Article Friendly article publishing script homepage.
  Number Times Read : 37    Word Count: 415  
Categories

Accounting
Beauty
Business
Career
Cars and Trucks
Computers
Culture and Society
Environment
Family
Finance
Fitness
Food and Drink
Free Tools and Resources
Health
Hobbies
Home
Humor
Inspirational/Motivation
Internet
Internet Marketing
Legal
Marketing
Men
Music
Personal Development
Pets and Animals
Politics
Psychology
Publishing
Recreation and Leisure
Relationships
Religion and Spiritualit
Root Category
Science
Speaking
Technology
Women
Writing
 
Stats
Total Articles: 886,158
Total Authors: 151,791
Total Downloads: 19,356,238


Newest Member
Malka Ladick

Text Ad's


   

Superior quality Medical wear



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://article2008.com/rss.php?rss=302
By : james snv    29 or more times read
Submitted 2010-03-16 06:28:17

Medical wear includes the shirts and trousers or gowns used by nurses, surgeons, and additional operating room personnel when wearing them for surgery. Today, medical wear consists of a short-sleeve shirt and pants, or even long sleeve leisure shirts to protect arms. It may also include a waist-length long-sleeved jacket with no lapels and stockinet cuffs, known as a warm up jacket. They are designed to be easy and comfortable with negligible places for grime to hide, easy to wash, and inexpensive to replace if damaged or tainted irreparably.

Practically each and every one of patient care personnel wear some form of medical wear while on job. Medical wear worn in surgery is more or less at all times colored solid light green, light blue or a light green-blue shade. In most of Europe, nurses and midwives mostly wear a uniform of tunic and trousers or a dress. Surgical medical wear is seldom owned by the wearer due to concerns about home laundering and hygiene issues.

Non-surgical medical wear arrive in a broader selection of colors and patterns, vary from professional garments to custom made men’s clothing, whether by money-making uniform companies or by home-sewing using commercially available printed patterns. A number of hospitals use medical wear color to make a distinction between patient care departments (i.e. Surgery, Labor and Delivery, Emergency, etc.) or between licensed patient care personnel (nurses, radiological technicians, respiratory and physical therapists, etc), unlicensed assistive personnel, and non-patient care support staff (i.e. portering, dietary, unit clerks, etc.). Hospitals may also extend the practice to differentiate non-staff members/visitors.

Doctors have a propensity to wear casual clothes with a white coat except for the time of surgery. In the UK, all NHS hospital trusts have strict clothing policies, and many of these particularly ban the wearing of the iconic white coat for medical staff, owing to infection control concerns. This has meant that more than a few hospitals around the UK have opted for medical wear for staff, especially in Accident and Emergency departments.

Medical wear hats or caps have graduated from being functional to being a customizable accessory both in the operating room and outside. Prior to the antiseptic focus of the 40's, medical wear hats were not considered essential to surgery. In the forties and fifties, as a hygienic focus swept the industry, these hats became standard wear to help protect patients from contaminants in hair. These hats have been, and continue to be distributed by Group purchasing organizations who supply hospitals with most equipment.
Author Resource:- "James Says:"If you are looking for medical wear, then look no further. basicmensclothing is the best among all in the industry for Long Sleeve Leisure Shirt.
Article From Article2008.com

 

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
New Members
select
Sign up
select
learn more
Affiliate Sign in
Affiliate Sign In
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites