Waterloo Region Record

OR doctors lament attacks on cloth caps

A little personalit­y or a hygiene issue: what do you think?

- Dr. Sarah Giles Dr. Sarah Giles is a family/emergency room doctor and a fellow in global journalism at the Munk School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto. The Canadian Press

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

So he was a bit disappoint­ed when some hospitals started to ban the cloth headwear, which lets doctors 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 thinks he once had four dozen.

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 shower-cap 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 it was likely vanity driven,” said cloth cap fan Dr. Lesley Barron, a general surgeon in Georgetown, Ont.

Some argue the personaliz­ed caps — featuring cartoons, favourite team logos, or festive scenes — can also improve patient care by decreasing pre-operative anxiety and worry.

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

But Molly Blake, president of Infection Prevention and Control Canada, is not as enthusiast­ic. She highlighte­d the main caveat of the study: that reusable cloth caps need to be regularly washed.

“The safe and appropriat­e management of scrubs is already challengin­g. … You may have seen health-care workers wearing scrubs — and cloth skull caps — travelling throughout hospitals and then wearing the same into the ORs,” Blake said, adding that the cleaning methods discussed in the study were not “normal practice” in her experience.

She also suggested the study should be replicated in an experiment with a bigger sample size before cloth caps are endorsed.

But not all hospitals banned cloth hats in the first place.

“To be honest, we did not give a great deal of considerat­ion to banning cloth hats, because we felt the evidence wasn’t strong enough to support it,” said Jason Hann, director of surgical and critical care services at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario.

While an individual hospital’s infection control policy might be explicit, the fashion rules about operating room headwear are often more subtle: some feel there are gendered norms and silent expectatio­ns.

“The culture is definitely (cloth) skull caps for boys, bouffants for women,” said Barron.

Though confessing that she finds cloth caps “ugly,” Barron admits they give more room for hair, prevent overheatin­g, and are less likely to create “OR head” — a condition similar to “bed head or “hat head.” While women with short hair often wear cloth caps in the OR, in doing so, they risk gender misidentif­ication.

Family doctor and anesthetis­t Dr. Annie Lu owns several cloth caps with Asian-styled dragon prints, but said, “when I wear them, I get mistaken for a guy by patients sometimes. There seems to be some notion of gender based on the style or design of the cap.”

And though a medical student might be eager to show off a little personalit­y, tradition dictates otherwise.

“It would seem pretentiou­s of a med student to already have custom cloth hats,” warned Dr. Kyle Sue, a family doctor in Arviat, Nunavut. Some surgeons believe students should only wear cloth hats after they have been matched to a surgical specialty for their residency.

Most operating room staff who do wear cloth hats get them from a co-worker who makes them.

After volunteeri­ng in a hospital in the Volta region of Ghana, Montreal nurse Julia Garland decided to start fundraisin­g with handmade cloth hats and has raised over $10,000 to date, enough to fund three separate year-long scholarshi­ps for Ghanaian nurses.

Beyond the print design, there are other ways the hats can be customized: built-in sweatbands can be added, a little extra room for those with ponytails, and reversible fabrics for the indecisive.

Gibson is glad he managed to avoid a cloth cap ban as a surgeon.

“I would have been sad, as I felt the crazy designs on my hats were very helpful with children.”

“I was up to a total of 48 different hats. Every morning it was a tough decision which one to wear, depending on whether the patients were adults or children.”

 ?? GLENN GIBSON, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Brightly-coloured cloth caps can ease patient tension say doctors who wear them. A new study says they’re cleaner than paper hats.
GLENN GIBSON, THE CANADIAN PRESS Brightly-coloured cloth caps can ease patient tension say doctors who wear them. A new study says they’re cleaner than paper hats.

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