
Pelvic Exams by Med Students on Anesthetized WomenΒ
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Please note: This blog contains descriptions of sexual assault.
From Heart Failure, a book I wrote about my time at Tufts University School of Medicine: βI am all gloved up, ο¬fth in line. At Tufts, medical studentsβparticularly male studentsβpractice pelvic exams on anesthetized women without their consent and without their knowledge. Women come in for surgery and, once theyβre asleep, we all gather around; line forms to the leftβ¦We learn more than examination skills. Taking advantage of the womanβs vulnerabilityβas she lay naked on a table unconsciousβwe learn that patients are tools to exploit for our education.β
Using female patients to teach pelvic exams without their consent or knowledge remains βa dirty little secret about medical schools.β It is an βage-oldβ practice that continues to this day in med schools around the world. Itβs been referred to as βthe βvending machineβ model of pelvic exams, in which medical students line up to take their turnβ¦β βOnly itβs not a vending machine; itβs a womanβs vagina.β
Itβs been called βan outrageous assault upon the dignity and autonomy of the patientβ¦The practice shows a lack of respect for these patients as persons, revealing a moral insensitivity and a misuse of power.β Indeed, βit is yet another example of the way in which physicians abuse their power and have shown themselves unwilling to police themselves in matters of ethics, especially with regard to female patients.β Said a residency-program director at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, βI donβt think any of us even think about it. Itβs just so standard as to how you train medical students.β
What happened when this practice came to light in New Zealand? The chair of the New Zealand Medical Association got on television and said: ββUntil recently it wasnβt an issueβ¦Iβm very sorry that women feel theyβve been assaulted and violated in this way. That was never our intention.β He had no idea then, asked the [TV] presenter, that women might object? βAll I can say is that there have been no objectionsβ¦β βCould the reason be,β asked the interviewer logically, βthat itβs very hard for an anesthetized woman to know whatβs going on?ββ
The practice has been defended publicly by many medical schools and hospitals, contending βthis touching is entirely appropriate and clearly falls well within the patientβs βimplied consentβ to carry out the operation.β After all, βpatients are aware they are entering a teaching hospital and therefore know that trainees will be actively participating in their care.β However, βresearchers have found that many patients do not know when they have interacted with medical students, or even whether they are in a teaching hospital.β How can this be? βDeliberate lies and deception.β
βA survey of medical students found that 100% of them had been introduced to patients as βdoctorβ by members of the clinical team,β and, as they go through training, there is, as a journal article is titled, an βErosion in Medical Studentsβ Attitudes About Telling Patients They Are Students.β βAdditionally, as medical students complete their clinical years of training, their sense of responsibility to inform patients that they are students is found to decrease,β especially if there is an opportunity to perform an invasive procedure. That may be why medical students seem to develop a βdonβt ask, donβt tellβ policy when it comes to seeking consent for pelvic examinations on anesthetized patients. More than a third of 1,600 medical students surveyed across the country strongly disagreed with the statement βHospitals should obtain explicit permission for student involvement in pelvic exams,β as seen below and at 4:03 of my video Medical Students Practice Pelvic Exams on Anesthetized Women Without Their Consent.

After all, doctors βargue that performing a pelvic examination is no more intimate than placing oneβs hands inside an abdomen during general surgery or attempting to intubate a patientβ and assert that sticking your fingers in a womanβs vagina is βjust as intimateβ as an ophthalmologist looking into the back of your eye; any claim to the contrary is just βanother attempt to justify the obsession with political correctness.β Said one medical school professor, βPersonally, I would prefer to see a new generation of well-trained doctorsβ¦rather than a nation of women whose vaginas are protected from battery by medical students.β
The national survey concluded: βPatients admitted to teaching hospitals do not, however, by the mere act of admission relinquish their rights as human beings to have ultimate control over their own body and to be involved in decisions concerning their health care.β
Is it possible that women just donβt care? Studies show that up to 100% of women asked said they would want to know that vaginal exams were being performed by medical students. Since patients care deeply about being asked, why canβt we at least ask their permission? βWe canβt ask women,β the medical school faculty replied. βIf we do, they might say no.β
Itβs jaw-dropping to me that Iβm still trying to expose this practice more than 20 years after I first wrote about it. Whatβs to be done? Ending the Hidden Practice of Pelvic Exams on Unconscious Women Without Their Consent.Β
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