How to dress in medical school?

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hellocubed

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Im heading to my first year in about 2 weeks, but really dont have any idea what kind of clothes to pack.

How do medical students usually dress during class?

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Today I wore gym shorts, slippers, and a derrick rose shirt
 
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Athletic shorts, t-shirt, tennis shoes.

On days where we practice on standardized patients (ie, clinical skills) I wear a pants, shirt, tie, white coat, tennis shoes.

My dressing style is not the greatest, but I'm comfortable and married, so I'm not trying to impress anyone, except for my wife, of course.

Congrats on starting school.
 
Jeans and t-shirts casual most of the week, business casual + white coat for days when we had SP sessions or Sim center stuff.
 
Im heading to my first year in about 2 weeks, but really dont have any idea what kind of clothes to pack.

How do medical students usually dress during class?

During the orientation week most wear a respectable pair of jeans/kakhis w/ either a polo shirt or a nice t shirt. Think what you would wear on a first date: try to strike that perfect casual balance between looking anal retentive and looking schizophrenic.

After that classes start and assuming your school doesn't have a dress code (*shudder*) 'clothes' rapidly degenerates into pretty much the bare minimum to keep you from getting arrested for indecent exposure. That standard may have been a tad lower than the national average for those of us who went to school in New Orleans. You will need to keep a single shirt/kakhis/tie combo in reserve for occasional days of shadowing, team based learning, fake patients, or whatever.

Somewhere around second year you'll probably stop showing up at all except on test days. Scare yourself by realizing you're only doing laundry twice a month because you're only getting dressed half as often.

Then third year hits you like a dump truck and you'll somehow find yourself standing on wards in an asinine short white coat , kakhis, a shirt, and depending on your clerkship director's preferences, maybe a tie. I strongly recommend investing in respectable looking, stain resistent fabrics that come out of the dryer ready to wear. Ironing is not an acceptable use of your time that year.

Fourth year the coat gets covered with your own unique pins and buttons, to show your individuality, and is then hidden within 5 minutes of your showing up to work, so that you can better pretend to be an actual doctor and not a worthless student. Ties are gone unless its a rotation interview. This is also when you get to find out who bought the clothes you don't need to iron, because no one is ironing their clothes at this point.

Then you graduate. Party naked until residency starts.
 
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Wear the same stuff you wore in college
 
Business casual if patients/standardized patients are involved. Otherwise, clothes. For me, this usually involved a light jacket or sweatshirt of some because our first-year lecture hall could easily be mistaken for a walk-in refrigeration unit. You'll wear scrubs in anatomy, but your school will probably provide those.

Oh, and you might want to bring a pair of old shoes or else sneakers that you can easily throw in the wash if your school doesn't provide those shoe cover things for anatomy.
 
I like to wear a pin stripe suit, a bowler, a handkerchief in my left pocket, and occasionally a monocle.

Seriously, though. Camus was on to something.

"What do I eat in med school?" Cue 200 responses listing generic foods every other person in the United States eats.

"How do I work out in med school?" Cue 50 generic workout plans.

I am eagerly awaiting "How to take showers in medical school?" and "How do I do laundry in medical school?"
 
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I like to wear a pin stripe suit, a bowler, a handkerchief in my left pocket, and occasionally a monocle.

Seriously, though. Camus was on to something.

"What do I eat in med school?" Cue 200 responses listing generic foods every other person in the United States eats.

"How do I work out in med school?" Cue 50 generic workout plans.

I am eagerly awaiting "How to take showers in medical school?" and "How do I do laundry in medical school?"

Not to mention the ever popular "How do I take a dump in medical school?"

You have to have all this down or you'll never make it.
 
Rule #1: cover your giblets
Rule #2: there are no other rules
 
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Don't wear anything that might be considered "slutty", even if it's just a bit above knee lenght jeans shirt and looks casual to you. Some older teachers don't like it and will let you know in front of your whole group.
 
Depends on the school. However, most are casual dress. Sometimes you have to dress up for orientation week(day 1 or so) because you do professional photos. I usually dress just this side of lazy bum. I try to make sure not to wear anything too horrible, because our deans are pretty visible, and I don't want to make a bad impression.
 
Don't wear anything that might be considered "slutty", even if it's just a bit above knee lenght jeans shirt and looks casual to you. Some older teachers don't like it and will let you know in front of your whole group.

