What are you guys rockin in the OR?
Anyone else feel a little strange when putting on a bouffant? There's something about it that is a little awkward...
Discuss -- even if you wear a bouffant![]()
I have a theory about this that has yet to be proven wrong. Males who wear the bouffant caps will always give you the old line, "it takes a REAL MAN to wear one of these things."
What they actually mean is, "I don't like to mess up my pretty hair with those surgical caps, so I wear the bouffant and cover up my insecurity about it by insulting the manliness of anybody who doesn't wear one."
Honestly, though, I don't know why the bouffant is so prevalent among anesthesiologists. Maybe because it's easier to take on and off if they are going in and out of the OR area all day? I dunno. I never wear the bouffant unless I am just going to walk quickly through the OR as a shortcut from the PACU to the locker room or something.
Some days those surgical caps can be frustrating, though - like when you have a "bad cap day" where it doesn't ever seem like it's fitting right and is all lopsided on your head. That bugs me. I have a pretty large noggin, and once in a while there will be a box of them that are small for some reason, and they just don't fit on my head right. On those days I sometimes consider going with the bouffant, but then I remember how ridiculous men look in them and just go with the poorly fitting cap.
As someone who started off with a bouffant and switched to the cap, I've seen both sides of this debate. I used to opt for the bouffant because I didn't want to mess up my hair.
Now I go with a cap. I switched for a number of reasons. I care less about hat hair. I realized that I look slightly ridiculous in the bouffant. Some people can pull it off, but I am not one of them. Finally, the custom scrub caps are one of the few things that I can use to individualize my appearance in the OR.
I thought I read somewhere way back about the elastic/rubber band in bouffants leading to hair loss...something like that. Having said that, my hair started thinning long before I started wearing the bouffant. Now I think the bouffant helps me appear to have more hair on top. ha.
Here's a question, though... in your ORs out there, do they still make you wear something to cover your head if you are completely bald? As you can see, I am trying to put as positive a spin on my hair loss as I can.
Here's a question, though... in your ORs out there, do they still make you wear something to cover your head if you are completely bald?
yes. hospital policy with no founded evidence (probably AORN based).
We don't really have a choice. Hospital policy to wear the bouffant (only the eye place stocks the caps). If you wear a custom cap it has to be covered by a disposable bouffant.
I wear the bouffants cuz the paper tie hats always make me sweat and i think it looks kinda gross to always walk around with a band of sweat on the front of your cap. Especially when going out to talk to family after the case, or when doing cases split between the OR and out of OR.
Ok someone has to say it: the bouffant looks horrible on men or women. In Europe (where we have more a sense of style than in the US) i've never seen anybody wear them although they are available.
Even at McDonald they don't wear them.
So wear it if you want but you'll look stupid.
My circulator had a flame scrub cap on today, and she didn't get the Scrubs reference either. Sigh.haha yeah i was waiting for the todd reference too. my attending had a flame cap and i told him he reminded me of the todd...he didn't get it.
Either way, I look good in spite of my bouffant.
That's what you think 😉
We don't really have a choice. Hospital policy to wear the bouffant (only the eye place stocks the caps). If you wear a custom cap it has to be covered by a disposable bouffant.
Yep, that's how it came about here. Ridiculous.yes. hospital policy with no founded evidence (probably AORN based).
I'd love to see that article, if (in fact) this is truly an "AORN" mandate. If so, why don't we have it universally adopted?
Good evidence? Bad evidence? Irrelevant evidence? No evidence?
In the meantime, smells like more completely f**king stupid bullsh*t that nurses seem to worry about and think is important, though.
-copro
I'd love to see that article, if (in fact) this is truly an "AORN" mandate. If so, why don't we have it universally adopted?
Good evidence? Bad evidence? Irrelevant evidence? No evidence?
In the meantime, smells like more completely f**king stupid bullsh*t that nurses seem to worry about and think is important, though.
-copro
the only thing i could find on the AORN site was "recommendations", and nothing was specific to caps.
perhaps something about baldys shedding skin cells causing massive infections, but i highly doubt it. especially since they (skin cells) don't typically "jump" forward over the drapes. unless of course headbanging is involved.
We have an ortho attending, who when he's in a hurry will just grab a shoe cover and put it on his head...and not those bouffant like shoe covers, but the firmer paper like shoe covers with the sneaker like treads on the bottom. Hilarious!
Do this and see how long it takes for an "administrator" to say something to you. When they tell you that you can't do that, tell them that this is the way you prefer to wear it. Then, when they persist, ask them for an evidence-based article that explains why you can't. What's even better is if you can get 20-30 of your peers to do the same thing.
Post whatever you got. I'd love to shred anything published by AORN on this subject.
I might have told this story before...
There is a male circulator at our hospital, bald as a cue ball, who is forced to wear a cap on his head. He also goes "commando" under his scrubs (don't ask me how I know this... I have not personally confirmed that to be fact). What is missing on top of his head is proudly and copiously displayed at the top of his v-neck in his scrubs. That's right, he's got so much friggin' salt-and-pepper chest hair hanging out over his scrub top that it make's Jay Leno's head look like Mr. Clean.
No one says a goddamn thing to him about it.
My thoughts from a previous thread on the subject:

there was an orthopedic attending who had the HAIRIEST nostrils ever, and he would wear his face mask to cover his mouth, but his hairy nose would overhang the mask --- i swear every time he took a breath through his nose, a few nostril hairs would fly into the surgical field....
did an RN EVER say anything to him....nope...
i take my surgical cap off for 2 seconds when i am leaning against the wall (far from the surgical field) to re-arrange it (it is all about making the crease at the right level so it doesn't look to goofy), and I get scolded... what the???
My head is so large that even with folding the surgical cap all the way down my hair still sticks out.

This might be a silly question, but for med students on a surgical rotation, are we "expected" to wear one over the other? I've done some OR shadowing this summer (between M1 and M2) and noticed that many of the residents have blue surgical caps of some sort, and the attendings all do as well. The nurses tend to wear the bouffants, and I was handed one my first day so I went with that since then.
ummmmmmmmm Terrance....what color is the wiiiiind?those "hats" remind me of Terrance and Philip.