Article Type
Changed
Fri, 01/18/2019 - 12:34
Display Headline
The first exam for a teenager

You open the chart, and you read the chief complaint. Like so many other charts, you see the words, "annual exam," but something catches your eye; her date of birth – "that can’t be right"– but before you can do the math, the number stares back at you – 14 years old. The last name may or may not look familiar – she could be the daughter of one your patients – nonetheless you are about to come to face to face with a 14-year-old patient. How you handle this interaction will forever be remembered by this young girl.

At this moment, I make a calculated decision on how I will proceed. Will I stand? Should I sit? What if she is so nervous she is standing, not sitting in the chair or on the table? I refocus on what is required for an adolescent visit? Does she need an exam? Will her mother or family member be in the room?

David M. Jaspan

I have found that by asking questions and expecting a one-word answer, I am prepared to move the visit along. "What can I do for you today?" This is usually met with an expressionless face and a shoulder shrug. I generally follow that with, "Did someone tell you to come here today?" If you’re lucky, you may get a verbal response, but commonly, you will get the affirmative head nod. I view this as a breakthrough. Now I try to pry, "Are you having a problem?" Again a head nod is success. Once I understand that she is there for a problem, I find that leading questions that use the "embarrassing words" make it easier for the patient to communicate. She may not want to say the word vagina or sex, so take the opportunity to say it for her.

If she is there for an "annual exam," imagine her relief when you tell her she does not need to be examined. In fact, she will not need a Pap smear until she is 21 (soon to be changed to 25). With the ice now broken and a relieved patient before you, this is the golden moment. This is the moment that I use to educate. A speculum is no longer threatening. She is now relaxed that this thing will not be used on her, and she can now listen. While holding the small narrow speculum, I say, "This is not a clamp because clamps close and a speculum is used to open." I hold the speculum in my right hand and then make a loose fist with my left hand. I place the lower lip of the speculum against my left thumb, and say, "This is what your cervix looks like, and this is as far as the speculum must be opened." I then ask her to make a fist. I hold the speculum again her hand, and I use the cytobrush and cotton swab inside her hand Then I ask, "Did that hurt?" Of course, the response is no. I will say that there are many more pain sensors on your hand than in the vagina, but the vaginal exam is embarrassing.

Once I have done this, I use a module or pictures to show her the vagina, cervix, uterus, and ovaries. This pictorial provides a visual of what the pelvic exam is intended to do.

I then show her the stirrups and say, "You can put your heels here, and then slide your bottom to the end of the table, and then we will then use the speculum. When the speculum is placed, you will feel pressure toward your bottom. If you allow your knees to fall out to the side, the exam can be over very quickly. Once we are finished with the speculum, one finger is placed inside the vagina to check your cervix, uterus, and ovaries. That’s it."

"My promise to you is that if you are ever uncomfortable, you just say stop and the exam will stop. It is much more important to me that you feel safe here in this office. It took a great deal of courage to even walk in the door today, you can always reschedule."

Katherine Bohnert

The new American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) guidelines do not recommend a pelvic exam until the age of 21, at the time of the first PAP smear. However, the more knowledge we can provide to our adolescent patients, the less fear they may have when the time does arrive for their first exam.

 

 

ACOG recommends that a young woman’s first visit to an ob.gyn. occur between the ages of 13 and 15 years old. This first visit should address health guidance, screening, and preventative health services. It is important to tell your patient that your discussions and exam will remain confidential. An internal exam is not necessary unless the patient is having a specific complaint. More importantly, this visit serves to establish rapport and trust between patient and doctor. This patient will be more likely to disclose important information about her health on future visits.

Initial and subsequent annual exams should include the following, according the recommendations:

• Vital signs including evaluation of menstrual cycle. This emphasizes the role of menstrual cycles in overall health status.

• Body mass index, which allows the opportunity to discuss dietary management.

• A discussion of normal adolescent development.

• A general physical exam should be performed at least once during early adolescence (12-14 years), middle adolescence (15-17 years), and late adolescence (18-21 years), but is not required at every visit.

• A pelvic exam is not required unless the patient is symptomatic.

• An evaluation of breast development.

• A training session about the external genitalia exam.

• An annual screen for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) (gonorrhea [GC], chlamydia [CT], and HIV) if the patient is sexually active. You can use urine specimens for GC/CT to avoid a pelvic exam.

• Discuss responsible sexual behavior: contraception, STIs, and emergency contraception.

