Generally, if someone goes to a doctor -- this comes up more at obgyn appts, especially when you're young or it's your first time -- it's generally allowed and considered more than appropriate if the patient wants someone to accompany them, yes?
What I'd like to know is ... when, and why, is this not allowed?
Here's two examples:
1. A young woman I met through my Tumblr blog went to a long overdue gyn appointment and got a positive pap test result. They had her come in for the standard colposcopy, and while there they decided (as they are wont to do), to take some biopsy samples. The poor thing was just besides herself, crying, begging them to stop but being told "just a lilttle longer, love". Traumatized.
True, this was during the time of covid, during which we all now know most excessive precautions were unnecessary and whatnot, but even so -- I ask you -- why the hell wouldn't it have been okay for her mom or boyfriend to accompany her to hold her hand and help her through it? Was the rationale, even for covid, sufficiently rational?
2. Just read this one -- right here (thank you for sharing your experience @Shygirl17 -- it's right here: https://en.zity.biz/index.php?mx=forum;ox=display;msg=1353339).
In a nutshell, she says she "was already on edge because they wouldn't let Anthony back there". This was *last year*. 2023.
Why? Why the hell would any doctor not be willing to let a nervous patient have someone there to support them?
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Asking this here because I'm sure there are reasons, and we have plenty of true medical personnel in our midst, and I'd love to hear -- even if I might disagree -- what the rationalization is for insisting patients be isolated leading to a more traumatic experience when we clearly know this makes it harder for some people?
Thanks in advance!
-tyd