Disposable gowns can guard doctors, colleagues and patients from contamination, but if you’re not in surgery – you don’t always need the highest level of protection. Find gowns that protect your workers, no matter the industry.

Choosing The Right Isolation Gowns
The FDA provides guidelines for gowns from Level 1-4 & when to use them:
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Level 4 |
---|---|---|---|
Minimal Risk | Low Risk | Moderate Risk | High Risk |
To be used, for example, during basic care, standard isolation, cover gown for visitors, or in a standard medical unit | To be used, for example, during blood draw, suturing, in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), or a pathology lab | To be used, for example, during arterial blood draw, inserting an Intravenous (IV) line, in the Emergency Room, or for trauma cases | To be used, for example, during long, fluid intense procedures, surgery, when pathogen resistance is needed or infectious diseases are suspected (non-airborne) |

Disposable Isolation Gown with Elastic Cuff
