Taking shoes off before entering medical clinic--is this a thing now?

Whatcha talking about? We had a good 1/4 cm on Jan 20th; the news went on about it all week!

When I was kid, everyone wore these, galoshes or overshoes, and took them off at the door of houses one visited. When fashion boots came in, people stopped wearing overshoes, and when you visited someone, you brought shoes to wear in the house after you took your boots off at the door. Being careful not to step in the melting snow from other boots at the door, which I often did, and still do, getting wet socks and wet feet.

But never in stores or offices, especially not in doctor offices. There were usually enough long hallways with mats designed to absorb water and salt and sand and grit, so that once you got into the office itself, you didn’t make a mess anymore.

Of course, then people started wearing hiking boots in the winter, and they are much messier, since they hold more snow.

Even in the UP of Michigan, where we got 300 inches of the snow the winter I lived there, did people take off their footwear in public places. Overshoes would make good sense, but people don’t wear them. They are ugly.

[quote=“Jackmannii, post:16, topic:785668”]

The only medical justification for this practice is that the medics paid a lot for the waiting room carpet and don’t want you getting it dirty.

I have never run across it in any physician’s or dentist’s office in the USA.

Seriously, Canadians don’t believe in doormats?

Im my experience, Canadians are just cleaner, and more respectful in general. Most footwear is contaminated with fecal bacteria, aka poop, which gets spread indoors by people who insist on wearing their footwear inside. Doormats only remove loose material. I don’t want my children crawling in poop. Disgusting.

Thing is though that having the inside of the home with some more of those “disgusting” outdoor world fecal contaminants (most specifically farm type fecal stuff) inside of it for your kids to crawl around in would likely make them healthier … the Amish have very little asthma and allergy and it seems to be from constant indoor exposure to all that. It is the fecal dust brought in that is the key.

It is literally the kids running in and out out of the house tracking in that fecal matter in their dust that results in the lower asthma and allergy risk.

Come up here some January and see for yourself. The bottoms of your boots will be an ugly mixture of snow, dirt and road salt. Anyone coming in to my house had better take them off in the vestibule and some people enforce this all year round (although I don’t). And the floor of my doctor’s office would be filthy if he didn’t ask this all winter.

Ontario is not “Canada.” Out here in BC have never seen requests for shoe removal, either in the balmy lower mainland (Vancouver region) or hinterlands, where it snows.

You don’t really get snow in Vancouver.

The three medical clinics I go to all have a “boots off” policy from first snow to final melt (which around here is about half a year).