Showing posts with label Rape. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rape. Show all posts

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Patient Dignity 19: Doctor Are Examining Your Genitals for No Reason

Source: slate.com


When a girl becomes a woman, she is initiated into a bizarre and mysterious annual ritual. She takes off her clothes, sticks her arms through a backless medical gown, reclines on an examination table, and spreads her legs. A doctor fits her feet into a pair of stirrups, looks at her genitals, sticks a cold metal speculum into her vagina, cranks it open, and peers in. When the speculum is removed, the doctor inserts a finger or two, and pokes around to feel the woman’s internal organs. Sometimes, the fingers examine her rectum, too.


In 2010, doctors performed 62.8 million of these routine pelvic examinations on women across America. In total, gynecological screenings cost the U.S. $2.6 billion every year.


And yet, a new study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine reports that there is no established medical justification for the annual procedure. After scouring nearly 70 years of pelvic exam studies, conducted from 1946 to 2014, the researchers found no evidence that they lead to any reduction in “morbidity or mortality of any condition” among women. In light of the study, the American College of Physicians, a national organization of internists, has crafted a new set of guidelines warning doctors that exams conducted on otherwise symptomless women can “subject patients to unnecessary worry and follow-up” and can “cause anxiety, discomfort, pain, and embarrassment, especially in women who have a history of sexual abuse.”


In an editorial also published in Annals, internists George Sawaya and Vanessa Jacoby of the University of California–San Francisco, conclude that the pelvic examination has “become more of a ritual than an evidence-based practice.” Sawaya told me that the routine pelvic exam is such "a foundational cornerstone" of gynecology, it's hard to even trace its origins. The new report urging doctors to reverse course will be "very controversial," Sawaya says. "I expect a lot of physicians to raise their eyebrows."

Just two years ago, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists admitted that “no evidence supports or refutes the annual pelvic examination … for the asymptomatic, low-risk patient.” Nevertheless, ACOG reupped its endorsement of the exam, writing that it “seems logical.” The procedure—which is routinely initiated early in a woman’s teen years and conducted annually—can aid in “establishing the clinician–patient relationship” and provide “an excellent opportunity to counsel patients about maintaining a healthy lifestyle and minimizing health risks,” ACOG reported. In other words, according to ACOG, while the annual pelvic exam might not be worthwhile in and of itself, it can be a useful device for bringing a woman to her doctor every year to get some necessary information about her reproductive health.

These conflicting recommendations—one by internists, the other by gynecologists—speak to the effects of cultural shaming on women’s health. Some women—particularly women who have been abused—can experience enough anxiety and pain from the intimate exams that they become less likely return for future exams. That could deter women from heading to the doctor when they do have problematic symptoms or heightened cancer risks. Furthermore, women taking birth control pills typically have to undergo an annual pelvic exam before a doctor will refill a prescription, which could prevent some women from using this safe and effective contraceptive method. (The ACP insists that refilling an oral birth-control prescription should not require a pelvic exam.)


Meanwhile, other women experience enough generalized anxiety about their genitals and reproductive systems that the fear pushes them to see their doctors every year and undergo examinations that, it turns out, won’t actually tell them much of anything about their health. While the 70 years of studies parsed in Annals paint an incomplete picture of the full effects a pelvic exam can have on a woman’s well-being, they do suggest that the exams can produce both “false-positive results” and “false reassurance” among women.

The pelvic exam is just the latest women’s health ritual to be reexamined in light of new research. In 2012, the United States Preventive Services Task Force and the American Cancer Society released new recommendations suggesting that women should undergo routine pap smear tests every three years, not once a year. In March, an Food and Drug Administration panel voted to replace the pap smear—in which a doctor scrapes cells from the cervix that are analyzed under a microscope for visual abnormalities—with an HPV test targeted at identifying the strains of the virus most likely to lead to cervical cancer. And in 2009, the USPSTF changed its stance on routine mammograms, recommending that women begin undergoing mammograms at age 50, not 40, and that they do them every two years, not every year.


Proponents of yearly pelvic exams may say that they compel women to seek counsel from their doctors and receive vital information about their own health. (They also, of course, bolster gynecologists' job security.) But it's becoming clear that this line of thinking is self-defeating: There’s no reason for women to report to their doctors every year if they can’t even trust what they’re being told.




What happened to, "First do no harm?"

...and physicians wonder why their patients do not trust them.

There is no reason that a genital exam ever needs to be performed on anyone older than 2 years as part of an annual physical or as part of any other exam in asymptomatic patients. You can not distinguish between the physician who is being "thorough" and a serial sexual predator in the medical setting. In order to protect the patient, it is necessary to err on the side of caution. The patient should be given the option AND allowed to decline this exam without penalty. 

The physician's "fiduciary duty" requires the physician to sacrifice his own well being for that of the patient. This justifies the "without penalty to the patient" requirement. 

--Banterings

Friday, September 5, 2014

Sexual Abuse by Physicians: More common than we think...

Around 25 percent of the physicians in the United States face malpractice charges every year, including sexual misconduct. Psychiatrists, who make up only six percent of all doctors, account for 33 percent of all the sexual abuse claims.