• Discuss the importance of diet and physical activity. It also is important to screen for eating disorders.

• Discuss prevention of injuries: avoidance of alcohol/drugs, drinking and driving, weapons, seatbelts and helmets, and safe tattooing and piercing.

• Screen for sexual activity, depression, abuse, school performance, and tobacco, alcohol, and drug use. This can be done using a questionnaire that the patient fills out in the waiting room. It is important to go over this questionnaire during the visit.

• Check that immunizations are up to date.

In addition to your visit with the patient, it is important to address the parent or caregiver. It is recommended that this be done once during the patient’s early adolescence, mid-adolescence, and late adolescence. This can be done with the patient and the caregiver in the same room, or with the caregiver separately. Topics to discuss include:

• Discuss normal development.

• Describe signs and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and abuse.

• Discuss the benefits of maintaining normal body weight through physical exercise and a healthy diet.

• Describe parenting behaviors that promote healthy adolescent adjustment.

• Outline ways to minimize potentially harmful behaviors.

A successful first visit is the initial step toward lifelong health maintenance.

Dr. Jaspan is the chairman of obstetrics and gynecology for the Einstein Health Care Network in Philadelphia. Dr. Bohnert is a PGY3 resident in obstetrics and gynecology at the Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia.

This column, "Adviser’s Viewpoint," appears regularly in Ob.Gyn. News.

Author and Disclosure Information

Publications
Legacy Keywords
pelvic exam, teen, first OBGYN visit, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Jaspan, Bohnert, teen health
Sections
Author and Disclosure Information

Author and Disclosure Information

You open the chart, and you read the chief complaint. Like so many other charts, you see the words, "annual exam," but something catches your eye; her date of birth – "that can’t be right"– but before you can do the math, the number stares back at you – 14 years old. The last name may or may not look familiar – she could be the daughter of one your patients – nonetheless you are about to come to face to face with a 14-year-old patient. How you handle this interaction will forever be remembered by this young girl.

At this moment, I make a calculated decision on how I will proceed. Will I stand? Should I sit? What if she is so nervous she is standing, not sitting in the chair or on the table? I refocus on what is required for an adolescent visit? Does she need an exam? Will her mother or family member be in the room?

David M. Jaspan

I have found that by asking questions and expecting a one-word answer, I am prepared to move the visit along. "What can I do for you today?" This is usually met with an expressionless face and a shoulder shrug. I generally follow that with, "Did someone tell you to come here today?" If you’re lucky, you may get a verbal response, but commonly, you will get the affirmative head nod. I view this as a breakthrough. Now I try to pry, "Are you having a problem?" Again a head nod is success. Once I understand that she is there for a problem, I find that leading questions that use the "embarrassing words" make it easier for the patient to communicate. She may not want to say the word vagina or sex, so take the opportunity to say it for her.

If she is there for an "annual exam," imagine her relief when you tell her she does not need to be examined. In fact, she will not need a Pap smear until she is 21 (soon to be changed to 25). With the ice now broken and a relieved patient before you, this is the golden moment. This is the moment that I use to educate. A speculum is no longer threatening. She is now relaxed that this thing will not be used on her, and she can now listen. While holding the small narrow speculum, I say, "This is not a clamp because clamps close and a speculum is used to open." I hold the speculum in my right hand and then make a loose fist with my left hand. I place the lower lip of the speculum against my left thumb, and say, "This is what your cervix looks like, and this is as far as the speculum must be opened." I then ask her to make a fist. I hold the speculum again her hand, and I use the cytobrush and cotton swab inside her hand Then I ask, "Did that hurt?" Of course, the response is no. I will say that there are many more pain sensors on your hand than in the vagina, but the vaginal exam is embarrassing.

Once I have done this, I use a module or pictures to show her the vagina, cervix, uterus, and ovaries. This pictorial provides a visual of what the pelvic exam is intended to do.

I then show her the stirrups and say, "You can put your heels here, and then slide your bottom to the end of the table, and then we will then use the speculum. When the speculum is placed, you will feel pressure toward your bottom. If you allow your knees to fall out to the side, the exam can be over very quickly. Once we are finished with the speculum, one finger is placed inside the vagina to check your cervix, uterus, and ovaries. That’s it."

"My promise to you is that if you are ever uncomfortable, you just say stop and the exam will stop. It is much more important to me that you feel safe here in this office. It took a great deal of courage to even walk in the door today, you can always reschedule."

