Showing posts with label nursing uniforms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nursing uniforms. Show all posts

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Disease Contamination at Hospitals are Possibly Caused by Scrubs Cheap and Nursing Uniforms


Ever heard of MRSA or methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus?
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is a type or strain of staph bacteria that does not respond to some antibiotics commonly used to treat staph infections. This dangerous antibiotic-resistant infection has plagued hospitals for years. Sadly, nurses and doctors are the ideal agents of these superbugs as they go along their hospital duties. The harmful pathogens, including MRSA, collect in their nursing uniforms or scrubs cheap and they may pass the danger to other patients, to their families or even their colleagues.
Previous research and studies have found that nurses’ scrubs uniforms are often contaminated. In 1969, Staphylococcus aureus was found by British researches on nurses uniforms. Some British researchers on 1983 also reported contamination of cotton gowns and in 2001 another team reported finding Staphylococcus aureus, Clostridium difficile and vancomycin-resistant enterococci on nursing uniforms. Now, a recent study by Israeli scientists, led by Yonit Wiener-Well, M.D., from the Shaare Zedek Medical Center in Jerusalem, showed that medical scrubs cheap and nursing uniforms are contaminated by harmful pathogens including MRSA or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. The study which was published in the September issue of the American Journal of Infection Control reported that 65 % of the hospital nurses uniforms and 60% of the doctors’ uniforms tested positive for potentially dangerous bacteria.
So, what do you think? Are nursing uniforms and scrubs cheap the culprit for the contamination of disease from the hospitals to our community? And if this is true, what should hospitals do in order to prevent the said contamination?

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

The July Effect on Hospitals: Truth or Myth?


"Avoid hospitals in July like the plague."
If you can, stay out of the hospital during the summer especially July. That's the month when medical students become interns, interns become residents, and residents become fellows and full-fledged doctors. In other words, some of the staff at any given teaching hospital is new on the job.
Summer hospital horror stories aren't just medical lore: The adjusted mortality rate rises 4% in July and August for the average major teaching hospital, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research. That means 8 to 14 more deaths occur at major teaching hospitals than would normally without the turnover.
Another scheduling tip: Try to book surgeries first thing in the morning and preferably early in the week when doctors are at their best and before schedules get backed up.

July is the 7th month of the year in the Julian and Gregorian Calendars and one of seven months with the length of 31 days. It is, on average, the warmest month in most of the Northern hemisphere and the coldest month in much of the Southern hemisphere. July's birthstone is the ruby which symbolizes contentment. Yet, hospitals and men and women in lab coats, I guess will never be contented on the month of July since in this month the most experienced medical residents graduate leave hospitals, just as newly minted M.D.s arrive to start caring for their first patients. This trend on July month was confirmed by a new research taking the first comprehensive look at death rates and complications occurring in hospitals throughout the year.

According to the team lead by Dr. John Young of the University of California, San Francisco, at teaching hospitals responsible for training new doctors, patient death rates increase while efficiency in patient care decreases during the month of July. In these hospitals, admitted patients serve as case studies used to educate future physicians on the best way to provide care; medical residents spend anywhere from three to six years as doctors-in-training, shadowing more experienced physicians as they learn how to diagnose and treat patients.
Furthermore, according to Time.com:
In the month of July the most experienced residents graduate, leaving behind those who haven't logged as many hours in the clinic or in patient wards. The older residents' departure also coincides with the entry of a new class of freshman residents — new doctors who are taking on the responsibility of patient care for the first time.
Not surprisingly, the changeover can disrupt patient care in hospitals, increasing complications from surgery and boosting medical error rates, particularly as new doctors who are unfamiliar with a hospital's pharmacy system mistakenly prescribe wrong doses of medications. The shift also decreases efficiency, with more unneeded or duplicate tests being ordered and patients being kept in the hospital longer than necessary.
However another article denied this July effect but instead wrote that;

"Key to the understanding that paper, however, is grasping that its conclusions apply solely to teaching hospitals, institutions where residents and interns treat patients as part of their medical training. It's therefore not true that all hospitals become a bit more dangerous in July. It's also not true that all teaching hospitals experience this decline.
Well, as for me, I guess death rate and bad patient care of medical professionals and practitioners wearing lab coats and nursing uniforms doesn't depend on a particular month but on the quality of service they give to their patients. No matter what month, or when and where, doctors and nurses in nursing uniforms must be careful in whatever they are doing with their patients.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Are Medical Scrubs that Essential?

Man looks at the outside appearance but God looks at the heart....



There are times that I wonder if janitors, teachers, pilots, physicians and nurses really need uniforms. We often see them in their uniforms and we implied and know for an instance who they are and what are their jobs through their clothes and dress. However did it occur to our mind if their uniforms are the criteria for a better service?


Yesterday I went to the hospital and I happened to noticed that all the nursing staffs and medical personnel there are wearing hospital uniforms and nursing uniforms. Then suddenly I wonder if there is really a need for them to wear their uniforms. Whew! (Just reflecting things out there..hmm..hmm..)


There are actually so many nursing forums who are always debating for what is the appropriate dress code for nurses; choosing between the white nursing uniforms and the solid medical scrubs and print scrubs.

Is there really a need for them to debate over their appearance instead of giving themselves into service with patients? As for me I'm not after the form of these nurses who wear Cherokee scrub tops or Dickies scrub tops, or even these doctors in Meta Uniforms, White Swan Fundamental Scrubs or even in white lab coats. All that matters to me is the spirit of service they are giving to their patients and on how dedicated they are to people. Hospitals and health care need nurses and physicians who are not vain about how they look but these institutions need someone who have the heart to serve and heal those sick.