 Prevalence:
The vast majority of physicians in the United States do not commit or condone sexual violence; however, perpetrators exist in every profession and the true prevalence of sexual assault committed by physicians against their patients is difficult to discern due to:


  •  Self-reporting by physicians themselves, or from reports by fellow physicians. Due to the obvious professional/career ramifications of self-reporting, the actual prevalence of sexual assault by physicians may be higher than indicated by the available data ; and
  • Victims of sexual assault by their physicians are thought to be even less likely to report the assault than victims of assault by other individuals, due to multiple factors. A low reporting rate further indicates that the prevalence of sexual assault by physicians may be higher than what is known.
A 1998 study in the Journal of the American Medical Association1 found:
  • The number of physicians disciplined per year for sex-related offenses increased from 42 in 1989 to 147 in 1996; and the proportion of all disciplinary orders that were sex related increased from 2.1% in 1989 to 4.4% in 1996.
  • Discipline for sex-related offenses was significantly more severe than for non-sex-related offenses, with 71.9% of sex-related actions involving revocation, surrender or suspension of medical license.
  • Of 761 physicians disciplined, 75% of the incidents involved patients, including sexual intercourse, rape, sexual molestation, and sexual favors in exchange for drugs 
  • As of March 1997, 39.9% of physicians disciplined for sex-related offenses between 1989 and 1994 were still licensed to practice
  • Physicians disciplined for sex-related offenses were more likely to practice in the specialties of psychiatry, child psychiatry, obstetrics and gynecology, and family and general practice.



The Dynamics of Sexual Abuse by Physicians:

As with all forms of such violence, sexual assault or abuse perpetrated by physicians against their patients is a malicious abuse of power intended to harm, control, and/or manipulate the victim. The physician-patient relationship is unique in ways that encourage an abuse of power by physicians who have malicious intent:
  • Physicians possess knowledge and expertise that the patient does not have, but needs. 
  • Patients are forced to trust physicians to diagnose and treat them appropriately and ethically. 
  • Patients are often at their most vulnerable when interacting with physicians, because of physical pain, injury, illness, disease, mental/emotional distress, or other very personal or intimate problems. 
  • Many patients must undress, be put under anesthesia, or otherwise placed in a position of powerlessness or incapacitation when being examined or treated by a physician.
Some of the ways offending physicians may commit and conceal sexual assault of their patients: 

  • Assault patients while they are unconscious/incapacitated, and thus unaware of the assault.
  • Tell patients that the behavior is a normal part of the examination or treatment.
  • Manipulate patients into thinking that their questions or concerns about the abusive behavior are without merit, are confused, or are just a misunderstanding. 
  • Convince the patient that no other physician can effectively treat them. 
  • Threaten to discontinue treatment if the patient refuses to be subject to abusive exams or procedures. 
  • Alter treatment (particularly medications) to keep the patient in need and/or compliant. 
  • Threaten to discontinue treatment if the patient reports the abuse.
  • Silence the patient by giving him/her money, gifts, or access to prescription drugs/opioids.  
  • Convince parents or loved ones of patients that they are trustworthy; or silence loved ones with money, gifts, or access to drugs. 
  • Elicit public support from patients they have not abused, and others who believe them incapable of sexual violence.





Sexual Abuse Harms Victims Forever.

Sexual assault has psychological, emotional, and/or physical effects that can last from a few weeks to forever. Victims suffer from depression, suicidal ideation and behavior and post-traumatic stress disorder.

Also, and because of their humiliation, they will probably avoid healthcare in the future. Nurse practitioners and doctors need to be sensitive to all patient’s need for modesty and bear in mind a possible background of sexual abuse.

Gowns or underwear shouldn’t be taken off without patient’s consent. Students don’t have the right to perform non-consensual exams on unconscious patients. Pelvic exams and pap smears are not necessary for birth control prescriptions. Doctors don’t need to ask their female patients to take their shirt off to listen to their hearts.


The Solution

Protecting the safety of the patient should be the first and foremost concern of healthcare. This includes protecting patients from sexual abuse by providers.

The only solution to prevent sexual abuse by healthcare providers is for patients to be able to refuse any intimate exam or procedure without without penalty. 

Any attempts to withhold prescriptions or treatments, dismissal of the patient from the practice, guilting, shaming, or other intimidation, at the refusal of an intimate exam/procedure or the request to undress should be seen as coercion and a pattern of sexual abuse.

This will also protect providers from false allegations.

There are very few (if any) situations where the results of an intimate cannot be obtained by other means:

  • Pelvic exams are not required for birth control. 
  • An enlarged or high riding prostate can be detected by ultrasound.
  • A good physician exam can conduct a physical exam on a patient wearing a bathing suit. 
  • A physician pediatrician who insists on viewing a patient's genitals without compromise should be suspect.
  • A physician who withholds treatment or prescriptions, or dismisses patients should be reported to the police so patterns of abuse can be established. 

Chaperones are not the solution. Many abuses have been conducted in the presence of other medical personnel. Above all else, the patient's wishes should be respected.

If a patient refuses a chaperone in a situation where one is required (either by law or by policy) should omit that portion of the exam or procedure without penalty to the patient. 




--Banterings