Physicians are trained to peer into your life, past and present, and ask all sorts of sensitive, if not uncomfortable, questions.
It's not just that they examine your naked body inside and out and record all its imperfections. Have you ever used marijuana or cocaine. Have you been depressed or been treated for mental illness.
You get the gist; the experience is intrusive. And doctors take the Hippocratic oath, pledging to hold sacred their patients' secrets.
This pledge of confidentiality, however, is now challenged by a world where computers rule and health information falls into many hands. Electronic medical records have become a national goal, a way to. Doctors are supposed to be nosy. Patients expect it, or they would not be forthcoming. And how about your marriage € or marriages.
How much do you smoke or drink.
One might well ask whether medical privacy is just too outmoded a concept for today's information-hungry world. But the doctor-patient relationship was never meant to be other than confidential and privileged and solely for the benefit of the patient. Have you used Botox or had plastic surgery. Ever had a sexually transmitted disease. |