
7 Reasons 12-Hour Nurses Need a Different Insole (And Why Standard Ones Make It Worse)
7 Reasons 12-Hour Nurses Need a Different Insole (And Why Standard Ones Make It Worse)
A Brisbane podiatrist explains what happens to your arches after years on hospital-grade floors — and what actually fixes it.

"Most nurses I see have been told to 'get better shoes.' After 14 years treating healthcare workers' feet, I can tell you: the shoes aren't the problem. Here's what is."
— Dr. Rachel A, Sports Podiatrist, Brisbane
Hospital floors are harder than almost any surface the human body was designed to walk on
Concrete is 8–12x harder than natural terrain. After 3,000+ steps per shift on it, your plantar fascia absorbs impact it was never built for.
Arch collapse happens gradually — you don't notice until you can't ignore it
Most nurses don't develop plantar fasciitis overnight. The arch drops over months or years, shifting load onto the heel and ball.
Standard insoles are designed for walking — not 12-hour clinical standing
Off-the-shelf insoles assume varied movement. Nursing involves prolonged static standing, rapid pivots, and hard-surface impact in a narrow shoe last.
Nurse clogs create a biomechanical mismatch without proper arch support
Crocs and similar clogs have wide toe boxes but minimal medial arch support. Without correction, the foot pronates inward — rotating stress into the ankle and knee.
The Insole Built for 12-Hour Shifts
AU$49.95
Try It Risk-Free →60-day money back · Ships from AU · 4,000+ nurses served
Painkillers and compression socks treat the symptom, not the structure
NSAIDs reduce inflammation temporarily. Compression socks improve circulation. Neither addresses the mechanical load distribution that's causing the damage.
The pain compounds shift by shift — the window to fix it narrows over time
Untreated plantar fasciitis progresses from soft-tissue inflammation to chronic structural damage. Early mechanical intervention is significantly more effective than late-stage treatment.
A nurse's feet carry more load in a week than most people's in a month
The average nurse walks 5–8km per shift. That's 35–56km per working week on the hardest surfaces available — in shoes not engineered for that volume.
How it compares
| OUR INSOLES | Pharmacy Insole | Custom Orthotics | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Built for hard hospital floors | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ |
| Fits nurse clogs & clinical shoes | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ |
| Ships same week | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ |
| Price | AU$49.95 | ~$20 | $400–$700 |
| Lasts 12+ months | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ |
| 60-day guarantee | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ |
What nurses are saying
"First week back on the ward without icing my feet at night in two years."
— Hannah, ED Nurse, Gold Coast
"My knees stopped clicking by the end of week three. I didn't even know they were connected."
— Maria, Theatre Nurse, Sydney
"I've tried $400 orthotics. These hold up better in my clogs."
— Tess, NUM, Melbourne