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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Brits ban white smocks, ties for hospital doctors

Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

LONDON – British hospitals are banning neckties, long sleeves and jewelry for doctors – and their traditional white coats – in an effort to stop the spread of deadly hospital-borne infections, according to new rules published Monday.

Hospital dress codes typically urge doctors to look professional, which, for male practitioners, has usually meant wearing a tie. But as concern over hospital-borne infections has intensified, doctors are taking a closer look at their clothing.

“Ties are rarely laundered but worn daily,” the Department of Health said in a statement.

“They perform no beneficial function in patient care and have been shown to be colonized by pathogens.”

The new regulations taking effect next year mean an end to doctors’ traditional long-sleeved white coats, Health Secretary Alan Johnson said. Fake nails, jewelry and watches, which the department warned could harbor germs, are also out.

Johnson said the “bare below the elbows” dress code would help prevent the spread of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, the deadly bacteria resistant to nearly every available antibiotic.

Popularly known as a “superbug,” MRSA accounts for more than 40 percent of in-hospital blood infections in Britain.

A 2004 study of doctors’ neckties at a New York hospital found nearly half of them carried at least one species of infectious microbe.