A girl becomes sexually active but does not want anyone other that her GP knowing. In most practices, that would not be allowed. The girl then become pregnant but wants a termination. She is now faced with 3 choices.
1) Tell the GP and allow her (or him if they chose not to see a female doctor) to share the data.
2) Try and force a miscarriage and not report it.
3) Go to a back street abortionist which may not be done safely and she runs the risk of being abused.I for one think the latter 2 choices are dangerous and I find it appalling that the health profession seem to think these are 2 viable options.
Illegal abortions still take place in the UK. What has to be asked, yet the health profession refuse to ask, is, are illegal abortions taking place in the UK because the health profession refuse to allow access for legal abortions unless the woman agrees to inform others? If the answer is yes, then the health profession can/should be held responsible for illegal abortions. In other wards, the buck stops with the health profession.
Showing posts with label GPs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GPs. Show all posts
Saturday, 24 November 2007
Example 4
If I was to lead someone to believe that I was a doctor so that I could carry out an intimate examination on them, would it be an assault/ sexual assualt even if they agree to me touching them? I would say yes.If a patient was to allow a doctor to carry out an intimate examination because of they thought tht only the GP would know why they were there and what was wrong with them but the info was then known by others (ether from reading the info or from thr doctor dictating the info to them), would that be a assault/sexual assualt? Again I would say yes.A lie to touch is still alie no matter what your profession. This sort of assualt goes on almost everyday in the health profession, yet it goes un-punished
Example 5
If someone was to put a gun to someones head and demand sex, would that be rape? I think it would be even if the victim was to say yes, as saying no could result in their harm. If the gun was hidden away, but the patient knew it was there, would that still be rape? I would say yes. This is an implied threat by the attacker.Currently, in most practices, unless a patient agrees to data sharing (I have been in practices, such as Gilbert Road in Bucksburn, Aberdeen) where all doctors/nurses have full access to GP files, such as asthma clincs knowing if patients have ever been raped and in these pracices even admin staff are allowed to know which patient is on Viagra or been abused etc), the patient is not allowed access to health care even where this causes discomfort or even their death unless they ‘consent’ to data sharing. With the threat of discomfort or even death for saying no (said or implied), can the patient saying yes be of their own freewill? I for one say no as to be consentioanl you must be able to say no without it causing any side effects, and to me discomfort/death is a side effect. NHS Grampian and other NHS trust (even government ministers) seem to view the patients discomfort/death as a viable option for the patient.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)