Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Doctors continue to practice after sexually abusing patients - because they are too important and needed

Atlanta Journal Constitution

A broken system forgives sexually abusive doctors in every state, investigation finds


In each of these cases, described in public records, the doctors either acknowledged what they’d done or authorities, after investigating, believed the accusations. While the scale and scope of the physicians’ misdeeds varied tremendously, all were allowed to keep their white coats and continue seeing patients, as were hundreds of others like them across the nation.

In a national investigation, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution examined documents that described disturbing acts of physician sexual abuse in every state. Rapes by OB/GYNs, seductions by psychiatrists, fondling by anesthesiologists and ophthalmologists, and molestations by pediatricians and radiologists.

Victims were babies. Adolescents. Women in their 80s. Drug addicts and jail inmates. Survivors of childhood sexual abuse.

But it could be anyone. Some patients were sedated when they were sexually assaulted. Others didn’t realize at first what had happened because the doctor improperly touched them or photographed them while pretending to do a legitimate medical exam.

Some doctors were disciplined over a single episode of sexual misconduct. A few physicians — with hundreds of victims — are among the nation’s worst sex offenders. But the toll can’t be measured by numbers alone. For patients, the violations can be life-altering. The betrayal even pushed some to suicide.

How do doctors get away with exploiting patients for years? [...]

Some victims say nothing. Intimidated, confused or embarrassed, they fear that no one will take their word over a doctor’s. Colleagues and nurses stay silent.

Hospitals and health care organizations brush off accusations or quietly push doctors out, the investigation found, without reporting them to police or licensing agencies.[...]

But when a physician is the perpetrator, the AJC found, the nation often looks the other way.

Physician-dominated medical boards gave offenders second chances. Prosecutors dismissed or reduced charges, so doctors could keep practicing and stay off sex offender registries. Communities rallied around them.[...]


The Roman Catholic Church, the military, the Boy Scouts, colleges and universities. They have all withered under the spotlight of sexual misconduct scandals and promised that abuse will no longer be swept under the rug.

The medical profession, however, has never taken on sexual misconduct as a significant priority. And layer upon layer of secrecy makes it nearly impossible for the public, or even the medical community itself, to know the extent of physician sexual abuse.[...]

Today, after months of unearthing rarely viewed documents and tracking some cases from beginning to end, the AJC is exposing a phenomenon of physician sexual misconduct that is tolerated — to one degree or another — in every state in the nation.[...]

Yet many, if not most, cases of physician sexual misconduct remain hidden. The AJC investigation discovered that state boards and hospitals handle some cases secretly. In other cases, medical boards remove once-public orders from their websites or issue documents that cloak sexual misconduct in vague language.

When cases do come to the public’s attention, they are often brushed off by the medical establishment as freakishly rare. While the vast majority of the nation’s 900,000 doctors do not sexually abuse patients, the AJC found the phenomenon is akin to the priest scandal: It doesn’t necessarily happen every day, but it happens far more often than anyone has acknowledged.[...]

Over and over again, records show, predatory physicians took advantage of a doctor’s special privilege — the daily practice of asking trusting people to disrobe in a private room and permit themselves to be touched.

Offenses ranged from lewd comments during intimate exams to molestation, masturbation by the doctor in front of the patient, swapping drugs for sex and even rape. Because many orders are vague or undetailed, it isn’t always clear if a doctor claimed the patient consented. However, the profession says consent is never a defense because of the power imbalance between doctors and patients.

David Clohessy, the executive director of SNAP, a support and advocacy organization for people sexually abused by priests, doctors and others, said many Americans view physicians with too much deference and automatic respect.

“We are so reliant on them, we are so helpless and vulnerable and literally in pain often times when we go in there. We just have to trust them,” Clohessy said.

“So when they cross the boundary and their hands go into the wrong places, we are in shock, we are paralyzed, we’re confused, we’re scared. We just do not want to believe, first of all, that a doctor is capable of this , and secondly that their colleagues and supervisors will not address this immediately and effectively when we report it.”[...]

11 comments :

  1. I love it when the sages of Chelm finally come to realize the obvious.

    Let me ask you,
    Do you think it never occurred to the Ob/Gyn that he would be having 1 on 1s with naked women, and being legitimized? Or do you think that he knew but went for it anyway reluctantly? (Or maybe willingly?) Do you think that the intern in those early days when he was first being privy to entering the room where there was a live one didn't arrive with heightened adrenaline like an aroused horse? Or maybe he just discomforts and inconveniences himself to have his hands מלוכלכות בדם בשפיר ובשליא with mesiras nefesh out of his love for man kind (or 'מין' kind).

    So let me enlighten you. This was a major factor in his decision to choose this profession. If we don't look aside, then we will have to disqualify males from joining this group. I'm not saying whether that should or shouldn't be, but I'm just saying the way it is.

    And let me tell you something else. Not only Ob/Gyns but also many others, dermatologists, internists etc.

    There are varying levels of offensive behavior, but ALL, yes ALL Ob/Gyns and lots of others have this quality to a certain degree.The question certainly is how much and to what level we should tolerate it, but let's first admit to this fact and not try to fool ourselves.

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  2. This was an old hitchkock movie, during WWII, a nazi prisoner (of sorts) successfully operated on a US patient, but threw him overboard (literally) after the operation.

    Also, mengele's )yemachewish patients in (munich) testified he was a good doctor, to jews too.

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  3. Ajority of doctors see it as "clinical", nothing personal. But there are exceptions, and nothing is done about it. (Rememberjoan rivers case? Nothing done about it. Nelson rockefeller, nothing done (he only got fired cause koch thought it was improper, but he's making Million$ now as a highly regarded expert, flying all over the country, testifying for both sides.)

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  4. You don't believe that any obgyn would want to help bring new life into the world? Do you also think that every female obgyn is lesbian? After all why else would she want to see other women's bodies?

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  5. No I don't think that, just as I don't thing that a carpenter is aroused by the wood or else why would he....? That's silly.

    But a normal man..... we are all to pretend that he doesn't even notice, right?

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  6. Of course they see only as clinical, they're super human beyond ant regular human feelings. You are very temimusdig.

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  7. Do the poskim agree with your conjecture?

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  8. I wouldn't want to be in the same room as you. You sound ill and dangerous.

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  9. Every posek that I know of allow women to use male doctors including gynecologists. It appears they don't agree with Harry.
    Poskim are generally male so I guess they're thinking about other things too?

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  10. It always does boil down to issuing insults, doesn't it. I'm actually a normal well adjusted individual who is stating an idea which I think is true. That doesn't call for insulting me in response.

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  11. I'm actually very cynical.

    They see it as clinical. Its part of their training, its the reason they always have a female nurse or secretary in the room during an examination (not that the nurse is watching what he's doing, where his hands are.) Or if there always is a nurse in the room.)

    There are exceptions, and those are where the licensing boards are refusing to punish, the topic of this post.

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