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.
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