Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 31, 1963)
4 Do Our Hands Hold the Key to Our Future Health? Graphology and palmistry, long considered superstitions of the Middle Ages, are now under study as possible diagnostic tools for cancer, heart disease, and mental illness By EVAN M. WYLIE IN AN EXAMINATION room at a medical center in the' South, a child extends the palm of his hand to the doctor, who scans its lines for clues to the boy's heart ailment In another laboratory in a North east city, .a specially trained diagnos tician peers intently at the handwriting of a 50-year-old woman in an effort to determine whether the lump in her breast is cancerous. In Michigan, doctors at a mental hospital check the fingertips of pa tients with mental illness, comparing them with those of criminals and law abiding citizens. Were it not for the hum of electronic apparatus and the modern design of the buildings, you might well imagine that these physicians were practicing in the Middle Ages, when palm read ing and handwriting analysis were used by soothsayers to prophesy men's futures. But medical activities de scribed above are being carried on in modern laboratories which are among the most respected in the world. The first American reports on the value of handwriting in early diagnosis of cancer came from a conservative , hospital in New York City. A recent report on the hand's palm-line patterns as a sign of inherited heart defects came from Tulane University's school of medicine and subsequently was pub lished in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Analysis of handwriting specimens dates back to the Romans and earlier. In the second century A.D., the his torian Suetonius claimed he could dis cern the penny-pinching proclivities of the Roman Emperor Augustus Caesar from his crabbed script. In the 1890s, a physiologist stated ' the now obvious truth : that the deli cate nerve-muscle interplay necessary to penmanship originates in the cen tral nervous system and therefore indicates what is going on there. With the acceptance of the psycho analytic methods of Freud, handwrit ing was subjected to symbolic analysis. Modern psychologists have found hand writing analysis as helpful as the famed Rorschach inkblot test fre quently used for detecting emotional maturity or abnormality. Medically, the study of handwritng has been focused on emotional and mental disorders, although it has not been limited to that area. A psychia trist and a handwriting expert have examined signatures of Franklin D. Roosevelt over the last decade of his life. They claim to have detected signs of his fatal circulatory ailment as early as 1940. Other authorities in the field deride such diagnosis made after the fact. But the two investigators contend that they can show signs of President Eisenhower's heart attack in his sig natures a month before the event and that Defense Secretary James For resters suicidal depression was mani fest in his penmanship a year before he took his own life. In other medical areas, there have been handwriting tests to discriminate among some types of Parkinsonism (shaking palsy) and between harden ing of the arteries that feed the heart and those that nourish the brain. A famed American graphologist, Klara Roman, has reported marked differ ences in the handwriting of patients suffering from high blood pressure as compared with those crippled with! arthritis. Other diseases, notably tu-l berculosis, some psychoses, and epi-f lepsy, also seem to indicate a loss ot delicate nerve control over fine mus cular coordination. The Ooal Decoda Um Hidden Meanings af Handwriting The big problem of handwriting! analysts has been the multitude oi signs to be observed and interpreted, Such factors as rigidity, reduction inf size of characters, tremor, changes inl pressure and inking, loss of free flow, and many others have been noted and n variously interpreted. rttotoGtAms tr stan haiiis fimlly Wwkllf. March 31. 1MJ 0