Comment & Controversy
In your practice, are you planning to have a chaperone present for all intimate examinations?
Robert L. Barbieri, MD
(Editorial; June 2020)
Enough is enough
I have always thought that many doctors who write opinions and pontificate about what should be done in practice live in la-la land. This editorial, for me, confirms it.
I personally am becoming tired of all this: dividing the specialty into obstetricians and gynecologists; pelvic exams are not necessary during annual visits; HPV testing by patients at home; doing away with Pap smears; Pap smears are not necessary for patients after a certain age; scribes in your footsteps to document all findings in the EMR; heaven forbid you do not ask the patient if she has a fire extinguisher in her house or some other stupid information; interpreters for people who speak Mongolian because their partner should not be used to interpret for them; and so on.
Now you want us to have a chaperone for every pelvic exam! Not any chaperone, but a specialized one! You worry about the sanctity and privacy of the patient but now have 2 additional people in the room for the patient’s exam. First, most patients prefer to have the least number of people looking at their bodies during an exam, especially a pelvic exam. Second, where do we get the money to support all of this? Does this type of policy make any sense? Are lawyers now controlling what medical care is all about? Is that what is now considered quality medical care?
By the way, I am not a burned out physician. I use common sense and consider what is best for my patients in everything that I do. If a patient requests a chaperone, my medical assistant will come to the room and provide that service. You do not need to be specialized to provide this service! Ivory tower people have lost all common sense. You consider yourselves the authorities in whatever medical field you specialize in, but let me tell you something: You really are not.
I know I will be criticized and demonized publicly by many; however, I have the courage to say what, in my opinion, I feel is right and what is wrong. Many physicians are afraid to do so, and, like sheep, will comply with your misguided opinions. I truly do not mean any disrespect to your knowledge and good intentions. I just think that enough is enough!
Gabriel G. Hakim, MD
Waterbury, Connecticut
Dr. Barbieri responds
In response to my editorial on the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommendation that chaperones be present for intimate examinations (ACOG Committee Opinion No. 796), Dr. Hakim outlines many concerns with the rapidly evolving practice of medicine.1 I am confident that the ACOG Committee on Ethics wisely considered the benefits, costs, and unintended consequences of the recommendation. The United States Veterans Administration, the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, and the American College Health Association endorse a similar recommendation. I do not think the distinguished members of the committees who issued the recommendation “live in la-la land.”
Reference
- American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Committee on Ethics. Sexual misconduct: ACOG Committee Opinion No. 796. Obstet Gynecol. 2020;135:e43-e50.