Katherine Bohnert

The new American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) guidelines do not recommend a pelvic exam until the age of 21, at the time of the first PAP smear. However, the more knowledge we can provide to our adolescent patients, the less fear they may have when the time does arrive for their first exam.

 

 

ACOG recommends that a young woman’s first visit to an ob.gyn. occur between the ages of 13 and 15 years old. This first visit should address health guidance, screening, and preventative health services. It is important to tell your patient that your discussions and exam will remain confidential. An internal exam is not necessary unless the patient is having a specific complaint. More importantly, this visit serves to establish rapport and trust between patient and doctor. This patient will be more likely to disclose important information about her health on future visits.

Initial and subsequent annual exams should include the following, according the recommendations:

• Vital signs including evaluation of menstrual cycle. This emphasizes the role of menstrual cycles in overall health status.

• Body mass index, which allows the opportunity to discuss dietary management.

• A discussion of normal adolescent development.

• A general physical exam should be performed at least once during early adolescence (12-14 years), middle adolescence (15-17 years), and late adolescence (18-21 years), but is not required at every visit.

• A pelvic exam is not required unless the patient is symptomatic.

• An evaluation of breast development.

• A training session about the external genitalia exam.

• An annual screen for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) (gonorrhea [GC], chlamydia [CT], and HIV) if the patient is sexually active. You can use urine specimens for GC/CT to avoid a pelvic exam.

• Discuss responsible sexual behavior: contraception, STIs, and emergency contraception.

• Discuss the importance of diet and physical activity. It also is important to screen for eating disorders.

• Discuss prevention of injuries: avoidance of alcohol/drugs, drinking and driving, weapons, seatbelts and helmets, and safe tattooing and piercing.

• Screen for sexual activity, depression, abuse, school performance, and tobacco, alcohol, and drug use. This can be done using a questionnaire that the patient fills out in the waiting room. It is important to go over this questionnaire during the visit.

• Check that immunizations are up to date.

In addition to your visit with the patient, it is important to address the parent or caregiver. It is recommended that this be done once during the patient’s early adolescence, mid-adolescence, and late adolescence. This can be done with the patient and the caregiver in the same room, or with the caregiver separately. Topics to discuss include:

• Discuss normal development.

• Describe signs and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and abuse.

• Discuss the benefits of maintaining normal body weight through physical exercise and a healthy diet.

• Describe parenting behaviors that promote healthy adolescent adjustment.

• Outline ways to minimize potentially harmful behaviors.

A successful first visit is the initial step toward lifelong health maintenance.

Dr. Jaspan is the chairman of obstetrics and gynecology for the Einstein Health Care Network in Philadelphia. Dr. Bohnert is a PGY3 resident in obstetrics and gynecology at the Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia.

This column, "Adviser’s Viewpoint," appears regularly in Ob.Gyn. News.

You open the chart, and you read the chief complaint. Like so many other charts, you see the words, "annual exam," but something catches your eye; her date of birth – "that can’t be right"– but before you can do the math, the number stares back at you – 14 years old. The last name may or may not look familiar – she could be the daughter of one your patients – nonetheless you are about to come to face to face with a 14-year-old patient. How you handle this interaction will forever be remembered by this young girl.

At this moment, I make a calculated decision on how I will proceed. Will I stand? Should I sit? What if she is so nervous she is standing, not sitting in the chair or on the table? I refocus on what is required for an adolescent visit? Does she need an exam? Will her mother or family member be in the room?

David M. Jaspan

I have found that by asking questions and expecting a one-word answer, I am prepared to move the visit along. "What can I do for you today?" This is usually met with an expressionless face and a shoulder shrug. I generally follow that with, "Did someone tell you to come here today?" If you’re lucky, you may get a verbal response, but commonly, you will get the affirmative head nod. I view this as a breakthrough. Now I try to pry, "Are you having a problem?" Again a head nod is success. Once I understand that she is there for a problem, I find that leading questions that use the "embarrassing words" make it easier for the patient to communicate. She may not want to say the word vagina or sex, so take the opportunity to say it for her.

