• Aust Fam Physician · Nov 2017

    Patients' attitudes towards chaperone use for intimate physical examinations in general practice.

    • Lucie Stanford, Andrew Bonney, Rowena Ivers, Judy Mullan, Warren Rich, and Bridget Dijkmans-Hadley.
    • Aust Fam Physician. 2017 Nov 1; 46 (11): 867-873.

    BackgroundThe objective of this article is to investigate patients' attitudes to the use of chaperones for intimate physical examinations (IPEs) in a sample of Australian general practices.MethodsA cross-sectional survey of adult patients from 13 randomly selected general practices in regional New South Wales was conducted between September and November 2012. Generalised linear mixed models were used for analysis.ResultsOf 780 surveys distributed, 687 (88%) were returned; the age range was 18-91 years and 356 (52%) were from female patients. Most women had never had a chaperone present for a Papanicolaou (Pap) smear (82.6%). Between 23% and 33% of respondents preferred a chaperone with their usual general practitioner (GP) across IPEs and gender of the respondents. The odds of preference for a chaperone were significantly less with a GP whom the respondents did not know well, compared with their usual GP, for a Pap smear (female) or genital examination (male).DiscussionIndividualised discussion regarding chaperone use for IPEs is warranted, especially with patients seeing their usual GP.

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