Is Your Handshake As Dangerous As Smoking?
[DENVER.CBSLOCAL] It's a fairly standard greeting ... the "hello" handshake. Whenever I meet a new patient, I say Hi, introduce myself, and stick my hand out for a shake. And if it's someone I have seen before, there's a Hi, how have you been, with a simultaneous handshake.
But if infectious disease experts from UCLA have their way, my handshake may go the way of leeches and bloodletting -- replaced by a long distance wave or salute.
A commentary in the Journal Of The American Medical Association says it's time to say goodbye to the handshake greeting in a health care setting. Or for that measure, goodbye to the goodbye handshake as well.
Sure, a firm handshake can be seen as a sign of greeting and compassion, but it's also believed to be one of the easiest methods to transmit germs. We've actually believe this for a long time but perhaps there is new urgency in the mysterious new world of diseases like MERS.
So the recommendation is to treat handshakes like smoking. In other words, since there are a lot of places that simply have smoke free zones, it seems like a good idea to have handshake free zones.
So what they're saying is that smoking's no more dangerous than a handshake?
That means educational programs, signage (I guess a stencil of a handshake with a big "X" through it), and perhaps penalties for violating the no-handshake policy.
The authors write: "Removing the handshake from the healthcare setting may ultimately become recognized as an important way to protect the health of patients and caregivers, rather than a personal insult to whoever refuses another's hand."
Removing all human contact seems to be the way to go. Don't you have to get closer than a handshake to beget children? (It's been so long I'm not sure anymore.)
Posted by: Fred 2014-05-21 |