Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been asked to leave the room for a portion of the visit since DC turned 13. I assume it's to ask questions about drugs/alcohol/abuse. Is this not the norm?
I leave for her to ask him questions, but I stay for the entire actual exam (even the private part).
Yucky. How would you have felt if your Mom/Dad had done that?
I spent three years changing his diaper and six years giving him baths. I think he can handle me seeing his twig and berries for thirty seconds a year.
Funny!
Anonymous wrote:Starting at what age does y'all's pediatrician office ask you to step out during physical exams. Even though we see a female doctor, I still prefer to stay in the room for my son's entire check up.
Anonymous wrote:Frankly, I cant imagine any actual abused child just opening up to the pediatrician like magic during a visit in which the parent just steps outside the room.
Nor can I imagine a teen opening up to the pediatrician on command about their own drug and alcohol use.
Is there any evidence backing up this screening process? Im 52. I think I saw the pediatrician alone as a teen at some point but it wasn't due to being requested to do so. My dad had always been the one to bring me to the doc, and the doctor was male, his wife was the nurse. I never felt uncomfortable with him, but I never would have told him I was smoking weed either.
Anonymous wrote:I remember a friend of mine with a daughter turning 12 or 13 saying that she was asked about her sexual orientation during the "parent out of the room" portion of the exam. The question to her was, apparently "Do you like boys, or girls, or both?"
Frankly, why is this assumed to be a concern for the pediatrician? Why is it assumed that they are going to beable to do jack squat if that kids orientation is a problem with their parents? What are they going to do, call social services because the patient cant tell mom they are gay?
I get that its a good thing to have trusted adults that arent your parents, but the choice of pediatrician is strange to me. They arent psychologists or social workers. They cant do anything to help their patient with their psychological issues if the kid cant be honest with their parent. Because if there is a problem with the kid and their parents, the pediatirician telling the parent your kid needs counseling would be not a good idea. Right?
What are we thinking here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been asked to leave the room for a portion of the visit since DC turned 13. I assume it's to ask questions about drugs/alcohol/abuse. Is this not the norm?
I leave for her to ask him questions, but I stay for the entire actual exam (even the private part).
Yucky. How would you have felt if your Mom/Dad had done that?
I spent three years changing his diaper and six years giving him baths. I think he can handle me seeing his twig and berries for thirty seconds a year.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with all posters who find this trend disconcerting. It was not the norm. I would be shocked to find that is made a dent in any social problem affecting kids today.
I just read an article in JAMA pediatrics about how doctors unwittingly co create the Munchausen by Proxy syndrome because they don't keep accurate enough documentation about who said or saw what when even in their own offices.
They don't have time for these complex issues. Its all they can do to keep the kids immunized and healthy.
Anonymous wrote:I remember a friend of mine with a daughter turning 12 or 13 saying that she was asked about her sexual orientation during the "parent out of the room" portion of the exam. The question to her was, apparently "Do you like boys, or girls, or both?"
Frankly, why is this assumed to be a concern for the pediatrician? Why is it assumed that they are going to beable to do jack squat if that kids orientation is a problem with their parents? What are they going to do, call social services because the patient cant tell mom they are gay?
I get that its a good thing to have trusted adults that arent your parents, but the choice of pediatrician is strange to me. They arent psychologists or social workers. They cant do anything to help their patient with their psychological issues if the kid cant be honest with their parent. Because if there is a problem with the kid and their parents, the pediatirician telling the parent your kid needs counseling would be not a good idea. Right?
What are we thinking here?