Surgical Attire – A Matter of Preference or Evidence?

Authors

  • Lisa Spruce

Keywords:

surgical attire, surgical site infection, patient safety, evidence-based practice

Abstract

Surgical attire can be an emotional and controversial topic among health care providers. The reality, however, is that exposing perioperative patients to the skin and hair of the perioperative team members may be putting patients at risk for a surgical site infection.

Author Biography

Lisa Spruce

Lisa Spruce, DNP, RN, CNS-CP, CNOR, ACNS, ACNP, FAAN presented on this topic at the 2015 ORNAC National Conference in Edmonton, AB.

Dr. Spruce is the Director of Evidence-based Perioperative Practice for the Association of periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN). She is responsible for the overall leadership, development, evaluation and maintenance of the products, services, and standards of practice developed by AORN’s Nursing Practice Team. She is also the author of AORN Journal’s highly popular Back to Basics series.

Dr. Spruce received her Masters of Nursing as well as her Doctorate of Nursing Practice from the University of South Alabama and is certified as an Acute Care Nurse Practitioner, an Adult Clinical Nurse Specialist, and a Perioperative Registered Nurse.

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Published

2016-03-01

How to Cite

Spruce, L. (2016). Surgical Attire – A Matter of Preference or Evidence?. Operating Room Nurses Association of Canada Journal, 34(1), 14–19. Retrieved from https://ornacjournal.ca/index.php/ornac/article/view/12191

Issue

Section

Feature Articles