BMJ 2005;330:234-235 (29 January), doi:10.1136/bmj.38315.646053.F7 (published 3 December 2004)
Primary care
Chaperones for intimate examinations: cross sectional survey of attitudes and practices of general practitioners
Joe Rosenthal, senior lecturer in general practice1,
Janice Rymer, senior lecturer in obstetrics and gynaecology3,
Roger Jones, Wolfson professor of general practice2,
Sarah Haldane, senior academic registrar in general practice2,
Shoshana Cohen, senior academic registrar in general practice1,
Jenny Bartholomew, researcher2
1 Department of Primary Care and Population Sciences, Royal Free and University College Medical School, University College London, London NW3 2PF,
2 Department of General Practice and Primary Care, Guy's, King's, and St Thomas' School of Medicine, King's College, London SE11 6SP,
3 Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Guy's, King's and St Thomas' School of Medicine
Correspondence to: J Rosenthal j.rosenthal{at}pcps.ucl.ac.uk
Introduction
The conduct of intimate examinations in medical settings has
been a subject of controversy for many years, because of potential
difficulties and pitfalls for both doctors and patients. The
royal colleges,
1 the General Medical Council, and the defence
organisations now emphasise the importance of ensuring that
these examinations are not done by unaccompanied doctors. Some
studies have shown, however, that the attitudes and behaviour
of medical professionals are often at odds with these recommendations
2
3 and that patients may not always welcome the offer, let alone
the presence, of a third person in the consultation.
4 We describe
the attitudes and practices of general practitioners regarding
the involvement of chaperones during intimate examinations and
identify barriers and concerns affecting their use.
Participants, methods, and results
A self completion questionnaire, with 38 items, was developed
from themes emerging from patient focus groups and was piloted
and modified before being sent to 1813 doctors from 18 primary
care trusts in England, selected to achieve geographical and
demographic diversity. A single postal reminder was sent to
non-responders.
We analysed 1246 (69%) of the questionnaires. The mean age of respondents was 45 (range 27-69); 754 (61%) were male and 972 (78%) were white. In all, 890 practices (71%) were urban, with 132 (11%) rural and 203 (16%) intermediate. There were more female general practitioners (GPs) in rural practices and more GPs from ethnic minorities in urban practices.
A total of 457 (37%) respondents had a policy on the use of chaperones. Altogether 517 (68%) male GPs and 24 (5%) women usually or always offered a chaperone; 410 (54%) men and 9 (2%) women usually or always used a chaperone; 60 males (8%) and 344 females (70%) never used one (
2 = 583.9, 3 degrees of freedom, P < 0.001).
Use of chaperones was correlated with increasing age (Pearson's r = 0.18, P < 0.01), belonging to a non-white ethnic group (
2 = 68.9, P < 0.001), and working in a smaller practice (Spearman's r = 0.14, P < 0.01).
Practice nurses were the most common chaperones with 969 (78%) GPs reporting that they were likely or very likely to be used. A family member or accompanying person (585; 47%), a non-clinical member of the practice staff (535; 43%), a student or GP registrar (275; 22%) or another doctor (119; 10%) were alternatives. Most respondents rarely or never recorded the offer (818; 66%) or the identity (884; 71%) of a chaperone. A number of factors influenced the use of chaperones (figure).
Comment
The use of chaperones by male doctors has substantially increased
since the 1980s and '90s and a continuing low level of use by
female doctors despite one third of practices having a policy.
Record keeping about the offer and use of chaperones is poor,
and significant barriers to the use of appropriate chaperones
in general practice still undoubtedly exist. The recommendations
of the royal colleges and other bodies are, therefore, difficult
to implement fully. Their advice may be appropriate in most
secondary care settings, but such recommendations may be difficult
to translate into primary care practice. We suggest that more
flexible guidance is needed for general practice, which must
recognise the realities of current staffing and space arrangements,
and take greater account of the wider context of the relationship
between patients, their doctors, and the practice.
