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Why are you fighting this? I've yet to find someone as obstinate on these issues as myself and even I see no issue here.
She makes personal decisions regarding her care in ways that best fit her while placing no burden on anyone else. Many women request female doctors for ANY compromising exam sans any reason at all. Why does having a reason suddenly make it not OK? My hospital has no problem scheduling for specific doctor to accommodate patients. You may wait another week to be seen in some cases but whatever.
Her input in the thread was quite fair, from my perspective. She gave personal info AND general, and only delved deeper when specifically asked. You're exaggerating the harm her statements pose.
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I didn't mean to go off on this particular poster, but the "penetrated by a stranger" wording I found very troubling. She sort of became the poster child on this thread for patients choosing not to be seen by male doctors/trainees, which is here my issue lies, not so much with her or her personal trauma.
The best thing my med school ever did was simply tell patients in no uncertain terms "sorry this is a teaching hospital, it is our policy that you will get seen by whomever we send into the room, otherwise go elsewhere". (most didnt). I've heard far too many stories of doctors at other programs who escaped learning how to do basic medical procedures and exams because programs let their patients choose not to be seen by a male, a student, someone of different race or ethnicity, etc. As someone in the midst of my training I'm sensitive to this, and think that, sure, while many people have history which might make it difficult to have certain body parts examined, I think when you expand it to certain body parts by certain genders (or races, nationalities, orientations) it's a slippery slope. You can't say, sure men should be able to go into any specialty, but they aren't going to examine me or another 1/6 of women (or more, give or take underreporting) who are similarly situated. I'm not sure a premed, who is going to be "imposing" on patients in a similar manner shortly, can appropriately have this attitude. But whatever. If you guys think we should allow men to be OBGYNs but only get to do a small fraction of procedures and exams during their training because patient comfort and funky wiring outweighs trainees actually seeing many patients, so be it. I think when some of you get far enough in your clinical training and realize that the only way you get good at things is by doing a lot of them, you might change your tunes. Patients to a point can choose their doctors, but often legitimate choices on their face can have illegitimate results, shutting whole groups of people out of adequate training or professional success.
As a profession it's probably a good idea to let people have a choice but also let them know that as a profession and as professionals we don't condone making choices on gender, racial, national grounds. At any rate sorry for making that particular poster the poster child for this, but her position made a pretty good lightening rod for this.