Sunday, April 21, 2013

The Greek Goddess... of hygiene?





Our practice is called Dental Hygiene. Ever wonder the Why, What and Where
of the word “Hygiene”? It’s a Greek word, and it’s a Who. Hygieia ( Ὑγιεία) was
the goddess of health, cleanliness and sanitation. She was the daughter of
Asclepius, the father of medicine, and Epione, whose name means “soothing”,
in this case of pain. She had sisters who helped with other parts of the
physicians’ god Apollo’s work, including Panacea, the goddess of medicines.
Hygiene’s work was prevention; health is promoted and illness prevented by
cleanliness.

This is a statue of Hygieia. She is feeding one of the snakes that wraps around the Caduceus, the medical symbol of the physicians staff. Two snakes curl around in the pattern of DNA, the basic
material for heredity. The image is a message to care for your body, and
in our case, to care for your teeth, as a source of health and prevention of
disease.  Who knew!


No comments:

Post a Comment