start of their shift looking as though they just sat 18 hrs balled up in a dryer! What makes it worse is their hair and makeup are as pristine as if they walked off a fashion magazine page...and then below the neck they look like a wrinkled mess.

Specializes in Med/Surg, Academics.
To me even putting the different jobs in different colors would be confusing. How is a sick patient to know that a(fill in color of choice) top means RN and/or LPN, a XXX one means housekeeping and a XXX one is a lab person?!

While true, if they aren't color coded, you can't tell the difference either. Maybe the admitting nurse should state the difference for those most likely to be involved in patient care. "So that you know who to ask if you need something, nurses wear X color and the CNAs wear X color on this floor. You'll see other colors, but these people are involved in direct patient care."

As the POA of someone who has been in the hospital too many times, I find it frustrating to not be able to see the difference. Knowing who can answer my question prior to asking it saves me time and frustration. I always check name badges before asking a question, but sometimes they flip around.

As a nursing student, I am constantly doing the flip around so that patients, nurses, doctors, etc. know my status.

As the POA of someone who has been in the hospital too many times, I find it frustrating to not be able to see the difference. Knowing who can answer my question prior to asking it saves me time and frustration. I always check name badges before asking a question, but sometimes they flip around.

As a nursing student, I am constantly doing the flip around so that patients, nurses, doctors, etc. know my status.

I always wear my name badge at people's eye level (drives me insane when a name badge is down on someones hip and I have to look like I'm doing the once over on their body just to read their name and position :eek:) and I am forever flipping it around so that it is readable :lol2:

We wear HUGE name badges (most call them billboards) that have our first name and title in lettering so big it would be very hard to miss. Our last name is in small lettering underneath. We have no scrubs dress code. Our housekeeping staff is from an outside company and that company requires them to wear kahki pants and a maroon polo top.

Everyone else is lassiz-faire. Some of the administrative type nurses wear business casual, a couple MDS nurses always have on lab coats but the DON never does, the ADON wears scrubs, two unit managers wear scrubs, one wears business casual, and the nurses and CNAs all wear whatever scrubs they want. I have been seeing more nurses wearing tee shirt style tops. I have no idea how they manage without pockets.

Plus Friday is casual so all bets are off that day...

Specializes in LTC.

Nurses should wear clothes that are neat(no wrinkles!), clean, and clothes that do not make them look... in the words of my mother.. 'like a rag-a-muffin.'

Specializes in OR Hearts 10.

At lunch the other day I walked into the hospital cafeteria and saw acouple of women in white, not scrubs but white pants and tops that were kind of like these. top1.jpg

My first thought was one of the floors was doing a trial like I had been reading about here. I thought these look like NURSES. Then they turned around and I saw they were LVN students. I wore uniforms like this years ago, not so bad. Of course I wasn't a nurse at that time but a Dental Assistant in the US Navy. I think in a hospital setting everyone would know this is the nurse!!!

Specializes in Peds BMT.

I work in pediatrics so obviously we mostly see patterned scrubs. The way we differentiate from different staff is that all staff has an extra badge that they wear behind the ID and it hangs down below it. So RNs have a big red RN under their ID, PCAs are Green, Child life are pink, etc.

I am probably in the minority here, but i favor a white uniform in the hospital setting and in long term care. As a patient, i want to know who is the nurse and who is in environmental services!

Specializes in Med-Surg, School Nurse.

I don't have a problem with a hospital/facility wide color or even universal...but please, please no more white for nurses. I am like "Pigpen" from Peanuts, and if there is something that is going to smudge, squirt, spray, drip, or leak it's going to be on me. Navy blue would be a good color. Personally, I don't like the pajama feeling of scrubs. Given a choice I would choose blue or black bottoms with a coordinating patterned shirt without cartoon characters. I don't have a big problem with cartoon tops, as long as the wearer knows and does their stuff. I don't know if everyone will take you seriously though when your shirt is full of Betty Boops, etc.

I don't think is necessary to have different colors for LPN's and RN's, because I don't think that most patients know what their different duties and responsibilities are. They just want a "nurse".

Specializes in Med-Surg, School Nurse.
Opinion: Hospital Scrubs' Deadly Mess - WSJ.com for those that think scrubs are more sanitary.
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