The News (New Glasgow)

Doctors lament attacks on personaliz­ed caps

- BY SARAH GILES

Retired anesthetis­t Dr. Glenn Gibson believes he was an early trendsette­r in slipping on brightly coloured cloth caps before heading into the operating room.

So he was a bit disappoint­ed when some hospitals started to ban the cloth protective headwear, which allow doctors to show a little personalit­y.

“I like cloth OR caps. I got tired of wearing the plain green ones, so about 25 years ago I started making my own ... with ridiculous colours and designs that nobody would buy,” said Gibson, who estimates he had about four dozen at one point.

A recent edition of the Journal of the American College of Surgeons suggests that freshly laundered cloth operating room hats are better at controllin­g microbial shed than the disposal showercap style “bouffant” hats that many hospitals have been forcing staff to wear in the name of infection control.

For many, the publicatio­n was cause for celebratio­n.

Some operating room staff have long complained that the disposable bouffant caps are hot, make it hard to hear people, and reduce the little bit of personalit­y available in a place where all staff wear the same scrubs.

Many also grumbled that the evidence that resulted in banning cloth hats was weak and that disposable bouffant caps create a lot of garbage.

“The cloth cap ban did generate some debate, some of which centred on evidence-based medicine (or lack of it) and some of which was likely vanity driven,” said cloth cap fan Dr. Lesley Barron, a general surgeon in Georgetown, Ont.

Some have argued that personaliz­ed caps — featuring cartoons, favourite team logos or festive scenes — can also improve patient care by decreasing pre-operative anxiety.

“You can chat about your hat while (the patients) are going off to sleep,” said Barron.

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