EnemaNewbie,
While I will not point out any of the real medical professionals here on this board, I will tell you that there are many of us here, doctors, nurses, x-ray techs, MA's, CNP's, PA's and the list goes on.
Once in a while one of us will come right out and tell you that we are in fact medical professionals, but not usually. However, if you play around in the site for very long, it should become apparent to you who we are.
It can be very very unsafe for us to reveal ourselves too much, we must be careful. So if you don't get any responses, this is why.
Another reason is because usually, we real professionals are at a ratio of about 250 to 1. Meaning that there are probably about 250 laypeople to every one of the real medical professionals.
Which brings up another issue, and I am not sure quite how to say this without sounding like I am bragging, because I don't mean to, but lets face it, most people with a medical fetish want to play with a real medical professional. We are their ultimate dream/goal.
When I first started out I didn't quite know what to expect, know the rules, or know how to do things. So, on another medical fetish site I posted that I was a real nurse, I am a woman, a rogue female none the less, and that I wanted to play for real, no cybering for example.
Well let me tell you, that was a huge mistake, huge! I had 20 sometimes more messages in my box from both men and women who wanted to play with me. I had people offering things from money to plane tickets, to free trips and whatever else one can think of, not to mention the "other" things that were being offered, suggested, or hinted at, lol.
So, we tend to keep a somewhat low profile for these two reasons, there are others, but I think these are the two main ones.
Another thing, most of us would never reveal whether or not real or play came first. That's a double edged sword, and we would just be cutting off our foot no matter what we answered. For example....
If we tell you that play came first, then it could be said that we just became a medical professional so that we could be kinky all the time, take advantage of our patients possibly, etc. No cool.
But if we say that real came first. Then again, someone could say that we are attracted to our patients and a danger to them because we have ulterior motives. Also, not cool.
So you see, we really can't answer that usually. It's a complicated system the medical system. We govern ourselves, the laws can't protect us. When we sign our license's, we pretty much are signing away about half of our legal rights, the same rights that give you freedom of speech etc, we as medical professionals have those revoked for the most part. We are held to a different standard than laypeople.
Weird but true.