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Feb 11, 2010
Medical Scrubs Collection offers a full selection of medical scrubs at discounted prices so if you are looking for cheap medicals scrubs they are the place to go. From Cherokee scrubs to Dickies Scrubs to Grey's Anatomy Scrubs they are your scrub store.

Function
Scrubs are meant to be comfortable enough that the dental assistant can move around as needed. That's why scrubs are made of either 100 percent cotton or a poly/cotton mix. The cotton serves another purpose, as it is better at absorbing sweat than any other fiber. This keeps the dental assistant as comfortable in the late afternoon as he is in the early morning hours. The scrubs are also made loose so they don't restrict any body movements.
Types
A dental assistant can purchase one of two types of scrubs. There are the usual scrubs that must be washed after each wear; then there are disposable scrubs. Disposable scrubs are mostly used when surgery is being performed, because some blood may get on them. There are also two types of regular-wear scrubs: The first type is a cross-stitch uniform and the second is a front-button uniform. After the dental assistant picks out the type of scrubs she plans on wearing, she must then pick out the pattern. There are plain-colored scrubs, scrubs with teeth all over them, and scrubs that depict cartoon characters to catch the interest of the youngest patients.
Size
Scrubs aren't usually sold in numbered sizes. This is because the waists are stretchy and not buttoned. Most scrubs come in small, medium, large and extra large. Many sites sell scrubs that are extra extra large, and even extra extra extra large. These larger garments, however, carry an additional fee. Medical Scrubs Collection offers a full selection of medical scrubs at discounted prices so if you are looking for cheap medicals scrubs they are the place to go. From Cherokee scrubs to Dickies Scrubs to Grey's Anatomy Scrubs they are your scrub store.

Posted at 08:19 pm by medical
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Dec 23, 2009
Maternity Nurse

Maternity nurses care for and educate women and families expecting a baby. When a woman goes into labor, a nurse checks her vital signs, determines how far along she is in labor, settles her in a room and assists the doctor or midwife in delivery. Maternity nurses also can administer induction medication and pain medication, but it's up to a trained anesthetist to give an epidural. Training to become a maternity nurse is very similar to training for any other nursing job. Maternity nurses care for and educate women and families expecting a baby. When a woman goes into labor, a nurse checks her vital signs, determines how far along she is in labor, settles her in a room and assists the doctor or midwife in delivery. Maternity nurses also can administer induction medication and pain medication, but it's up to a trained anesthetist to give an epidural. Training to become a maternity nurse is very similar to training for any other nursing job.

Medical Scrubs Collection offers a full selection of medical scrubs at discounted prices so if you are looking for cheap medicals scrubs they are the place to go. From Cherokee scrubs to Dickies Scrubs to Grey's Anatomy Scrubs they are your scrub store.

Are you looking for a Baby nurse in nyc, ?  There is a great baby nurse agency  called Caring Baby Nurses. They have baby nurses in new York city, you can get a nyc baby nurse or  baby nurse nyc,to do your newborn baby nurse.  This is a great baby nurse agency nyc

Posted at 09:24 am by medical
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Oct 15, 2009
Becoming a Nurse - RN or LPN?

There are two kinds of nursing designations in America. The one most people are familiar with is the Registered Nurse, or RN. The other one is the Licensed Practical Nurse, or LPN. LPNs in some states are known as Licensed Vocational Nurses, or LVNs. (For all practical purposes, LPN is pretty much the same as LVN, and we’ll use LPN to refer to both, as it‘s more common.) RN is the more advanced designation, as it takes two to four years of study to earn. Some hospitals have diploma programs where they train people for nursing on the job. This sort of training used to be a lot more widespread, but these days most people become a registered nurse by getting an Associates Degree in Nursing, or a Bachelor of Science in Nursing. The associates degree takes two years to earn, while the bachelor’s program usually runs four years. Of course, you’ll need a high school diploma or GED in order to enroll; and you may be required to take and pass the National League for Nursing Exam before being accepted. There are special programs at some schools where people who already have a bachelor’s degree can get a Nursing degree in a shorter period of time, without having to take the entire course of study.

To qualify as a registered nurse, once a person graduates with either degree, they must then pass the national exam for registered nurses, the NCLEX-RN. NCLEX stands for National Council Licensure Examination. Once a person has their degree in nursing, and has passed the NCLEX-RN, they’re qualified to practice as a registered nurse. To become an LPN usually only takes a year of study, and a degree is not required, although a diploma or certificate will be issued. Some hospitals offer LPN training, and there are many schools across the country where a person can get LPN training. Once they‘ve graduated from the training program, the prospective nurse will need to pass the NCLEX-PN (Practical Nurse) test before being certified. That’s the difference in the educational paths to becoming either an RN or an LPN. Of course, most nursing courses of study, whether LPN or RN, are usually somewhat selective, and you’ll have to demonstrate some aptitude for nursing skills and their related academic courses before being accepted. And once you’ve got your diploma or degree, you’ll want to spend some time preparing for the licensing test. The NCLEX is quite a challenge no matter which version you’re taking, and it will require a good grasp of nursing concepts, and a lot of study time in order to pass. A good study guide is essential to preparing for either version of the NCLEX.

