The present invention relates to lab coats of the type worn by medical professionals.
Conventional lab coats are white and have collars and lapels which are similar to collars and lapels on men's and women's suit jackets insofar as collars and lapels are cut from the same cloth as the body of the coat and folded over.
Medical professionals often drape a stethoscope around their collar and lapels. Very often the draping of the stethoscope causes the lapel of the lab coat to fold and crinkle when the stethoscope is used or moved.
Traditional lab coats often have the medical professional's hospital department such as surgery, radiology, critical care, for example, sewn or embroidered on the body of the lab coat. The sewn or embroidered department identification is often hard to read or seen.
It is an object of the present invention to avoid the folding, crinkling, and other interference caused by a stethoscope when worn on a lab coat.
It is also an object of the present invention to improve on the traditional hospital department identification system.
These objects, and others as will become apparent from the following disclosure and accompanying drawings, are achieved by the present invention which comprises in one aspect a lab coat comprising sewn down or ironed on lapels.
In some embodiments the lab coat has no collar or a sewn down collar.
In preferred embodiments the lapels of the lab coat include color and/or design indicia corresponding to a particular department, specialty, or other identification so that in a particular hospital or other medical facility setting, the color and/or design of the lapels functions to identify, for example, the department or specialty of the wearer.
In some embodiments the lapels are cut from different cloth than the body of the lab coat. The cloth from which the lapels are cut can be colored and/or include design indicia while the body of the lab coat can be traditional white, for example.
While it is preferred that the back of the lab coat does not have a collar because a folded down collar has been found to interfere with stethoscopes, in some less preferred embodiments the lab coat can include a sewn down collar, for example cut from the same material as the lapels in some embodiments or as part of a unitary member comprising the collar and the lapels, in which case it is preferred that the unitary collar-lapels member be sewn along the outer edges of the lapels and the outer edge of the collar or ironed on to the body of the lab coat. In some embodiments the lapels, which may or may not include an integral collar, are fastened to the lab coat by means other than stitching or ironing on.
Referring now to the drawings,
An embodiment of a coat 10 according to the invention illustrated in
In some embodiments the sleeves include cuffs or edges which include color and/or design features corresponding to those of the lapels.
In some embodiments the lapels having color and/or design indicia are ironed on or fastened to the body of the lab coat by means other than sewing.
It has been found experimentally that a stethoscope can be worn by a person who is wearing a lab coat according to the invention without interference from a lapel or, in some embodiments, from a collar, which overcomes a problem with traditional lab coats which require frequent straightening of lapels and collars which are wrinkled or crinkled by stethoscopes.
The present invention, therefore, is well adapted to carry out the objects and attain the ends and advantages mentioned, as well as others inherent therein. While the invention has been depicted and described and is defined by reference to particular preferred embodiments of the invention, such references do not imply a limitation on the invention, and no such limitation is to be inferred. The invention is capable of considerable modification, alteration and equivalents in form and function, as will occur to those ordinarily skilled in the pertinent arts. The depicted and described preferred embodiments of the invention are exemplary only and are not exhaustive of the scope of the invention. Consequently, the invention is intended to be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims, giving full cognizance to equivalents in all respects.