Quick Answer
The beloved medical sitcom Scrubs returned to screens on Disney+ on 26 February 2026 with a belated Season 10, reuniting most of the original cast including Zach Braff, Donald Faison and Sarah Chalke. As Australia's medical scrubs supplier since 2001 — the same year Sacred Heart first opened its doors — we had a lot of feelings about this one.
There's a very specific kind of joy that comes from hearing the Scrubs theme song again. If you know, you know. JD's rambling daydreams, Turk and JD's bromance, the Janitor's elaborate schemes, Dr Cox's rants — for nine seasons (well, eight good ones and one we don't talk about), Scrubs gave us a hospital full of deeply flawed, genuinely loveable people trying their best. And now, sixteen years after Sacred Heart went dark, they're back.
Here at Infectious Clothing Company, we've been supplying medical scrubs Australia-wide since 2001 — the exact same year Scrubs first aired. So you could say we've grown up alongside Sacred Heart. When the show returns, we pay attention. And when the cast shows up in scrubs, we definitely pay attention.
In this guide:
1. Why Scrubs is back — and why it matters
2. What made the original Scrubs so great
3. What to expect from Season 10
4. How real medical scrubs have changed since 2001
5. What scrubs does the cast actually wear?
6. Sacred Heart vs real Australian healthcare uniforms

Why is Scrubs coming back in 2026?
Scrubs Season 10 launched on Disney+ on 26 February 2026, sixteen years after the show was cancelled following a rocky ninth season. The revival brings back most of the core cast — Zach Braff as JD, Donald Faison as Turk, Sarah Chalke as Elliot, and John C. McGinley as the endlessly quotable Dr Cox — for a nine-episode run that picks up roughly where the good old days left off.
The timing isn't accidental. The unexpected smash success of The Pitt — a brutally realistic emergency room drama that premiered in late 2025 — reminded audiences and commissioners alike that people genuinely love hospital television when it's done with heart. Add in a cultural moment that's broadly hungry for comfort, warmth and stories about people trying to do good, and suddenly the nostalgia math for a Scrubs revival starts making a lot of sense.
From us, the actual scrubs people: We launched Infectious Clothing in 2001, the same year JD Dorian nervously walked into Sacred Heart as an intern. Back then, medical scrubs in Australia were largely boring, boxy and beige. Twenty-five years later, we're stocking three of the world's leading scrubs brands with hundreds of styles, colours and fits. The uniform world has changed almost as much as JD has.
Whether you're tuning in purely for the nostalgia, genuinely curious about whether the reboot holds up, or just here because you googled "scrubs" and ended up somewhere unexpected — welcome. You're in good company.
What made the original Scrubs so great?
Scrubs arrived on screens in 2001 with a deceptively simple premise: a bumbling intern navigates life, love and mortality in a chaotic public hospital. What set it apart was the tone — somehow simultaneously a broad workplace comedy, a heartfelt bromance, a romance, and occasionally a genuinely gut-punching drama that dealt with death, grief and burnout without ever feeling preachy or manipulative.
The show had a rare emotional intelligence. It understood that doctors and nurses are funny and human and flawed, and that the absurdity of hospital life coexists with genuine tragedy. Episodes that made you laugh out loud in the first act could leave you quietly devastated by the final scene. "My Lunch." "My Old Lady." "My Screw Up." If you know those episode titles, you know exactly what we mean.
It also happened to be wildly well-dressed, at least by early 2000s television standards. The scrubs were everywhere — teal, navy, that particular shade of ceil blue that became almost synonymous with the show. For us, watching the wardrobe was half the entertainment.
The show ran eight strong seasons before a troubled ninth attempt to reboot the format with a younger cast fell flat. It was cancelled in 2010. Most people agree the show ended a season too late and a cast-change too many. The good news is that Season 10 appears to have learned from that mistake entirely.
What to expect from Scrubs Season 10
Season 10 picks up with JD having quietly retreated from the chaos of hospital medicine to become a GP, treating what the Sydney Morning Herald reviewer Karl Quinn rather delightfully described as "the minor ailments of the suburban well-to-do." It takes all of about two minutes for him to engineer a reason to return to Sacred Heart, where Turk is now Head of Surgery and Elliot still works.
By the end of the first episode, the full circle is complete: JD, who began the series as a wide-eyed intern, is now back at Sacred Heart mentoring the next generation. The new cast includes a fairly standard set of modern television types who are likely to serve primarily as foils for the beloved originals rather than genuine leads.
The verdict so far: The SMH gave it three stars — "soft, cosy and familiar." Not the most exciting television of 2026, but exactly the kind of show you can sit three generations of your family in front of without anyone being offended. Given the current state of the world, that's genuinely not nothing.
New episodes drop weekly on Thursdays after the two-episode premiere. If you fell in love with Sacred Heart the first time around, this feels like coming home — a little older, a little softer around the edges, but unmistakably the same place.
How have real medical scrubs changed since 2001?
When Scrubs first aired, the medical uniform landscape was dramatically different. Healthcare workers in Australia were largely wearing whatever their hospital stockroom supplied — typically boxy, unisex cotton-polyester blends in a handful of standard colours. The idea that scrubs could be tailored, stretch, fashion-forward or genuinely comfortable was still fairly radical.
Fast forward to 2026 and the transformation is remarkable. Modern medical scrubs Australia-wide now come in technical four-way stretch fabrics engineered for 12-hour shifts, moisture-wicking finishes that handle theatre-level heat, antimicrobial treatments, and silhouettes that actually flatter. The colour palette has exploded far beyond the teal-and-ceil palette of Sacred Heart's hallways.