Medical Scrubs Collection offers a full selection of medical scrubs at discounted prices so if you are looking for cheap medicals scrubs they are the place to go. From Cherokee scrubs to Dickies Scrubs to Grey's Anatomy Scrubs they are your scrub store.

Posted at 08:23 am by medical
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Aug 25, 2009
Nursing Scrubs

I remember the days when I was a kid, I was often sick.  Hence I had to visit the hospital a number of times with my Mum. Sometimes …despite being sick, I would act fine, so that I could avoid going to hospital. As a kid I thought that place looked creepy.
 I wondered how the Doctor, the nurse and the people who worked there could actually work in such a gloomy place.  No matter how hard Mum explained, I never liked going there, even if it was for a while.
Now I take my daughter to a hospital when she is sick. But, I find her a lot happy when she is there.
And this tells me the change that has come in the atmosphere that once I feared.
Those places seem to have got complete change. The Doctors and the nurses look a lot pleasing now. The other staff members also look happy and satisfied. The patients too look relaxed. I wonder what change is this.
The one thing that catches my eyes is the scrubs they were. I had found ‘that’ dress of my nurse very boring.
Nursing scrubs are better and beautiful today. They are comfortable and seems like were made rightly for the wearer. No longer is the white or the green, the only color, pink, blue red , orange, plum, sage, salsa and whole lot of new colors, as I can see has come to be replace the nurse’s dress. The vibrant colors make me feel relieved.
The quality too looks good; the design looks nice on who ever wears it,
The shoes too are no longer white. I see a lot beautiful and comfortable shoes.
The medical uniforms look a lot exciting ……………….
I guess, the luxury of comfort and flexibility, add to it, the satisfaction of one’s taste in designs and styles, is what makes this place full of liveliness.
I am told that they get their scrubs from famous medical clothing lines, like the Dickies, Landau, Cherokee, Baby Phat Scrub, Urbane S, and a few others. They tell me that they are comfortable and happy in it.
And I can only wish my nurses too had worn these.



Today nurses need not wear ‘that’ dull and boring dress that was either in white or in pale green, they have a lot of choices, to look beautiful and relaxed.
No one would have thought that dressing in this field would have been so exciting.

Clothing lines like the Dickies, Urbane S, Landau, Cherokee and others, come out with new and innovative designs, they get to choose from a collection of wide variety of combinations. They get offered with style and prints for every season. They choose as they desire.

Internet has made it possible for them to sift through a lot of choices, and look what each sites has to offer, to get what they want in a very short duration. They are happy because they are satisfied.
Medical Scrubs Collection offers a full selection of medical scrubs at discounted prices so if you are looking for cheap medicals scrubs they are the place to go. From Cherokee scrubs to Dickies Scrubs to Grey's Anatomy Scrubs they are your scrub store.

Posted at 07:46 pm by medical
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Aug 2, 2009
History of Scrubs

The use of a special medical uniform for surgical and other procedures was not normal practice until the early part of the twentieth century. Surgical procedures often took place in large amphitheatres where medical students could observe the operations being carried out by the physicians. In most cases the surgeons wore everyday street clothing during the procedure, except sometimes the surgeons donned butchers' aprons to protect their clothes. In those days the importance of sterility was not recognized, so instruments and supplies were not commonly sterilized. The sutures used for closing wounds were usually just gut string sewn with a normal sewing needle which was reused over and over. Even the gauze employed to cover the wound was often nothing more than remnants taken from cotton mill floors.

The sea change in medical dress came after the Spanish flu pandemic in 1918 in which twenty million people died; together with the rise of Lister's theory of antisepsis. The beginning of special medical dress was surgeons and other medical personnel wearing masks, which was done more to protect the physician from the patient's illness rather than to protect the patient. At this time too heavy rubber gloves began to be used by medical staffers to protect themselves from harsh chemicals used in cleaning the medical environment. By the nineteen forties, with the awareness of how wounds can become infected and of the need to have a sanitary environment in the operating room, medical staff professionals began wearing white uniforms during surgery and routinely in their daily rounds.

