白大褂要正好的還是偏大的?

時間 2021-05-06 01:06:25

1樓:朱喵

我不是醫生,但是實驗室做實驗要穿白大褂,而且一年四季就一件,從不換洗。最早八月入學的時候選了一件合身的,結果十一二月天冷了衣服穿多了,穿白大褂就太緊了。所以親身經歷告訴我,要選偏大一點的。

2樓:岸上1988

正好的。一開始一直覺得大一點裡邊可以套衣服防止冷,但是後來發現正好的穿上更得體,偏大一點看起來就鬆鬆垮垮,本人建議正好的。

3樓:鵝城衙門小保安

還是學生,就不談工作後的著裝了。

在學校我一般穿偏小的,自己做乙個收腰墊肩,熨平了。如果可以,我還想在加上袖口飾帶和領線。

內套同色系上下衣,配小皮靴。

這樣比較顯身材也時尚,看上去酷酷的。

4樓:呼吸工程師老王

我朋友,是個醫生。

依稀記得他早些年的時候,跟他師傅坐門診,每天都打扮的精精神神,衣服板板正正,下巴上不放過乙個鬍子茬。

不管前一天我們玩到多晚,他總是第二天十分精緻地出現在門診。

後來他去了療區,因為要開始值班,我們出去玩的次數就少了。

有一次路過醫院,我尋思過去看看他。

這個鬍子拉茬雙目無神一副被玩壞了的樣子的兄弟是誰啊?

哦是我兄弟。

他不再精緻了,長袖白大褂像風衣一樣穿著,胸前兜裡插著兩根筆,其他的兜鼓鼓囊囊的沒看清。

判若兩人!

後面再一起吃飯的時候有聊過他當時的前後形象差距,我朋友喝了一口酒,悠悠的說。

有個能穿的就行了,哪那麼多講究

5樓:上善若水

夏季正好就行,春秋冬季得看醫院條件,如果供暖很好,不需要外出會診,隨車出診之類的可以要正好的,否則得考慮裡面加衣服,還有女性有沒有生孩子的可能等

6樓:林中水滴

當然要偏!大!的!

因為你的白大褂除了裝下你瘦小的身軀,還要在口袋裡裝聽診器、叩診錘、棉籤,備用紗布、各種筆、各種隨手塞進去的單子,哦,還有手機、耳機、充電寶……

而且你有沒有在冬天的半夜穿越大半夜醫院會診的經歷,白大褂裡得套個棉襖吧……

而且醫院的白大褂都是統一清洗消毒,相信我,消毒的力度兩次就能把L碼變成S

一定一定要大號的啊

7樓:Tolling Bell

來自 10.1001/virtualmentor.2007.9.4.mhst1-0704.

Physicians dressed themselves in black and were painted in black garb until the late 19th century. Black attire was, and is, considered formal (e.g.

, today's tuxedo). Consequently until about 1900, physicians wore black for their patient interactions since medical encounters were thought of as serious and formal matters. Clergymen also dressed in black, which indicated the solemn nature of their role in encounters with parishioners.

An additional or alternative possibility for the dark garb might be that until the late 19th century seeking medical advice was usually a last resort and frequently a precursor to death. Until the last third of the 1800s, an encounter with a physician rarely benefited the patient. In fact, up to that point, virtually all of "medicine" entailed many worthless cures and much quackery.

Thomas Eakins created what is arguably one of America's greatest paintings in 1875 entitled "The Gross Clinic". It depicts a scene from Jefferson Medical College's amphitheater in Philadelphia showing Dr. Samuel Gross and his assistants—all dressed in black formal attire—performing a leg operation on a young man.

At about the same time, the idea of antisepsis was taking hold in Europe. It was Joseph Lister's contribution that truly moved medicine from home remedies and quackery to the realm of bioscience. For the first time, reproducible results helped researchers better understand how to prevent bacterial contamination.

Remarkably this progression was documented in Eakins' 1889 operating theater masterpiece entitled "The Agnew Clinic" from the University of Pennsylvania. D. Hayes Agnew, MD, can be seen in a white smock, with assistants also wearing white, suggesting that a new sense of cleanliness pervaded the environment.

The patient is swathed in white sheets and the nurse has a white cap. Similarly, an 1889 photograph from the Massachusetts General Hospital archives shows surgeons in short-sleeved white coats over their street clothes.

Shortly after the Agnew painting, the Flexner report (1910) led to the closure of a large number of borderline medical educational institutions and the restructuring of medical education around laboratory science. Coupled with William Osler's 1892 textbook of medicine and Walter Reed's observation of the spread of malaria by mosquitoes during the construction of the Panama Canal, the value of cleanliness and antisepsis was firmly fixed as the core of medical science.

At the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries, when medicine became the truly scientific enterprise we now know, the "whiteness" or "pureness" of medicine became reflected in the garb of physicians and, interestingly, nurses . Up until that time nuns in their black habits functioned as nurses, largely in almshouses. At the turn of the 19th century the black habits of the religious nursing orders became white.

In fact to this day nurses in England are called sisters, because of their religious origins. Our society has carried this symbol of whiteness to the marriage altar where brides traditionally wear white as a symbol of their purity.

A depiction of a physician in a white coat is indeed the symbol of medicine, eclipsing the black bag or the stethoscope . But the image of the white coat has also become so intimidating that pediatricians and psychiatrists generally choose not to wear it in order to reduce anxiety on the part of their patients. The term "white coat syndrome" is used to describe unrepresentative high blood pressure recordings due to a patient's anxiety upon seeing a doctor in a white coat.

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