The shift was driven partly by the rise of premium American scrubs brands — the same brands we stock at Infectious — who realised that healthcare workers spending 40-plus hours a week in uniform deserved the same level of technical design that athletes get in their sportswear. Dickies Medical, Cherokee and Wink all emerged from that era with seriously considered product lines that went well beyond "cotton box shape in navy."
The pandemic accelerated things further. When scrubs became a symbol of frontline healthcare and hospitals started mandating specific colours for infection control and role identification, the scrubs industry had to grow up fast. Today's healthcare uniform is a genuinely technical garment — and the healthcare professionals wearing them have made clear they're not willing to go back.
The brands that changed everything
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Best for: Nurses, allied health, long shifts Dickies brings legendary workwear durability to healthcare. The EDS Signature and Xtreme Stretch ranges deliver serious four-way stretch and longevity that washes after washes without losing shape — a long way from Sacred Heart's boxy cotton days. Shop Dickies → |
Best for: Nurses, doctors, multi-role teams Cherokee is the world's most recognised scrubs brand for good reason. The Infinity collection delivers the kind of tailored, stretch-forward fit that a 2001 hospital wardrobe department could only dream of — in a colour range that goes well beyond teal. Shop Cherokee → |
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Best for: Allied health, dental, vet, beauty Wink scrubs bring a fashion-forward sensibility to healthcare uniforms without sacrificing function. The W123 collection sits at an accessible price point without cutting corners, making them ideal for clinics and practices looking to kit out a full team in style. Shop Wink → |
Only in Australia at Infectious Infectious is the only Australian retailer stocking all three brands — Dickies, Cherokee and Wink — under one roof. That means you can compare and mix across collections, and kit out an entire team with consistent quality regardless of role or preference. Business & team orders → |
What scrubs does the Scrubs cast actually wear?
The original series had a distinct aesthetic: loose, somewhat boxy scrub tops in teal, ceil blue and the occasional navy or hunter green, paired with drawstring pants in matching or contrasting colours. Very early-2000s American hospital. Dr Cox favoured darker tones. Turk, as head of surgery, spent a lot of time in theatre greens. Elliot, a female doctor in a male-dominated world, often wore slightly more fitted tops — which was quite forward-thinking for the era.
In Season 10, the wardrobe has clearly had an update — the cast are visibly in more modern cuts, with better-fitting tops and a slightly more fashion-conscious palette. Zach Braff's JD wears a dark grey top in early promotional images, while Donald Faison's Turk is seen in a rich teal that wouldn't look out of place in our Cherokee Infinity collection. Sarah Chalke's Elliot, now in a white coat as a more senior physician, brings that classic clinical authority look.
The teal question: Teal is one of our most-asked-about colours. It's the unofficial colour of Sacred Heart and, thanks largely to Scrubs, remains deeply associated with nursing and allied health in the public imagination. We stock it across Dickies, Cherokee and Wink — and it consistently sells out faster than almost any other colour. Some things don't change.
The show's costume department has never disclosed specific brands, but the silhouettes and colour palette in Season 10 are very much in line with the premium scrubs aesthetic that brands like Cherokee and Dickies have been developing over the past decade. If you want to wear what Sacred Heart is wearing in 2026, our scrubs Australia collection is a very good place to start.
Get the Sacred Heart look — with actual quality
Teal, ceil blue, navy, hunter green — all the classics, in modern fits that actually last a shift.
Shop All Scrubs Nursing ScrubsSacred Heart vs real Australian healthcare uniforms
One thing Scrubs never really dealt with — because it's American and a sitcom — is the colour-coding reality of modern Australian healthcare. In many Australian health systems, scrub colours aren't just an aesthetic choice: they're a functional communication tool that tells other staff and patients what role you're in and which department you work for. The NSW Health uniform policy, for instance, specifies particular colours for nurses, midwives, patient service assistants and various allied health roles.
Sacred Heart's fairly relaxed approach to colour is very much the American private hospital model. In a busy Australian public hospital, your scrub colour is basically a second name badge — it tells everyone around you who you are and what you do before you've said a word. This is genuinely useful in an emergency, and it's one of the reasons colour-coded hospital scrubs have become such an important part of the Australian healthcare uniform conversation.
Another thing the show glosses over: pocket placement. Any real healthcare worker will tell you that pocket layout is one of the most hotly debated elements of scrub design. How many pockets? Where exactly? Are there instrument loops? Is there a dedicated phone pocket that doesn't gape open when you lean over a patient? These are not trivial questions when you're on a 12-hour shift.
Modern scrubs brands have taken this seriously in a way that early-2000s television wardrobe departments simply didn't need to. The Dickies Xtreme Stretch range, for instance, is engineered with healthcare workflow in mind — multiple utility pockets, stretch panels positioned where your body actually moves, and construction that holds up to repeated industrial washing.
Ready to upgrade your Sacred Heart look?
Whether the return of Scrubs has you feeling nostalgic, inspired, or just quietly reminded that you've been meaning to replace that pair of tops with the frayed cuffs — we've got you. We've been doing this since 2001, we're authorised Australian distributors for Dickies, Cherokee and Wink, and we're the only place in Australia where you can compare all three side by side.
If you're buying for yourself, the best place to start is our main medical scrubs Australia hub — you can filter by brand, colour, fit, role and size, including a solid plus size scrubs range that doesn't compromise on quality or style. If you're kitting out a team, our business orders page covers bulk pricing and custom embroidery.
And if you want your scrubs personalised — your clinic name, your name, your logo — head to customise your scrubs. It's the one thing Sacred Heart was definitely missing.
More from the Infectious blog:
Best scrubs in Australia — 2025 buyer's guide
Dickies vs Cherokee vs Wink — which brand is right for you?
Scrub colours explained — what each colour means in Australian healthcare
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