The first medical scrubs in wide use were white drapes or gowns which covered the surgeon and medical assistants during operations. The white colored fabrics used in these scrubs symbolized cleanliness. However, it was soon found that white clothing worn against a background of white sheets and a white surgical environment often caused eyestrain. It was in the nineteen fifties and sixties that medical and dental scrubs, usually of a green or blue color which is more restful to the eyes and also doesn't show bloodstains as readily, came into widespread use. Soon designers of medical apparel began experimenting with different colors and styles of scrubs, and by the nineteen eighties it was possible for medical professionals to select from a wide array of colors and fashionable designs. Today's medical scrubs range from cheap nursing scrubs to elegantly designed coordinated outfits suitable for street wear; and from short sleeved, V neck shirts with drawstring pants to formal jackets and gowns. Fabrics used for medical scrubs come in a wide range of solid colors, and feature bright prints (which are popular among medical professionals who work with children). Durable fabrics, which are easy to clean, are among the most popular.

So, if you are a physician or nurse, take pride in the medical uniform which tells all the world that you are a professional in your field. Medical and dental scrubs originated in response to awareness of the need for sterile and sanitary conditions in the medical environment, but they have come to be the hallmark of a profession and a sign of respect. When it comes to high-fashion cheap nursing scrubs, remember that Scrubs & Beyond has the biggest selection available online.

 Medical Scrubs Collection offers a full selection of medical scrubs at discounted prices so if you are looking for cheap medicals scrubs they are the place to go. From Cherokee scrubs to Dickies Scrubs to Grey's Anatomy Scrubs they are your scrub store.

Posted at 06:51 pm by medical
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Jul 14, 2009
Why Do Doctors Wear Green Or Blue Scrubs?

Scrubs used to be white — the color of cleanliness. Then in the early 20th century, one influential doctor switched to green because he thought it would be easier on a surgeon’s eyes, according to an article in a 1998 issue of Today’s Surgical Nurse. Although it is hard to confirm whether green scrubs became popular for this reason, green may be especially well-suited to help doctors see better in the operating room because it is the opposite of red on the color wheel.

Green could help physicians see better for two reasons. First, looking at blue or green can refresh a doctor’s vision of red things, including the bloody innards of a patient during surgery. The brain interprets colors relative to each other. If a surgeon stares at something that’s red and pink, he becomes desensitized to it. The red signal in the brain actually fades, which could make it harder to see the nuances of the human body. Looking at something green from time to time can keep someone’s eyes more sensitive to variations in red, according to John Werner, a psychologist who studies vision at the University of California, Davis.

Second, such deep focus on red, red, red can lead to distracting green illusions on white surfaces. These funky green ghosts could appear if a doctor shifts his gaze from reddish body tissue to something white, like a surgical drape or an anesthesiologist’s alabaster outfit. A green illusion of the patient’s red insides may appear on the white background. (You can try out this “after effect” illusion yourself.) The distracting image would follow the surgeon’s gaze wherever he looks, similar to the floating spots we see after a camera flash.

The phenomenon occurs because white light contains all the colors of the rainbow, including both red and green. But the red pathway is still tired out, so the red versus green pathway in the brain signals “green.”

However, if a doctor looks at green or blue scrubs instead of white ones, these disturbing ghosts will blend right in and not become a distraction, according to Paola Bressan, who researches visual illusions at the University of Padova in Italy.

So, although doctors trot down the street these days in a rainbow of patterned and colored scrubs, green may be a doctor’s best bet.

Medical Scrubs Collection offers a full selection of medical scrubs at discounted prices so if you are looking for cheap medicals scrubs they are the place to go. From Cherokee scrubs to Dickies Scrubs to Grey's Anatomy Scrubs they are your scrub store.

 

Posted at 09:05 pm by medical
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Jul 1, 2009
History of surgical attire


The University of Maryland Shock Trauma Team, wearing scrubs.In contrast to the uniforms long required of nurses, surgeons did not wear any kind of specialized garments until well into the 20th century. Surgical procedures were conducted in an operating theater. The surgeon wore his street clothes, with perhaps a butcher's apron to protect his clothing from blood stains, and he operated bare-handed with non-sterile instruments and supplies. (Gut and silk sutures were sold as open strands with reusable, hand-threaded needles; packing gauze was made of sweepings from the floors of cotton mills.) In contrast to today's concept of surgery as a profession that emphasizes cleanliness and conscientiousness, at the beginning of the 20th century the mark of a busy and successful surgeon was the profusion of blood and fluids on his clothes.[citation needed]

With the "Spanish flu" pandemic of 1918 and the growing medical interest in Lister's antiseptic theory, some surgeons began wearing cotton gauze masks in surgery—however, this was not to protect the patient from intra-operative infection, but to protect the surgeon from the patient's diseases. Around the same time, operating theatre staff began wearing heavy rubber gloves to protect their hands from the solutions used to clean the room and equipment, a practice surgeons grudgingly adopted.

By the 1940s, advances in surgical antisepsis (now called aseptic technique) and the science of wound infection led to the adoption of antiseptic drapes and gowns for operating room ("OR") use. Instruments, supplies and dressings were routinely sterilized by exposure to either high-pressure steam or ethylene oxide (EtO) gas.

