Uniform: Not Just A Word, For Public Health Service’s Commissioned Corps

Uniform: Not Just A Word, For Public Health Service’s Commissioned Corps
Service members model the Modified Service Dress Blue Sweater. The Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service requires that members wear either the sweater or a windbreaker.
Uniform: Not Just A Word, For Public Health Service’s Commissioned Corps
Service members model the Modified Service Dress Blue Sweater. The Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service requires that members wear either the sweater or a windbreaker.

Uniform: Not Just A Word, For Public Health Service’s Commissioned Corps

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I am not making this up.

With temperatures barely out of the 100s and even higher in many areas, the Commissioned Corps of The U.S. Public Health Service has some helpful tips for officers who stray outdoors from the lab or the clinic.

“Being that it is summer and heat indices have been over 100 degrees here in the National Capitol Region,” the Corps’ latest newsletter says, “be reminded you have to wear either the sweater or windbreaker jacket when outdoors.”

A sweater? A windbreaker? In this heat? C’mon!

But lest you think the Corps is some mindlessly rigid military outfit of doctors, researchers and other health professionals, there is a dispensation for those sweltering indoors.

“An officer may elect to remove the Service Dress Blue Jacket in their immediate office space or vicinity. Vicinity is usually defined as same floor or area that the office is in.”

But don’t go too far:

“This does not include going upstairs to visit another office, going to another building, or going downstairs to the galley.”

For those of you who haven’t seen the Commissioned Corps’ uniform, it is one of the sharpest in the military. I live down the street from a prominent Corps member and whenever he wears his Dress Blues, he turns heads.

This month’s Commissioned Corps uniform Q&A also tackles the Corps’ ever-vexing problem of Public Display of Affection.

“If you have to think about it,” the guide advises, “you probably shouldn’t do it.”

There’s more on the history of the Corps here.

Copyright 2011 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.