experience –
Uniform color by disciplineRating: (votes: 0) We are coded that way, used to be coded by department but that got voted down. Comment:
Isn't the point of a uniform that you DON'T choose what you're wearing? It seems a very odd question to me, but maybe that's a cultural difference between NZ and USA...
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i like it; everyone walks around claiming to be nurses when they are house keepers just messing with beeping iv pumps.
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I think it's good for staff to identify each other, but it doesn't work on patients. Patients assume anyone in scrubs is a nurse or physician.
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I don't see it as an issue of being able to "wear what you want", many companies and organizations have uniforms (police, military, mechanics, just to name a few).I personally like the idea, not so much from a patient perspective, but when you're interacting with someone within the hospital, you know exactly who you're dealing with and predominately what their job is.
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Personally I think being color coded is retarded. Isn't that why we all wear name badges with our picture, name, title, and department? Do they hand a color code sheet to patients when they are admitted telling them what color signifies what department? I thought not.
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I don't mind color coding, it beats having to wear all white all the time like when I first got out of nursing school. When I did refresher course clinicals earlier this year, the floor I worked on had no uniform policy, it was a free for all and it looked sloppy.
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Actually my hospital is color coded and in every patient area there is a chart that tells what the colors mean. I love it for quickly identifying what department a staff member belongs to.
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As a former patient, I loved it so did my wife. She and I found it to easy to identify who was the RN, CNA, and housekeeping.The doctor was the identified by his super-sized ego. Now as a student-nurse I wish all hospitals were color colored. Much easier to identify the various specialties at a quick glance.
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I like the freedom of choosing The only departments in my hospital that has to wear a distinct color is our ED
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I like it, personally. I think it looks more professional. I did clinicals at a place that didn't require color coding and it was hard to identify people quickly. There were also a lot of mismatched scrubs/jackets.
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Quote from Murse901I think it's good for staff to identify each other, but it doesn't work on patients. Patients assume anyone in scrubs is a nurse or physician.
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