The Power of Touch
In a High-tech World, It Pays to Reach Out
Nora Brunner
Physician and holistic health pioneer Rachel
Naomi Remen once confessed that as a pediatric intern she was an
unrepentant baby kisser, often smooching her little patients as she made
her rounds at the hospital. She did this when no one was looking
because she sensed her colleagues would frown on her behavior, even
though she couldn't think of a single reason not to do it.
The lack of basic human contact in our high-tech medical system reflects
a larger social ill that has only recently started to get some
attention--touch deprivation. The cultural landscape is puzzling. On the
one hand, we are saturated in suggestive messages by the mass media; on
the other hand, the caring pediatrician is afraid someone might look
askance at her planting a kiss on a baby's forehead. What's wrong with
this picture?
Social NormsUnfortunately,
touch has become, well, a touchy subject. Though there's growing
scientific evidence that skin-to-skin contact is beneficial to human
health, American social norms inhibit this most basic form of human
interaction and communication. Despite our supposedly enlightened
attitudes, we Americans are among the most touch-deprived people in the
world.
"Touch deprivation is a reality in American culture as a whole," writes
Reverend Anthony David of Atlanta. "It's not just babies needing to be
touched in caring ways, or the sick. It's not just doctors and nurses
needing to extend it. It's all of us, needing connection, needing to
receive it, needing to give it, with genuine happiness at stake."
Distant, DisconnectedHow
did we come to deprive ourselves so tragically? According to Texas
psychology professor David R. Cross, PhD, there are three reasons
Americans don't touch each other more: fear of sexual innuendo, societal
and personal disconnection aided by technology, and the fact that the
ill effects of non-touching are simply not that obvious and don't
receive much attention.
It's no surprise Americans are often afraid physical touching signals
romantic interest, which leads to the twin perils of either having our
intentions misunderstood or wondering if someone's gesture is an
uninvited advance. This ambiguity is more than enough to scare most
people from taking someone's arm or patting them on the back.
The potential for the loaded gesture is further complicated by our
litigious society in which unwelcome touch can mean, or be interpreted
as, dominance, sexual harassment, or exploitation. People in the helping
professions are regularly counseled on how to do their jobs without
creating even a hint of ambiguity. In one extreme example, counselors at
a children's summer camp were given the advice that when kids
proactively hugged them, the counselors were to raise both arms over
their heads to show they hadn't invited the contact and weren't
participating in it. One wonders how the innocent minds of children will
interpret this bizarre response to their spontaneous affection.
Another reason for touch phobia, according to Cross, is that we live in a
society with far-flung families and declining community connections.
Technology plays a significant role in the way we communicate, and it
seems we move farther away from face-to-face communication with every
new invention. How ironic that the old telephone company jingle that
encouraged us to "Reach Out and Touch Someone" gave way to the slew of
electronic devices we have today, all ringing and beeping for our
attention. While these devices were invented to improve communication,
some people wonder if the net effect is lower quality in our exchanges
of information.
While there is scientific research showing non-touch is detrimental to
health, Cross says those negative effects aren't obvious. The effects of
a lack of touch are insidious and long-term and don't amount to a
dramatic story for prime time.
"Humans deprived of touch are prone to mental illness, violence,
compromised immune systems, and poor self-regulation," Cross says. So
serious are the effects of touch deprivation, it's considered by
researchers to be worse than physical abuse.
Benefits of TouchStated
more positively, science does support the preventive health benefits of
touch. For example, Tiffany Field, PhD, founder of the Touch Research
Institute, notes that in a study on preterm infants, massaging the
babies increased their weight and allowed them to be discharged earlier.
Discharging babies earlier from expensive neonatal intensive care units
could save the healthcare system $4.7 billion annually.
In other research, scientists at the University of North Carolina found
the stress hormone cortisol was reduced with hugging. Cortisol is
associated with anger, anxiety, physical tension, and weakened immunity.
Massage therapy has been found useful in reducing symptoms such as
anxiety, depression, pain, and stress, and is helpful for those
suffering with a variety of illnesses, including anorexia nervosa,
arthritis, cancer, fibromyalgia, and stroke. While more research is
needed, massage therapy has also been shown to reduce symptoms
associated with alcohol withdrawal and smoking cessation, and can
strengthen self-esteem, boost the immune system, increase flexibility,
and improve sleep.
As a nation, we are still finding our way in terms of increasing our
touch quotient; but those who make their way into a massage therapy room
are farther along than most.