Letters
"Saving sex for sexual health: readers’ responses"
Anisa Nasir’s article about abstinence in March’s Student BMJ sparked a lively discussion on student.bmj.com, with 17 responses from 14 authors in about half a dozen countries (2008;16:98-9;
http://student.bmj.com/issues/08/03/life/098.php). Although a couple of respondents agree with the concept of abstinence on religious grounds only, some take issue with other
respondents, or the perceived ideological or moral basis of the authors’ reasoning. Most responses, however, reflect the complexity
of the matter as presented in the article itself and perhaps raise questions or prompt discussion rather than take sides.
One correspondent argues that abstinence is not a medical question but a social one; several others do see it as medical,
and one even says that as such its efficacy should be studied in real life conditions, rather than ideal trial conditions.
Ghana and Uganda are named as two examples where an abstinence policy has reduced rates of sexually transmitted infections.
But another correspondent argues that an abstinence only programme is inadvisable because it doesn’t teach adolescents about
other forms of contraception. Several correspondents say that teaching protected sex is probably still the safest option because
the need to “demystify” sex would not be met by portraying it merely as an activity that gives people sexually transmitted
infections.
In life as in trials, compliance will always be a problem, especially given the young age of those most at risk—physically
and emotionally—from unprotected sexual encounters. The latter point is tackled by two correspondents. They recommend counselling
before youngsters become sexually active to ensure that by the time they become teenagers they might be able to accept abstinence
as a possible way of life, without feeling manipulated into it.
Several are in agreement that it would make sense to add abstinence to the list of possible medical interventions to prevent
pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections, especially as the established methods are not effective enough in preventing
these. As one of these possible methods, abstinence would then not be used in the sense of directive counselling—which would
contravene guidelines set by the UK General Medical Council, for example.
Rather than regarding sex advice from doctors as patronising or out of turn, several correspondents think that doctors generally
have their patients’ best interests at heart, and that, therefore, in the context of sexual health counselling, abstinence
should be included as one of several options available.
Birte Twisselmann assistant editor bmj.com
btwisselmann@bmj.com
Student BMJ 2008;16:181 | 17
"Depression is stigmatised"
Healthcare professionals have raised awareness about depression, and the comprehensive guidelines from the National Institute
for Health and Clinical Excellence make treatment more structured.1 However, could the real problem be the less easily treated stigma associated with a mental illness? Many patients do not
seek advice or treatment for fear of the stigma associated with both depression and mental illness in general.2 People’s opinions are deeply rooted and so are difficult to change. The government has set out a five year plan to combat
this stigmatism and negative stereotyping, but how effective can it really be?3 Also, as our population ages, mental illnesses, including depression, will inevitably increase in incidence. Are we prepared
to deal with this burden and the problems associated with stigma?
J Sunkersing second year medical student University of Southampton
sunkersing@aol.com
Student BMJ 2008;16:181 | 17
- Slack R, Chaplin R. Tackling depression. Student BMJ 2008;16:116-7. (March.)
- Barney L, Griffiths K, Jorm A, Christensen H. Stigma about depression and its impact on help-seeking intentions. Aust N Z J Psych 2006;40:51-4.
- Gould M. Government moves to end stigma of mental illness. BMJ 2004;328:1456.
"Depressed patients need counselling"
In addition to the points raised in the article about tackling depression, in the March issue of the Student BMJ, lack of adequate provision of counselling and cognitive behaviour therapy in parts of the United Kingdom have made doctors
hesitant when managing depressed patients.1 I don’t blame them. For many patients antidepressants combined with cognitive behavioural therapy is the most effective form
of treatment.
There may be a shortage of NHS counsellors for depressed patients
My general practitioner-tutor has the agonising task of explaining to his patients, some of whom are in desperate need of
care, that there will be a nine month wait to see an NHS counsellor. This in itself can be a deterrent for doctors at all
levels to diagnosing a patient as having moderate depression. The media have labelled doctors “pill pushers,” but how are
we to move away from this image without the resources to provide holistic care for our patients?
Christina Stamoulis fifth year medical student Manchester University
cstamoulis@doctors.org.uk
Student BMJ 2008;16:181 | 17
- Slack R, Chaplin R. Tackling depression. Student BMJ 2008;16:116-7. (March.)
"Sadness is not depression"
Depressive disorder exists and can be a devastating condition that needs medical attention, but Slack and Chaplin’s article
in March’s Student BMJ was symptomatic of a fallacy that exists in the psychiatric profession, which has failed to understand normal human sadness.1 The system of diagnosis that psychiatrists have proposed, the classification in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder (DSM), fails to take into account any understanding of normal sadness and its difference to a depressive disorder.
