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“Scrubs Are for Surgeons Only” — Nurses clap Back with 100 Free Scrubs Giveaway for Nurses Week

Kehinde Oluwatosin by Kehinde Oluwatosin
April 27, 2026
in Nursing News
0

“Scrubs Are for Surgeons Only” — Nurses Clap Back with 100 Free Scrubs Giveaway for Nurses Week

Lagos, Nigeria — 27 April 2026 — A dental surgeon’s call to restrict scrubs to operating theatre staff has sparked a lively debate across Nigerian healthcare. Instead of division, the nursing community has responded with creativity, solidarity and a major giveaway that has already reached nearly 100 frontline nurses during International Nurses Week.

The conversation began on 24 April when Dr Dantala, a dental surgeon known on X as @Docfrosh, quoted optometrist Dr Peculiar Idiagbonya. Her post warned against assuming roles based on attire: “You see someone in scrubs and just assume? Not every woman in scrubs is a nurse. Not every man in scrubs is a doctor.”

Dr Dantala replied that scrubs originated for surgeons in theatre and should stay that way. He suggested nurses return to traditional white gowns and caps, medical laboratory scientists wear lab coats, and other clinicians use ward coats or corporate dress with clear name and title tags. “If I ever become a CMD of any teaching hospital, this is one of the peripheral things I will fix,” he wrote. The post quickly drew more than 449,000 views and hundreds of replies.

Nurses and other professionals pushed back. One registered nurse (@Nursebassey_) said: “If your biggest concern as a future CMD is who wears scrubs, then we’re in trouble already.” Others stressed practicality. Scrubs allow freedom of movement during long shifts and emergencies, something traditional gowns cannot match.

From debate to action: “Operation Scrubs Giveaway”

Nurse Fatai Ibrahim, RN, MSN (@rundriveng), a Nigerian-American nurse informaticist and advanced trauma nurse, turned the moment into something positive. On 24 April he announced he would give away free, high-quality scrubs to practising Nigerian RNs as “my little way of saying thank you” during Nurses Week.

Creative humour joins the conversation

Nurses added a light-hearted twist. Across X, many both male and female began posting funny AI-generated images of themselves in exaggerated white nursing uniforms complete with dramatic, oversized caps. The playful visuals gently poked fun at the suggestion of returning to traditional attire while celebrating nursing identity with humour and pride.

Why this matters: Professional identity and patient care

The episode highlights deeper issues in Nigerian healthcare. Clear identification of roles supports patient safety and professional respect. Yet many experts argue that rigid uniform rules overlook modern realities, longer shifts, infection control needs and the comfort that helps staff deliver better care.

Fellow Nurses Africa welcomes this display of unity. Nurse-led initiatives like the giveaway show resilience and innovation. They remind us that Nigerian nurses are not just reacting to criticism, they are shaping their own narrative, strengthening collegiality across the sector and putting patients first.

As Nurses Week continues, the story offers a hopeful example: even small controversies can spark meaningful change when met with creativity and generosity.

The giveaway remains open to further donations. Fellow Nurses Africa will follow its impact on Nigeria’s nursing workforce.


Fellow Nurses Africa is the independent voice of African nursing, we educate, inform and support nurses across Africa.

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Kehinde Oluwatosin

Kehinde Oluwatosin is one of the many editors here at Fellow Nurses Africa and fellownurses.com.

He is a registered nurse with a Master of Science degree in healthcare leadership from the University of Hull, United Kingdom. Kehinde is passionate about advancing the nursing profession across Africa. As Co-Founder of Fellow Nurses Africa, he plays a key role in shaping editorial direction, ensuring our content educates, informs, and empowers nurses continent-wide.

With expertise in leadership, patient flow, and healthcare operations, Kehinde brings valuable insights to nursing news, career development, and policy discussions. He is committed to amplifying the voice of African nurses and driving positive change in the profession.

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