At our hospitals here in my area and at the nursing facilities we have all kinds of different color hospital grippy socks. Each size is a different color. There are yellow, blue, green, red, and gray that I have seen and white with blue tread.
And if I might offer a little bit of advice to you guys, NEVER walk ANY PLACE in the hospital, not even in your own room bare footed. A hospital floor is one of the dirtiest things known to man. It may look clean but I assure you it isn't.
Now back on the political end of the hospital socks. I don't think it's a law, but again at least here in Ohio it's pretty much a very strict policy that every patient wear grippy socks. If one of our patients fall and they were not wearing grippy socks the facility can get in serious trouble. If a patient falls and is injured and it's found out that they didn't have any fall prevention's in place the facility is at risk for being sued as well as having to eat or pay for the bill or charges associated with the care of that fall. It's a huge deal.
When we get a new patient in a facility we have to fill out a care plan for them that is specific to them, their condition, needs and treatment. Always, and I do mean always one of the papers in the admit packet is the fall prevention page. There you check the things that you are going to put in place to keep that patient from falling. Those things range anyplace from keeping the floor clutter free to placing a tab alarm on them.
It pains me to hear that some of your facilities do not take something as important as grippy socks seriously. Aside from keeping your feet pretty toasty, they really do provide a very important function, which is, keeping our patients safe. Ill fitting grippy socks are more of a hazard actually than not wearing any socks at all. It's a shame.
Mashie