The “universal symptoms of depression,” as stated in DSM-IV are more precisely Western ways of expressing distress that have
been medicalised through a number of expert theories that build on various aspects of our language based folk model of depression.
To provide all doctors and medical students simply with lists of symptoms and to state that effective remedies exist, such
as pharmacotherapy or cognitive behaviour therapy, is of little use to either the healthcare professional or the patient.
Better systems need to be put in place to understand depression and its multiple external causes. The prevalence of depression,
on which the authors base their argument, is symptomatic of an overly broad description that has led to the misidentification
of people’s emotions and moods. After all, the answer to how many people have depression depends on how it is diagnosed. The
persistence of some of the symptoms listed by the authors tells us nothing because the markers are arbitrary.
Without a knowledge of the situation in which the symptoms are grounded, which Slack and Chaplin ignore in their proposed
screening of two questions, the natural reaction to a diagnosis of cancer, desertion of a spouse, or loss of work will be
misinterpreted as pathology. Alongside the reductionist claims made, it is widely held that depression is not “an internationally
recognised disease.” A large body of evidence, stemming from linguistics and anthropology as well as psychiatry, indicates
that because the assumption of universal prototypes of emotion is incorrect so must be the assumption that emotions and emotional
expression are universal categories.
The notion of depression has many unstable polythetic categorisations, and the multiple causes are often diffuse and socially
embedded. It is these intricacies that get overlooked and ignored with the responses and management plans recommended by Slack
and Chaplin in their reductionist approach.2 3 4
Alice Howell fourth year medical student, MSc in culture and health University College London
alice.r.howell@gmail.com
Student BMJ 2008;16:182 | 17
- Slack R, Chaplin R. Tackling depression. Student BMJ 2008;16:116-7. (March.)
- Horwitz A. The loss of sadness: how pyschiatry transformed normal sorrow into depressive disorder. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007.
- Jadhav S, Littlewood R. Attitudes towards depression: some medical antropological queries. Pysch Bull 1994;18:572-3.
- Kleinman A, Good B, eds. Culture and depression: studies in the anthropology and cross-cultural psychiatry of affect and disorder.
Berkely: California University Pre ss, 1985.
"Peer led training has flaws"
I worked on setting up an expanded version of the peer led training described by Saidi and coauthors.1 I think the programme is only as good as the information delivered. I have since been marking the students that attend this
teaching, and they seem to have been instructed incorrectly, causing them to perform at best average compared with their peers,
and in contrast to what is said in the article. In theory peer led training works. But in practice it needs to be continually
updated with the curriculum components and evidence based practice, which is currently lacking.
Kirsten Lawson specialist registrar London Deanery
kirsten.lawson@kmpt.nhs.uk
Student BMJ 2008;16:182 | 17
- Saidi S, Lievesley A, Lee M, Gent L, Lin R, Jones L. Peer led training in communication skills. Student BMJ 2008;16:114. (March.)
"Doctorates don’t make a doctor"
As a potential applicant to medical school I was intrigued to read the article about a former pornographic actor who switched
careers to become a “doctor.”1 I am interested because my past is a little different to the typical applicant, but not quite so provocative: I have the
back of my hands tattooed and large obvious facial piercings. Given that medicine is a conservative profession, I don’t think
US admissions committees will have much interest in me if I walk in with them in full view, so I will have to hide them surgically.
After the research I have done about how medical schools might respond to my visible body modifications and the extreme competition
for places, I find it incredibly difficult to believe that a former porn star would be admitted. I looked this actor up, and
both the article and Wikipedia state that she has a doctoral degree; however, she is not a medical doctor. Current colloquial
use of the term “doctor” is reserved for practitioners of medicine—general practitioners, physicians, surgeons, or other specialists.
Simply because you have a doctorate and use the title Dr in front of your name does not mean that you are a doctor. Please
let us try to avoid such confusions.
Jake Humphries research assistant II Harvard School of Public Health
jacobhum@hsph.harvard.edu
Student BMJ 2008;16:182 | 17
- Richards L. Sex, clinics, and videotape. Student BMJ 2008;16:100-1. (March.)
"An inspiring doctor"
Having recently attended a lecture by Professor Harold Ellis titled “60 years in the NHS: an old surgeon looks back,” it was
a pleasure to read the article by Peter Cross in April’s Student BMJ.1 As a fourth year student I am fast approaching the end of the undergraduate medical curriculum, and it seems an appropriate
time to reflect on the characters that I’ve met along the way and how they have affected my personal development.
