Re: The Primitives Strike Back
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Re: The Primitives Strike Back         

Group: alt.philosophy · Group Profile
Author: TruthSlave
Date: Feb 27, 2008 02:52

Sir Frederick wrote:
> The latest from Eurabia:
> The Primitives Strike Back :
> Muslim medics refuse to roll up their sleeves in hygiene crackdown -
> because it's against their religion
>
> Last updated at 17:52pm on 26th February 2008
> http://www.dailymail.co.uk
>
> Health officials are having crisis talks with Muslim medical staff who
> object to new hygiene rules
> Health officials are having crisis talks with Muslim medical staff who
> have objected to hospital hygiene rules because of religious beliefs.
>
> Medics in hospitals in at least three major English cities have refused
> to follow the regulations aimed at helping tackle superbugs because of
> their faith, it has been revealed.
>
> Women medical students at Alder Hey children's hospital in Liverpool
> objected to rolling up their sleeves when washing their hands and
> removing arm coverings in theatre, claiming it is regarded as immodest.
>
> Similar concerns were raised at Leicester University and Sheffield
> University reported a case of a Muslim medic refusing to "scrub" because
> it left her forearms exposed.
>
> Some students have said that they would prefer to quit the course rather
> than expose their arms, but hygiene experts said no exceptions should be
> made on religious grounds.
>
> A Royal Liverpool hospital spokesman said they had experienced issues of
> Muslim staff not sanitising their forearms with alcohol gel although
> this had now been addressed.
>
> Dr Steve Ryan, medical director at Alder Hey said that while the "bare
> below the elbows" dress code is a matter of patient safety, the trust
> would work with Muslim students to find a solution.
>
> He said: "We specify bare below elbows, no wrist watches, nail varnish
> or false nails in clinical areas.
>
> "Good hand hygiene is one of the most important and simplest actions we
> can take to prevent healthcare associated infections.
>
> "A number of female Muslim students had approached the University of
> Liverpool to ask if we would provide facilities for them to change their
> outerwear and Hijab for theatre scrubs.
>
> Dr Charles Tannock, a Conservative MEP and former hospital consultant,
> said: "These students are being trained using taxpayers' money and they
> have a duty of care to their patients not to put their health at risk.
>
> "Perhaps these women should not be choosing medicine as a career if they
> feel unable to abide by the guidelines everyone else has to follow."
>
> But the Islamic Medical Association insisted that covering all the body
> in public, except the face and hands, was a basic tenet of Islam.
>
> It said: "No practising Muslim woman - doctor, medical student, nurse or
> patient - should be forced to bare her arms below the elbow."
>
> The new Department of Health guidance was introduced this month in a bid
> to restrict the spread of potentially fatal infections such as MRSA and
> Clostridium difficle.
>
> The code of practice helps NHS bodies to plan and implement how they can
> prevent and control healthcare- associated infections.
>
> It sets out criteria by which managers of NHS organisations are to
> ensure that patients are cared for in a clean environment and the risk
> of infections is kept as low as possible.
> --

I don't know if its just me, but there seems something
almost incredible in this story. Its the kind of story
which were it not true, might be invented just for its
effect. One of those stories which waits to be debunked
by history. In the mean time there are the obvious
questions, such as why would anyone in this day and age,
enter the medical profession without subscribing to the
very basic tenets of medical hygiene?

This story does not compute... Its acceptance as story
however, does. Such stories say more about the story
teller, his audience and his times.

It also begs a question on the nature and use of truth,
the older definitions of truth, as its made to serve man.

Truth - that which can not, or will not be contradicted.

" Women medical students at Alder Hey children's hospital "
" in Liverpool objected to rolling up their sleeves when "
" washing their hands and removing arm coverings in theater, "
" claiming it is regarded as immodest. "

There again it might be a matter of interpreting the language
used. Someone refusing to do something in a particular place,
would be different from someone refusing to do that same thing.
'In theater' might simply be about that situation. The word
'immodest' should also serve as a clue.

In our age this element of deconstructing the story is almost
a requirement to accepting the news. I wonder though, how many
will see any reason for this exercise?
> Frederick Martin McNeill
> Poway, California, United States of America
> mmcneill@fuzzysys.com
> w00t *********************************
> "Man isn't a noble savage, he's an ignoble savage. He is irrational,
> brutal, weak, silly, unable to be objective about anything where his
> own interests are involved - that about sums it up. I'm interested in
> the brutal and violent nature of man because it's a true picture of
> him. And any attempt to create social institutions on a false view of
> the nature of man is probably doomed to failure." - Stan
> **************************************
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