Why do you wear a white coat? (if you indeed do)

Nurses Professionalism

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This thread is designed to explore why nursing professionals and other professionals wear white lab coats to work. As most of us know, medical doctors have had a long history of wearing white lab coats. We also see PAs and APRNs wearing white lab coats, which makes sense to me, given that mid-levels are quasi-colleagues of MDs and prescribers in their own right.

However, I have even seen nurse managers, nurse educators, case managers, and skin team nurses running around hospitals in those long white lab coats. Why? It has even gotten to the point where sometimes I'll walk onto a unit and there are more people wearing white lab coats than there are "normal employees." It's hardly even a status symbol anymore, certainly not when more people are wearing them in a given situation than not.

Some of you may disagree with this, but I think white lab coats are ugly as hell and that wearing one demonstrates an utter lack of style. It's become what people are wear when they can't figure out how to put together an impressive outfit. If I were a mid-level practitioner, I wouldn't EVER wear a white lab coat if I could help it. I'd rather wear well-fitted, professional clothing.

Besides having no style, there are other downsides to wearing those long white lab coats. For one thing, they show everything. I can't even begin to count how many times I've seen people in those coats with black pen marks all over. That's professional looking. Or how about when people drape their lab coats over the backs of swivel chairs? Someone then sits down and starts idly rolling their chair around while the bottom of the person's lab coat drags along a nice gritty, dirty floor. Then they can come back and put on their nice, gritty, dirty lab coat. Ewwwwww.

Alternatively, someone will sit down in a chair with the lab coat still on and it gets all scrunched up under their buttocks. Have you ever noticed how EXTREMELY wrinkled those long white lab coats are in the back? Bingo. That's why. Just look around next time you're at work. The backs of everyone's lab coats are wrinkled and it looks terrible.

So... what is the point of them? If you wear one of these white coats, what is the purpose? Do you like how it looks? Is there some amazing utility to these coats than isn't afforded by normal clothing? Okay -- they have a lot of pockets. I can see the benefit of those pockets if you're working in a lab or are carrying a lot of instruments. However, if you're a paper pusher like a case manager or a unit manager, then what are all the pockets for? What am I missing here?

The OP is always trying to troll and stir the pot by asking appearance-based questions...

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I am too busy working to look at what everyone else is wearing at work anyways.

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mrsjonesRN said:
The OP is always trying to troll and stir the pot by asking appearance-based questions...

Not that there's anything wrong with that.

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The nursing school I went to 17 years ago had us wear one. It was part of our uniform. I think it's a symbol of professionalism. It's hot wear I live, so I will not be wearing one in the summer.

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Specializes in Hospice Nursing.
Farawyn said:
Not that there's anything wrong with that.

No, no, not at all

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Specializes in Family Practice, Mental Health.
Dogen said:
Only because the filter removed my first attempt at some non-traditional credentials.

Did it start with W? It failed for me too. Hehehehe

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Specializes in Behavioral Health.
®Nurse said:
Did it start with W? It failed for me too. Hehehehe

Yes! It shouldn't surprise me that we have similar fake credentials.

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Please define following: elevator speeches/mid level providers/white coats :

1.Word salad

2.confabulation

3.grandiose thought process

4.Defence mechanism

5.reality

I am still confused:roflmao:

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Farawyn said:
Not that there's anything wrong with that.

Just making a facetious comment and obvious statement

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Specializes in school nursing, ortho, trauma.

i wear a white coat - or jacket i suppose as i usually wear the short to the hip style - a consultation coat is what i think it's called. I will occasionally wear a long coat if that's all i have clean. I work in a school. It's an easy way for the kids and staff to pick me out, especially if i have chosen not to wear scrubs that day. It also acts as a great barrier against bites and splashes of all types.

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I only wear one if it's part of the dress code for the facility. I think of them as overshirts, so they get washed every time I wear them.

canigraduate, BA, DN, almost BSN, CHEF, DGLVR, BSA

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canigraduate said:
I only wear one if it's part of the dress code for the facility. I think of them as overshirts, so they get washed every time I wear them.

canigraduate, BA, DN, almost BSN, CHEF, DGLVR, BSA

I guess if I HAD to, I would.

Farawyn, RN, ASN, BA, SN, BSNWNABEE, BFD

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