West Virginia State University

Gus R. Douglass Land-Grant Institute

Getting a Grip

In flu season, what price for prevention? That's a question the Philadelphia Inquirer is asking as religious and medical leaders discuss the ethics of the handshake. While there is medical debate about avoiding the gesture -- some doctors say a ban is only minimally effective, others carry hand sanitizer in bottles with them -- some people fear a moral contagion.


Philadelphians' concerns on such questions have deep historic roots. Handshaking was once a common form of greeting in Europe, then displaced in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries by hat doffing and bowing, only to re-emerge as an allegedly English innovation. But it was the Quakers, first settlers of Philadelphia, whose founder George Fox promoted the gesture as a symbol of the equality of believers -- at a time when authorities considered refusing to doff a hat to magistrates something between heresy and treason.

Youtube actually hosts a virtual festival of conspiracy-theory handshake videos like this.

Despite hygienic reservations, the handshake is a Western custom that has made its way around the world. Influenza did not reverse the trend even after the 1918 pandemic, so it's not going to do so now. Some alternative gestures like elbow bumps make as much sense as rituals of safe blood brotherhood. In fact the small risk makes the clasp even more meaningful. So handshakes, perhaps followed by discreet private disinfection, are here for the duration.

from: http://correspondents.theatlantic.com/edward_tenner/2009/10/getting_a_grippe.php

 

Comments

Visitor

Jun 15, 2010
1:55 pm

nice

very nice article and write so perfect

Visitor

May 12, 2010
12:42 pm

How to wash your hands???

 

How to wash your hands

It's generally best to wash your hands with soap and water.
Follow these simple steps:

  • Wet your hands with running water.
  • Apply liquid, bar or powder soap.
  • Lather well.
  • Rub your hands vigorously for at least 20 seconds.
    Remember to scrub all surfaces, including the backs of your
    hands, wrists, between your fingers and under your
    fingernails.
  • Rinse well.
  • Dry your hands with a clean or disposable towel or air
    dryer.
  • If possible, use your towel to turn off the faucet.

Keep in mind that antibacterial soap is no more effective at
killing germs than is regular soap. Using antibacterial soap may
even lead to the development of bacteria that are resistant to
the product's antimicrobial agents — making it harder to kill
these germs in the future.


Chicago Tickets

website design

Dec 22, 2009
1:45 am

I often carry hand

I often carry hand sanitizer...good to read the post on handshakes and your observations on it.Thanks a lot.
http://www.quality-web-solutions.com/website-design-india.php

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