Posted on 03/26/2002 2:36:24 AM PST by mamarainsberry
Edited on 04/22/2004 12:32:59 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
Dianne Neely has no official way to complain about an intrusive "Teen Questionnaire" that a pediatrician gave to her 13-year-old daughter, Amanda, without parental consent.
The 27 questions
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
I wouldn't fault any parent for having some trust of a doctor, but stories like this is an eye-opener.
It is a boundary violation. We sent out the following SUSSA ALERT last week and I posted it here. We can stop this if people start reporting these ethics violations.
SUSSA ALERT
The following article was written by Timothy Wheeler, MD, Director Doctors for Responsible Gun Ownership, a Project of The Claremont Institute, PO Box 1931, Upland, CA 91785-1931
Dr. Wheeler gave SUSSA permission to reproduce this and distribute it to our members and elsewhere. Please read this carefully and pass it on to your family and friends.
Many doctors organizations are under the control of anti-civil rights extremists and are actively encouraging their members to work against the Bill of Rights. We need to AGGRESSIVELY fight this.
As Dr. Wheeler states in his article: The last thing a doctor wants these days, next to a malpractice suit, is a patient complaint alleging unethical conduct. That means the best way to fight back is to file a complaint against the offending doctor.
Some of your friends or members of your family may be reluctant to file a complaint against their doctor or pediatrician. Remind them that just refusing to answer the offending question will not stop the doctor from asking less informed patients these questions. Remind them we are fighting to preserve our freedoms and our childrens freedom. Their complaint could save a life. It will certainly eliminate one threat to our freedom.
Please spread this information to as many people as you can. With some effort we can put a stop to this assault on our rights.
Gun Politics in Your Doctors Office
Do you own a gun? How many guns do you have? Do your children have access to guns in your home? Did you know that having a gun in your home triples your risk of becoming a homicide victim?
These are questions your doctor may ask you or your children as part of routine physical examinations or questionnaires. Gun-related questions in doctors offices, especially those coming from pediatricians, are based on a medical political movement against gun owners. That movement is led by the American Academy of Pediatrics, although the AMA and other physician groups have launched similar efforts against gun owners.
With a few rare exceptions, such questions about guns do not reflect a physicians concern about gun safety. Rather, they are intended to prejudice impressionable and trusting children and their parents into thinking that guns are somehow bad.
That political motive makes these questions ethically wrong. Any doctor who asks them is committing a form of unethical conduct known as an ethical boundary violation. And any doctor who commits a boundary violation should be disciplined.
Who can discipline the physician? You, the almighty consumer. Thats right. If you, the patient or parent, file a formal written complaint with the offending doctors HMO or medical group, your complaint will be taken seriously. The doctor will be asked to respond to it. In any case, your polite but firm protest will be a black mark on his or her record that will likely make him or her think twice before repeating the offense.
Patients not enrolled in a health plan (HMO) might see a doctor in a small group practice or solo practice. Boundary violations by a doctor in this case can be reported to your county medical society. Although federal anti-trust laws have mostly stripped medical societies of their enforcement powers, they can still get an erring physicians attention.
Medicine has become an extremely competitive service industry. Medical groups are trying harder than ever to please consumers. The last thing a doctor wants these days, next to a malpractice suit, is a patient complaint alleging unethical conduct.
If the doctor persists or is especially inappropriate, you can send that written complaint to your state medical licensing board. For instructions on filing a complaint go to the web site of your state government or look in the phone book for the boards listing. This is a last resort, and it will be a definite blemish on the doctors career. But it may be necessary for repeat offenders. This step will apply enormous pressure on the offending physician, even if the state board takes no official action against his or her license.
To summarize: you dont have to suffer in silence and you dont have to disclose personal information about your gun ownership to politically motivated doctors. Most important, you can strike back at unethical doctors who abuse your trust to advance a political agenda against law-abiding gun owning families.
For more information contact Doctors for Responsible Gun Ownership (DRGO),
a Project of The Claremont Institute, PO Box 1931, Upland, California 91785-1931.
(909) 949-9971 drgo@adelphia.net www.claremont.org, click on DRGO
Exactly! This "every Doc is out to give my kid and abortion and take away my guns" paranoia is just plain silly. Keep up that attitude and you'll have only yourself to thank when Doc's quit practicing and bring young minds quit going to medical school. Who's going to treat your kid's strep throat then?
Q. Is there a national data base of gun owners now?
A. Maybe.............
Q. Do a certain group, type of people WANT a data base of gun owners?
A. Quite definitly!
Q. Is there a drive on to have a Nation-wide MEDICAL database?
A. Why of course.
Q. Would this database be available to any 'authorities'?
A. Why, again, yes.
Q. Would these 'gun questions' be in that data base?
A. HAHAheehee < /Maniacal_Laugh> ... Of course!
I'll begin, my personal physician who is a great doctor and human being asked me about having a gun in my house.
The next 15 minutes consisted generally of my questions to him regarding the reason for asking the question concerning gun ownership. It doesn't sound like this is anywhere near the anamoly I thought it was.
There are many good ETHICAL priests as well. Just how far can you trust them with your kid?
The only way to stop this is to report the doctors. Just changing doctors will not stop these questions. Complaints will.
Flat refusal to answer such questions is good. And the parents should be in the room to make sure nothing inappropriate, such as intrusive questions, occur.
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