Feature

Which factors fuel sexual violence in health care?


 

Inadequate sex education?

News reports about physicians who abuse patients have a tremendous impact on the public. People are genuinely surprised when they hear the words “health care professional” and “sex attack” in the same sentence. “One of the most disturbing aspects is that health care professionals are committing these acts of violence against women who are in a vulnerable state, typically when they’re under anesthesia, they’ve fallen ill, or when the health care professional introduces an element of deception into the procedure so as to create the opportunity to abuse the patient in some way,” said Dr. Drezett.

As Dr. Cohen sees it, to perpetrate these acts of sexual violence, physicians – as well as lawyers, religious leaders, judges, politicians, police officers, and other persons in a position of trust – make use of their power to take advantage of a person’s vulnerability. “Physicians, lawyers, police officers, religious leaders, dads, bosses, husbands – the people who commit sexual abuse all have something in common,” he said. “In terms of the emotional aspect, all of them are taking advantage of both the power that their position holds in society and the asymmetrical power dynamics that exist between them and the other person.”

Indeed, anyone who knocks on a physician’s door seeking a diagnosis or treatment, anyone who knocks on a lawyer’s door seeking assistance, is putting themselves in a fragile situation. “The abuser considers the other person an object, not a human being who has rights,” said Dr. Cohen. People who fit the psychological and behavioral profile of a sexual assailant find in these “powerful” professions and in the circumstances and opportunities these professions provide a means to fulfill their desires. In medicine, however, there is yet another imbalance, one involving consent to touch a person’s body.

The age of the recently arrested anesthesiologist is something that caught Dr. Cohen’s attention. As noted in one of his many books, Bioética e Sexualidade nas Relações Profissionais [Bioethics and Sexuality in Professional Relationships], published in 1999 by the São Paulo Medical Association, age is a characteristic that repeatedly came up in his analysis of 150 sexual abuse proceedings handled by Cremesp.

“When I looked over the cases, I saw that most of the abusers were not right out of med school in their twenties – a time when sex is at the forefront of one’s life – nor were the abusers on the older end of the age spectrum. The abusers were, in fact, those who had already had several years of experience – as was the case with this 32-year-old anesthesiologist who, at a particular moment in time, breached all prohibitions and betrayed the expectations that society had of him as a physician: to care for people’s well-being and to alleviate their suffering. There was nothing that could hold him back from fulfilling his desire, not even the presence of nurses and other physicians in the operating room.” As for the findings of Dr. Cohen’s review, the majority of the 150 cases were dismissed because of lack of evidence.

To Ms. Pedroso, who has treated more than 12,000 victims of sexual harassment, it’s the questioning and intimidation that women feel in relationship to the male physician – a person who is viewed as holding knowledge about her body – that leaves them vulnerable and more subject to acts of violence, especially in more remote places. “We’re speaking, yet again, about rape culture. Not many people know what that term means, but, generally speaking, it has to do with the objectification of women’s bodies and the issue of boys growing up thinking they have the right to touch girls and women and that they will go unpunished for doing so.”

The lack of sex education and efforts to prevent sexual abuse are contributing factors for why the situation remains unchanged. “We are long overdue. We live in a country where there’s this completely mistaken belief that talking about sex education involves teaching children how to have sex, as opposed to teaching them how to protect themselves. We teach girls that they have to protect themselves from being raped, but we don’t teach boys not to rape.”

Another point highlighted by Ms. Pedroso is the fact that to carry out their actions, sexual assailants seek out-of-the-way places, places where they believe the rules can be bent and where they won’t be caught. This is what may have happened with Dr. Bezerra. During a recent press conference, the coordinator of the Health Section of the Rio de Janeiro Public Defender’s Office, Thaísa Guerreiro, stated that although the Women’s Hospital in São João do Meriti – one of the places where the assailant worked as an anesthesiologist – had adopted protocols to protect patients, it failed to enforce them. Another observation was that the health care professionals normalized violations of a woman’s right to have a companion present throughout labor and delivery, a right guaranteed by federal law. Ms. Guerreiro went on to say that the hospital’s chief of anesthesia and the state’s health coordination office did not question this, nor did they find it strange or surprising. According to witness statements, Dr. Bezerra would ask the patients’ husbands to leave the room in the middle of the procedure.

It should be clarified, Dr. Drezett mentioned, that although obstetric violence and sexual abuse overlap in places, they do not have the same root cause or definition. “There are two sets of situations that we term ‘obstetric violence.’ One involves any type of disrespectful treatment, whether comments or neglect, during pregnancy, delivery, or the postpartum period. The other refers to health care professionals’ attitudes in imposing inadequate and outdated medical procedures at the time of birth, such as keeping the woman fasting, having her pubic hair removed, and inducing labor or speeding up the delivery with oxytocin and [routine] episiotomy, among other things.”

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