5 Further
research is needed into patients' views and wishes. We also
need to gain more understanding of the circumstances in which
problems might arise in this delicate area.
| What is already known on this topic
Attitudes and behaviour of medical professionals are often at odds with the recommendations of the royal colleges and other bodies regarding the universal use of chaperones for intimate examinations
What this study adds
Use of chaperones by male doctors since the 1980s and '90s has substantially increased, but use by female doctors remains low
More flexible guidance is needed for general practice as well as further research into patients' views and wishes on the use of chaperones
| |
This article was posted on bmj.com on 3 December 2004: http://bmj.com/cgi/doi/10.1136/bmj.38315.646053.F7
Contributors: RJ, JRo, and JRy had the original idea for the study. Data were collected by SH and SC. JB analysed the data and drafted a report. All authors wrote the paper. RJ is guarantor.
Funding: SH and SC were funded by the London Deanery GP Department as academic senior registrars in general practice.
Competing interests: None declared.
Ethical approval: South East Multicentre Research Ethics Committee.
References
- The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. Gynaecological examinations, guidelines for specialist practice. London: RCOG, 2002.
- Jones RH. The use of chaperones by general practitioners. J R Coll Gen Pract
1983;33: 25-7.[Medline]
- Speelman A, Savage J, Verburgh M. Use of chaperones by general practitioners. BMJ
1993;307: 986-7.
- Stern V. Gynaecological examination post-Ledward: a private matter. Lancet
2001;358: 1896-8.[Medline]
- Whitford DL, Karim M, Thompson G. Attitudes of patients towards the use of chaperones in primary care. Br J Gen Pract
2001;51: 381-3.[Medline]
(Accepted 10 February 2004)

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
StumbleUpon
Technorati What's this?
Relevant Articles
-
Use of chaperones in general practice: GPs try to balance doctors' and patients' needs
- Norma O'Flynn and Nicky Britten
BMJ 2005 330: 846.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
-
Use of chaperones in general practice: Chaperones protect both parties
- Charlotte Cohen, Ken McLean, and Simon Barton
BMJ 2005 330: 846-847.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
-
Guidelines for chaperones in primary care are not practical
BMJ 2005 330: 0.
[Full Text]
-
A tough nut to crack
- Kamran Abbasi
BMJ 2005 330: 0.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Al-Gaai, E A, Hammami, M M
(2009). Medical chaperoning at a tertiary care hospital in Saudi Arabia: survey of physicians. J. Med. Ethics
35: 729-732
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Sinclair, A. M, Gunendran, T., Pearce, I.
(2007). Use of chaperones in the urology outpatient setting: a patient's choice in a "patient-centred" service. Postgrad. Med. J.
83: 64-65
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
O'Flynn, N., Britten, N.
(2005). Use of chaperones in general practice: GPs try to balance doctors' and patients' needs. BMJ
330: 846-846
[Full text]
-
Cohen, C., McLean, K., Barton, S.
(2005). Use of chaperones in general practice: Chaperones protect both parties. BMJ
330: 846-847
[Full text]
-
(2005). Are Chaperones Needed for Intimate Examinations?. JWatch Emergency Med.
2005: 9-9
[Full text]
Rapid Responses:
Read all Rapid Responses
- Please can we avoid dangerous conflations
- Steven Ford
bmj.com, 9 Dec 2004
[Full text]
- Fair Game
- Awori J Hayanga
bmj.com, 14 Dec 2004
[Full text]
- Further examination
- David Carvel
bmj.com, 28 Jan 2005
[Full text]
- Chaperones for intimate examinations: difficulties exist
- Cheung Yiu Wing
bmj.com, 29 Jan 2005
[Full text]
- WHAT IS AN INTIMATE EXAMINATION?
- Graeme M Mackenzie
bmj.com, 31 Jan 2005
[Full text]
- Chaperoning for intimate examinations
- Charlotte E Cohen, et al.
bmj.com, 4 Feb 2005
[Full text]
- Re: Fair Game
- Jaiganesh K Viswambharan
bmj.com, 7 Feb 2005
[Full text]
- Practitioners try to balance doctors and patients needs
- Norma O'Flynn, et al.
bmj.com, 9 Feb 2005
[Full text]