When I started I expected to be encouraged and motivated by doctors who were enthusiastic about medicine, with a fire for
their specialty. But what I found was rather different. Doctors were exhausted by policy and red tape and were unable to recall
why they chose medicine. Some doctors were keen to put students off medicine and scoffed at eagerness and idealistic views
of the health service.
These views are understandable given the current climate in the National Health Service and medical education but don’t serve
to motivate future professionals. This was not true of all the doctors I have met, but it was the over-riding theme. Professor
Ellis’s talk was a breath of fresh air, however—a real inspiration. It was refreshing to see a doctor with a fervour for medicine
and teaching, and I encourage any students looking for inspiration to attend one of his talks.
Kathryn Topley fourth year medical student University of Leeds
ugm4kjt@leeds.ac.uk
Student BMJ 2008;16:182 | 17
- Cross P. A surgical superstar (Harold Ellis). Student BMJ 2008;16:159-60. (April.)
"Going back to Nigeria?"
I am a British medical student, originally from Nigeria, and I am often asked whether I will go back to Nigeria to practise.
I don’t know, but it is something I think about often. I have experienced the public healthcare system in Nigeria, and the
situation Ejibe described in March’s Student BMJ is as I have observed.1
Imagine having to work long hours with substandard or non-existent equipment, for insubstantial earnings. Turning patients
back from hospitals is not unusual, and many doctors watch their patients die without being able to do anything. Even patients
that can be helped can end up dying because they can’t afford the prescribed drug.
In Nigeria doctors work either for the government in public hospitals or privately if they have the capital. There is no free
health care even in public hospitals. And if you work privately you end up helping only rich people. The people who really
need your help can’t afford to pay.
Medical professionals in the United Kingdom should be given the opportunity to experience medicine in poor countries so that
they value the opportunities they have. Such experience could also equip them to work with limited resources. Understanding
these circumstances also helps to explain the medical “brain drain.” Most doctors who move to rich countries to practise are
not driven by greed—not everyone can deal with the challenges of working in a poor setting every day.
Dare Oladokun first year medical student Leeds University
um07oao@leeds.ac.uk
Student BMJ 2008;16:182 | 17
- Ejibe D. Making do in Nigeria. Student BMJ 2008;16:130. (March.)
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LETTER
"Saving sex for sexual health: readers’ responses"
(Birte Twisselmann, May 2008)
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Adam Di Chiara (May 7th, 2008)
Senior Artworker, BMJ adichiara@bmj.com
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The idea that an abstinence only policy in Uganda has helped lower HIV AIDS infection rates has been much touted in the press over recent years, and has become a popular belief, so much so that the belief has surfaced in these letters pages. But the ABC (Abstain, Be faithful, use Condoms) policy in Uganda promoted and funded by the US government has been opened up to much criticism, particularly as funding is being targeted more towards the A,B than the C, Human Rights Watch's reports, [1] ( http://hrw.org/reports/2005/uganda0305/ ) "Some experts credit the "ABC" strategy with helping to reduce HIV prevalence in Uganda from about 15% in the early 1990s, to less than 10% today (2004). However, Human Rights Watch's report documents how condoms are left out of the equation, especially for young people."
"Teachers told Human Rights Watch that they have been instructed by U.S. contractors not to discuss condoms in schools because the new policy is "abstinence only." President Museveni has publicly condemned condoms as inappropriate for Ugandans, leading some AIDS educators to stop talking about them. The First Lady has also lashed out against groups that teach young people about condoms and called for a national "virgin census" to support her abstinence agenda."
Before the ABC program was set up, Uganda was indeed having some success in HIV AIDS prevention, with a strong education program that seems to have created the results that the "pro-abstinence lobby" is now claiming as its own. With US funding now aimed primarily at an abstinence only policy those successes may well be reversed.
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LETTER
"Going back to Nigeria?"
(Dare Oladokun, May 2008)
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Dr. Shashi Sigdel (May 27th, 2008)
intern, Institute of Medicine, Kathmandu, Nepal, Institute of Medicine sashi.silverline@gmail.com
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I fully agree with the dilemma this young medic is having at present. In third world countries alike ours, one has to work under sub-substantial facilities and enviornment that lacks the charm of medical practice. On one hand, the poverty smothers the management protocol impregnated with the rampant private practice rather for the economic benefit. We have the right to practice where we feel comfortable under the quotient of our qualifications. Even from Nepal, so many medical students get drained every year via USMLE and other licence examinations. It would be praise worthy, if after the attaining qualifications, we serve the soil that cultivated us provided we don't have to abide to inevitable coercions and poltical unstabilty. But whereever we practice in this global village, let us practice humanity as well blended with medicine and let us treat the PEOPLE rather than the CASE.
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