You will find that there are also green surgeons in the operating room. In fact, they used to be in white coats. However, as the complexity of the operation increased, in the early twentieth century, a famous doctor wrote an article analyzing some of the problems faced by the operation. The clothes in the operating room should be changed from white to green so that the surgeon’s eyes are better.
Although it is not certain whether it was his influence that caused the subsequent popularity of green surgical gowns, from the perspective of color analysis, his view is correct, because green is the relative color of red. To understand its role here, we must first know the “oversaturation” phenomenon in the brain’s operation. This refers to a person’s nerve fatigue after being continuously exposed to the same or the same kind of things, or after receiving the same continuous stimulation.
Simply put, it is like the same part of the brain that has been working hard. After high-intensity operation, it finally can’t hold on, and finally just goes on strike. The principle is similar to that of a person who has been confined in a dark room for a long time, suddenly walking to a bright place and unable to adapt to it is the same! During the operation, the height is concentrated under the red (the color of blood). At this time, we need green to adjust the fatigue for the doctor.
Therefore, the color of hospital overalls is not chosen arbitrarily, it is only selected after everyone has demonstrated that it is feasible.