https://www.aclusd.org/en/news/aclu-south-dakota-takes-legal-action-stop-forcible-catheterizations
http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/bjsports/early/2018/06/22/bjsports-2018-099403.full.pdf
http://www.urologytimes.com/modern-...ful-catheter-insertion-leads-bleeding-lawsuit
I find it stunning it a post Larry Nassau world that a community would be so resistant and defensive when someone suggests hey, before providers forced themselves inside someone’s geniltals, let’s make sure consent and dignity is being valued highly. Are there rare times when it can’t be obtained a procedure should be done anyhow? Yes. But there needs to be respect even in those times that’s what is being done is without consent and forced physical invasion into a body, even if it causes no harm, without consent can be extremely traumatizing. I am not even stating that forced procedures against someone’s will should never ever be done. I’m stating that it’s happening too often and with little regard for the common effect it has on people.
Many therapists are trained to be reluctant and hesitant to call for 911 help for trauma patients in a mental health crisis.
Do you understand this? Have you gotten outside the EMT world at all to see the long term effects? I have.
Therapists are trained to be very careful about hospitalizing patients with trauma histories because it’s written in textbooks that the process is traumatic and worsens symptoms - it does not help restore to health. It might keep someone alive, which is very crucial, but it’s expected they will have worse symptoms when they leave because of forced procedures and etc.
I’ve personally talked to ER nurses who do more forceful IVs and laugh at suicidal patients in crisis and forced caths on highly fubtional patients expressing they were suicidal. The medical record documents no out of control behavior just an expression of suicidal thoughts. There was no cause for the forced catherizations for the client that I talked to them about.
They did it anyhow explaining it is what they normally do. “She should have peed the in the cup when we told her to do so.”
I still have the records from those conversations.
Three years later this client refused chemo for a highly treatable cancer because they were so afraid of forced procedures being done again without consent. This patient will likely die of this cancer because they have been so traumatized they won’t access care for it. It’s totalky their choice too.
Go ahead and continue the forced catherizations.
As someone who has professionally dealt with the long term consequences of well meaning and not so well meaning EMTs pushing too quickly for forced procedures invading the gentials of clients against consent, I hope that perhaps someone here will read my perspective on the long term consequences of forced procedures and make sure it’s absolutely worth the risk and costs to the patient to do it against their consent.
And if you take that as an attack, that’s on you.