'I bet she’s enjoying this': When doctors violate unconscious patients
We may only interact with our physicians a few times a year, but they hold enormous insight into the most intimate details of our lives. We’re okay with this lopsided relationship because of an implicit trust. Yet while every doctor takes an oath to continually earn that trust, some physicians, even heroic ones, fail to live up to their pledge.
In a disturbing essay titled “Our Family Secrets,” published Tuesday in the Annals of Internal Medicine, a journal of the American College of Physicians, a doctor reveals in vivid detail what it looks like when that trust is violated—specifically, through completely indecent treatment of female patients under general anesthesia. Writing anonymously, the author declares: “I know this is my silence to break.”
It’s probably safe to say that most doctors would be horrified by the behavior described in the essay, which you can find here. But its publisher hopes the piece will also embolden some to call out inappropriate behavior, even when the offenders are superiors.
Do doctors need to start wearing body cams?
In an accompanying note, Dr. Christine Laine, editor-in-chief of the journal, says she and her editorial team initially debated publishing the accounts. “We all agreed that the piece was disgusting and scandalous and could damage the profession’s reputation,” she wrote. “Some believed that this was reason not to publish the story. Others believed that it was precisely why we should publish it.”
Laine elaborated on her own emotional reaction over the phone. “The first time I read it, it made my stomach churn,” she told me. “Every time I’ve read it since, I’ve had the same reaction. It makes me angry for all the patients, angry for all the young physicians, and angry at myself—angry for all the physicians who were too timid to speak up.”
Just how pervasive is this brand of unethical behavior? Should we, as patients, be more concerned about the conduct of those with whom we entrust our lives? Do doctors need to start wearing body cams?
No national governing body tracks the kind of transgressions recounted in the essay—but Barron Lerner, a physician and medical ethics professor at New York University’s Langone Medical School, said he believes they aren’t common. “I would say the sorts of things being described in that piece are very rare, especially now,” Lerner told me. “Ten, twenty years ago, they were more commonplace.”