Background: The objective of this study was to compare patients' preferences and physicians' practice for the presence of chaperones during genitourinary examinations.
Methods: A survey of 163 emergency department patients and 52 physicians was used to evaluate patients' preferences and physicians' practices for the presence and gender of a chaperone during genital examinations.
Results: Most male patients (88%) did not care about the presence of a chaperone. Only 47% of female patients preferred a chaperone when a pelvic examination was to be performed by a male physician and only 26% preferred a chaperone with a female physician. One hundred percent of male and most female physicians (92%) used a chaperone for pelvic examinations. Most physicians do not ask patients whether they want a chaperone; however, most patients would like to be asked.
Conclusions: We conclude there is a discrepancy between what physicians do and what their patients desire.