Originally, operating room attire was white to emphasize cleanliness. However, the combination of bright operating lights and an all-white environment led to eyestrain for the surgeon and staff. By the 1950s and 1960s, most hospitals had abandoned white operating room apparel in favor of various shades of green, which provided a high-contrast environment, reduced eye fatigue, and made bright red blood splashes less conspicuous.

 
Operating staff in an operating room, wearing scrubs.By the 1970s, surgical attire had largely reached its modern state: a short-sleeve V-necked shirt and drawstring pants or a short-sleeve calf-length dress, made of green cotton or cotton/polyester blend. Over this was worn a tie-back or bouffant-style cloth cap, a gauze or synthetic textile mask, a cloth or synthetic surgical gown, latex gloves and supportive closed-toe shoes. This uniform was originally known as "surgical greens" because of its color, but came to be called "scrubs" because it was worn in a "scrubbed" environment.

Medical Scrubs Collection offers a full selection of medical scrubs at discounted prices so if you are looking for cheap medicals scrubs they are the place to go. From Cherokee scrubs to Dickies Scrubs to Grey's Anatomy Scrubs they are your scrub store.

 

Posted at 07:15 pm by medical
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Jun 22, 2009
What Should I Consider when Buying Nursing Scrubs?

If you are considering buying nursing scrubs, there is a strong likelihood that you currently are or will soon be working in the medical field. Though there are other situations that warrant the purchase of nursing scrubs, such as cosmetology school, which often requires students to wear scrubs as a uniform, most people in the market for buying nursing scrubs are current or future employees in a medical setting.

The first thing to consider when buying nursing scrubs is any requirements mandated by either your employee or your school or training facility. Your employer may require buying nursing scrubs of certain colors or may not allow patterns. This is especially true in private doctor and dentists offices where employees are often all required to wear the same color. Similarly, many schools that offer training in various medical fields require all white scrubs. If you are restricted to certain colors, make sure you adhere to the requirements.

If you are restricted to only white, be sure to check the care label before buying nursing scrubs. You might want to consider buying only scrubs that are safe to bleach. Also be sure to check the fabric label and buy appropriate sizes if the fabric is likely to shrink. Most nursing scrubs don’t require ironing if they are hung up straight out of the dryer.

If there are no restrictions on color or pattern, then buying nursing scrubs can be fun. Modern designs and manufacturers provide a plethora of patterns, colors, and designs to choose from. Before buying nursing scrubs, consider your current or future work environment while shopping. If you are or will be working in a children’s hospital or a pediatrician’s office, then consider buying fun prints and bright colors. You might even consider buying nursing scrubs in fun prints even if you don’t work with children. Having a variety of nursing scrubs on hand can help alleviate the ho-hum aspect of your mandated wardrobe.

Medical Scrubs Collection offers a full selection of medical scrubs at discounted prices so if you are looking for cheap medicals crubs they are the place to go. From Cherokee scrubs to Dickies Scrubs to Grey's Anatomy Scrubs they are your scrub store.

 

Posted at 06:29 pm by medical
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Jun 18, 2009
Recruitment Incentives

The nursing shortage offers extremely advantageous opportunities for current nurses earning a higher degree and for nursing students preparing to enter the workforce. Many hospitals are now offering incentive programs such as:

Recruitment bonuses (ranging anywhere from $2,000 to $20,000)
Relocation assistance
Housing assistance
Day care
Tuition repayment
These recruitment incentives go to nurses who accept a position at their facility and agree to a set work commitment. Be sure to discuss these types of incentives when you are applying for your next job to make sure you are earning as much as you can.

Does Certification Pay?
Yes! Ask any nurse about the rewards of becoming certified in a nursing specialty and you’ll never hear a hint of regret. Certification brings much more than personal pride. You'll gain prestige from meeting nationally recognized standards in a specialty and added knowledge to build your confidence in practice and in dealings with other health care professionals.

Besides helping improve your sense of self, certification identifies you as a nurse who has met rigorous practice and continuing education requirements in your specialty. Patients will benefit from your expertise and employers will go out of their way to hire you and keep you happy.

Plus, certification brings salary benefits. The seventh annual nationwide survey from Nursing2006 shows that nurses who have attained higher education and specialty certifications are making more money. Over 1,100 nurses responded to the salary survey that was initially published in January 2006. Among all nurses, those who reported being certified in a specialty made $9,200 more annually than nurses who weren't certified.
Medical Scrubs Collection offers a full selection of medical scrubs at discounted prices so if you are looking for cheap medicals crubs they are the place to go. From Cherokee scrubs to Dickies Scrubs to Grey's Anatomy Scrubs they are your scrub store

Posted at 05:44 pm by medical
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