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How patients perceive scrub color of medical pros | WRAL

CHAPEL HILL – Fourth-year UNC School of Medicine student Casey Hribar, who is also pursuing an MBA at Carolina, led research on patient perceptions associated with scrub color, and published the findings in a JAMA Surgery research letter. The researchers examined whether scrub color is associated with the ability to be perceived as a surgeon and the perception of selected clinician character traits.

Doctors wearing green scrubs were most strongly recognized as surgeons, while black scrubs were not highly thought of; some patients associated black scrubs with death. For more findings, check out MedPageToday, which featured this research, as well. Nurse Scrub

How patients perceive scrub color of medical pros | WRAL

Other authors are Carolyn Quinsey, MD, assistant professor of pediatric neurosurgery, Martin Piazza, MD, a resident in the UNC Department of Neurosurgery, and a former UNC epidemiologist Avinash Chandran, PhD, now at the Datalys Center for Sports Injury, Research and Prevention, Inc. in Indiana.

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How patients perceive scrub color of medical pros | WRAL

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