Anonymous wrote:It sounds like it was traumatizing. Were you in the room? I would cancel the appt and find a new doctor. I have a 10 yo son and I can't imagine a scenario where he is freaking out, pushing a doctor's hands away, and the doctor GOES THROUGH A TESTICULAR EXAM ANYWAY. That is violating! Can you imagine giving a pelvic exam while a girl screams No!? You need a new doctor, and you need to listen to your son.
Anonymous wrote:This is a serious red flag for sexual abuse. You need to fully investigate this further. I am a physician and please - do not brush this off with your son. Seek professional assistance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a serious red flag for sexual abuse. You need to fully investigate this further. I am a physician and please - do not brush this off with your son. Seek professional assistance.
I work in criminal justice and this was my first response too. Sexual abuse.
Anonymous wrote:How about postponing the testicle check? Chances anything is wrong are so rare. This is a big red flag as far as I'm concerned. I think it's very unusual to have such a violent reaction against this kind of exam. I'd take it off the table for now, do the rest of the physical without it, and then keep trying to talk about it.
Anonymous wrote:This is a serious red flag for sexual abuse. You need to fully investigate this further. I am a physician and please - do not brush this off with your son. Seek professional assistance.
Anonymous wrote:Along these lines, I can tell the pediatrician I don't want my preteens to have genital exams this year? (They've never found anything abnormal in the past).
Are the docs supposed to allow parents to request this?
Anonymous wrote:Get a female doctor. He will be less freaked out. Tell your son you will be in the room with him. Ask the doctor if it is necessary. A good doctor will put him at ease, in your presence. Tell your son that if doctor says he can skip it he can skip. If not he has to do it but you will give him a special reward for managing his anxiety and facing it without a lot of time waste. I personally think you sound kind of insensitive op. Kids this age and older can be really sensitive about their private areas. Your physician husband ought to be a little more sensitive. He sounds really anxious about this. Good luck. Signed mother of a very anxious teen.
Anonymous wrote:Woman here - maybe he's just embarrassed. I remember being told I would have to have a pelvic exam once I got my period, which resulted in me lying to the doctor about getting my period until I was 17 when I had a huge ovarian cyst that required an OB exam. I don't even know why I was so embarrassed but my doctor was male and I remember feeling much better about having the female OB do the exam.
I think you should tell him that certain things are uncomfortable and embarrassing but need to be done to make sure we are physically okay. And then ask him if there's anything he would like that could make it easier such as a different dr, maybe your husband being there instead of you (though telling him go man up may have alienated him ...).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a serious red flag for sexual abuse. You need to fully investigate this further. I am a physician and please - do not brush this off with your son. Seek professional assistance.
What do you mean by this? That the doctor was improper? Or someone else may have abused him?