If she is there for an "annual exam," imagine her relief when you tell her she does not need to be examined. In fact, she will not need a Pap smear until she is 21 (soon to be changed to 25). With the ice now broken and a relieved patient before you, this is the golden moment. This is the moment that I use to educate. A speculum is no longer threatening. She is now relaxed that this thing will not be used on her, and she can now listen. While holding the small narrow speculum, I say, "This is not a clamp because clamps close and a speculum is used to open." I hold the speculum in my right hand and then make a loose fist with my left hand. I place the lower lip of the speculum against my left thumb, and say, "This is what your cervix looks like, and this is as far as the speculum must be opened." I then ask her to make a fist. I hold the speculum again her hand, and I use the cytobrush and cotton swab inside her hand Then I ask, "Did that hurt?" Of course, the response is no. I will say that there are many more pain sensors on your hand than in the vagina, but the vaginal exam is embarrassing.

Once I have done this, I use a module or pictures to show her the vagina, cervix, uterus, and ovaries. This pictorial provides a visual of what the pelvic exam is intended to do.

I then show her the stirrups and say, "You can put your heels here, and then slide your bottom to the end of the table, and then we will then use the speculum. When the speculum is placed, you will feel pressure toward your bottom. If you allow your knees to fall out to the side, the exam can be over very quickly. Once we are finished with the speculum, one finger is placed inside the vagina to check your cervix, uterus, and ovaries. That’s it."

"My promise to you is that if you are ever uncomfortable, you just say stop and the exam will stop. It is much more important to me that you feel safe here in this office. It took a great deal of courage to even walk in the door today, you can always reschedule."

Katherine Bohnert

The new American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) guidelines do not recommend a pelvic exam until the age of 21, at the time of the first PAP smear. However, the more knowledge we can provide to our adolescent patients, the less fear they may have when the time does arrive for their first exam.

 

 

ACOG recommends that a young woman’s first visit to an ob.gyn. occur between the ages of 13 and 15 years old. This first visit should address health guidance, screening, and preventative health services. It is important to tell your patient that your discussions and exam will remain confidential. An internal exam is not necessary unless the patient is having a specific complaint. More importantly, this visit serves to establish rapport and trust between patient and doctor. This patient will be more likely to disclose important information about her health on future visits.

Initial and subsequent annual exams should include the following, according the recommendations:

• Vital signs including evaluation of menstrual cycle. This emphasizes the role of menstrual cycles in overall health status.

• Body mass index, which allows the opportunity to discuss dietary management.

• A discussion of normal adolescent development.

• A general physical exam should be performed at least once during early adolescence (12-14 years), middle adolescence (15-17 years), and late adolescence (18-21 years), but is not required at every visit.

• A pelvic exam is not required unless the patient is symptomatic.

• An evaluation of breast development.

• A training session about the external genitalia exam.

• An annual screen for sexually transmitted infections (STIs) (gonorrhea [GC], chlamydia [CT], and HIV) if the patient is sexually active. You can use urine specimens for GC/CT to avoid a pelvic exam.

• Discuss responsible sexual behavior: contraception, STIs, and emergency contraception.

• Discuss the importance of diet and physical activity. It also is important to screen for eating disorders.

• Discuss prevention of injuries: avoidance of alcohol/drugs, drinking and driving, weapons, seatbelts and helmets, and safe tattooing and piercing.

• Screen for sexual activity, depression, abuse, school performance, and tobacco, alcohol, and drug use. This can be done using a questionnaire that the patient fills out in the waiting room. It is important to go over this questionnaire during the visit.

• Check that immunizations are up to date.

In addition to your visit with the patient, it is important to address the parent or caregiver. It is recommended that this be done once during the patient’s early adolescence, mid-adolescence, and late adolescence. This can be done with the patient and the caregiver in the same room, or with the caregiver separately. Topics to discuss include:

• Discuss normal development.

• Describe signs and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and abuse.

• Discuss the benefits of maintaining normal body weight through physical exercise and a healthy diet.

• Describe parenting behaviors that promote healthy adolescent adjustment.

• Outline ways to minimize potentially harmful behaviors.

A successful first visit is the initial step toward lifelong health maintenance.

Dr. Jaspan is the chairman of obstetrics and gynecology for the Einstein Health Care Network in Philadelphia. Dr. Bohnert is a PGY3 resident in obstetrics and gynecology at the Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia.

This column, "Adviser’s Viewpoint," appears regularly in Ob.Gyn. News.

Publications
Publications
Article Type
Display Headline
The first exam for a teenager
Display Headline
The first exam for a teenager
Legacy Keywords
pelvic exam, teen, first OBGYN visit, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Jaspan, Bohnert, teen health
Legacy Keywords
pelvic exam, teen, first OBGYN visit, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Jaspan, Bohnert, teen health
Sections
Article Source

PURLs Copyright

Inside the Article