Do all the RNS in your hospital wear the same color?
Which color?
Is it by role, or unit? (like all RNS wear navy, techs wear ciel)
MJB2010 said:Do all the RNS in your hospital wear the same color?Which color?
Is it by role, or unit? (like all RNS wear navy, techs wear ciel)
Our unit (Med-Surg) wears ryal blue and or white scrubs. The mother/baby floor wears lilac and some light blue color. Most units (except mother/baby) wear royal blue and or white.
I propose that each role wear a color that coordinates with the body fluid they are most likely to contact. Ex. Lab=red, RT=tan (sputum), RN=brown, CNA=yellow, (although many of these are interchangable, you get the picture)
I think the other color-coordination schemes make about as much sense as this one does, so why not?
A fun part about my job is that we can wear any color/print. I prefer darker shades because they tend to hide more (stains from the shift, etc.) and I don't have to worry about anything being see through. I am especially glad that we aren't required to wear white scrubs...my mom had whites for nursing school and they were always dirty!
My last travel assignment was strictly navy for nurses. Boring! All my others have been color of choice. I personally wear the same colors ... top and bottom and dress it up with a print jacket. Funny how some relate white to nurses. When I worked at the state mental hospital we wore street clothes because studies showed patients felt people in white were unapproachable. I have scrubs of basically every color and many interchangeable jackets.
I'm a CNA and at my facility, we have to wear beige scrubs with our company name monogrammed on them.
I really do not understand why they make us wear such a light color that dirties so easily; as CNA we are exposed to blood, poop, food, and other things that could easily stain.
It's not aesthetically appealing, either.
~PedsRN~, BSN, RN
826 Posts
Children's Hospital here = Fun Scrubs.