They had three criteria: The shirts needed to be blue, to reinforce Memorial's internal Into the Blue initiative. They asked for long sleeves, so that nurses could wear them under scrub tops. And they had to be, well, good enough to actually get worn.




2 comments:
Here at Yakima Valley Memorial Hospital we are basking in the wild response to the shirts, the slogans, the whole campaign. The response greatly exceeds our expectations. Thank you and the whole team at Trampoline!
OK, those? Are AWESOME. I would wear one. Totally.
Post a Comment