I don't know where you go to school.
 
Im heading to my first year in about 2 weeks, but really dont have any idea what kind of clothes to pack.

How do medical students usually dress during class?


This thread could go on for ever with some knuckleheads telling you dress like bum, but:
Bottom line:

In class dress neat an respectable..
Around patients shirt and tie..

End of story!
 
Hugo Boss, Burberry, Armani, and the like
 
[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q0lNO49WBLU[/YOUTUBE]
 
Just curious, but is there anything against dressing professionally everyday? For example: dress pants, dress shirt, tie, dress shoes.
 
Just curious, but is there anything against dressing professionally everyday? For example: dress pants, dress shirt, tie, dress shoes.

... Why? It just makes you look like a tool.
 
I guess the better question is why would you?

...yeah. I imagine that people that expect medical school to be an environment in which you wear a tie to class everyday are going to be disappointed with the reality. With the exception of what the lecturer is blabbing about, it really is no different than undergrad (at least pre-clinically).
 
You people are obssessed with other people's opinions.
 
You people are obssessed with other people's opinions.

WhatDoYouMean_u18chan.jpeg
 
Not to mention the ever popular "How do I take a dump in medical school?"

You have to have all this down or you'll never make it.

do you have to always wipe the seat down with a seat liner or are med school bathrooms relatively clean... i remember in high school kids would pee all over the rolls of tp... like wth!!
 
I don't know, I definitely feel confident and comfortable when I dress professionally. How about business casual; that s, everything I said before, but without the tie? Am I still considered "that guy"?
 
I don't know, I definitely feel confident and comfortable when I dress professionally. How about business casual; that s, everything I said before, but without the tie? Am I still considered "that guy"?

You're in Canada. Things must be different up there
 
Dress with more of a preppy (polo shirts, boat shoes, sport shirts, etc.) style and you will still be able to look nice without ostracizing yourself.
 
just wear whatever you want. T-shirt and jeans, or scrubs everyday telling people you're going to be a surgeon
 
How would it look to work out shirtless in just scrub pants?
 
During the orientation week most wear a respectable pair of jeans/kakhis w/ either a polo shirt or a nice t shirt. Think what you would wear on a first date: try to strike that perfect casual balance between looking anal retentive and looking schizophrenic.

After that classes start and assuming your school doesn't have a dress code (*shudder*) 'clothes' rapidly degenerates into pretty much the bare minimum to keep you from getting arrested for indecent exposure. That standard may have been a tad lower than the national average for those of us who went to school in New Orleans. You will need to keep a single shirt/kakhis/tie combo in reserve for occasional days of shadowing, team based learning, fake patients, or whatever.

Somewhere around second year you'll probably stop showing up at all except on test days. Scare yourself by realizing you're only doing laundry twice a month because you're only getting dressed half as often.

Then third year hits you like a dump truck and you'll somehow find yourself standing on wards in an asinine short white coat , kakhis, a shirt, and depending on your clerkship director's preferences, maybe a tie. I strongly recommend investing in respectable looking, stain resistent fabrics that come out of the dryer ready to wear. Ironing is not an acceptable use of your time that year.

Fourth year the coat gets covered with your own unique pins and buttons, to show your individuality, and is then hidden within 5 minutes of your showing up to work, so that you can better pretend to be an actual doctor and not a worthless student. Ties are gone unless its a rotation interview. This is also when you get to find out who bought the clothes you don't need to iron, because no one is ironing their clothes at this point.

Then you graduate. Party naked until residency starts.

Post of the week. For sure.
 
Dress with more of a preppy (polo shirts, boat shoes, sport shirts, etc.) style and you will still be able to look nice without ostracizing yourself.

That's a good point. A nice poo in exchange for a dress shirt is good.
 
Dress with more of a preppy (polo shirts, boat shoes, sport shirts, etc.) style and you will still be able to look nice without ostracizing yourself.

That's a good point. A nice poo in exchange for a dress shirt is good.

Just make sure to pop dat collar bro

So your classmates no ur fly

I like the poo idea, but only if it's a nice poo

Don't wanna look like diarrhea eh?
 
I miss the days of wearing jeans and a hoodie for several months in a row...


Perrotfish hit the nail on the head, basically.
 
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