More articles by Dr. Soucasaux:
Anatomical drawings - Anovulatory
cycles - Archetypal aspects of the female genitals
- The breasts: some morphological aspects - Colposcopy - Endocrinology
of menstruation - The curious relations between
androgens and estrogens in women - Female sexual
response - The Gräfenberg Spot (G-Spot)
- Gynecological assistance: the three basic areas
- Gynecologist versus obstetrician: what lies
behind the combination? - "Gyneco-obstetric-surgical"
stubborness and the perpetuation of one of the greatest mistakes of
women's medicine - Mayer-Rokitansky-Kuster-Hauser
(MRKHauser) Syndrome - Menstrual toxin: An
old name for a real thing? - Nature and the ovaries
- Oral hormonal contraceptives (the "Pill")
- The Ovaries: Some Functional and Archetypal Considerations
- Peculiarities of the Female Genitals' Sensory Innervation
- Physiology of menstruation - Polycystic
ovaries syndrome - The Possibility of Becoming Pregnant,
Its Implications for Women, and Abortion - Premenstrual
congestion of the breasts - Premenstrual syndrome
(PMS) - The Psychology of Gynecology - Psychosomatic and symbolic aspects of menstruation
- Psychosomatic gynecology - Symmetric
Patterns in the Female Genitals - Uninterrupted
use of hormonal contraceptives for menstrual suppression: why I do not recommend
it - The uterine cervix - Uterine
contractility - The Uterus and the Female "Passive-Active"
- Women's corporeal consciousness and experience,
and see his Art of Menstruation
"Gyneco-Obstetrics": One more unanimously accepted
great mistake
Nelson Soucasaux , Brazilian gynecologist
After having exhaustively demonstrated that gynecology and obstetrics
are very, very different medical specialities and that there are no scientific
and logical reasons that could justify their usual integrated practice by
the same physician (read the article), some complementary
observations on how this serious mistake of the fusion of both specialities
was perpetuated become pertinent.
As I've said, ". . .When everybody walks on the same direction,
this may be a sign that they are following the wrong direction . . . ."
Unanimity is a situation that almost always should arouse some suspicion,
mostly when it seems to be "absolute." I say that because, in
several ways, unanimity may be very dangerous. Contrary to the suppositions
of so-called "common sense," unanimity not always is a sign of
being right, since it also may be a serious indication of error. And, in
that case, the mistakes perpetrated become more and more dangerous because
they seem to be the "right thing." The Brazilian expression "ondas
de mal senso" defines quite well this kind of phenomenon, very
common along all the history of humanity. (In English, that expression can
be understood as a "dissemination of epidemic nonsense" in a community).
Carl Gustav Jung's studies on the intricate dynamics of the collective
mind are highly advisable for the understanding of this subject. He studied
the mechanisms responsible for a phenomenon that may be metaphorically described
as "psychical contamination," and by means of which an enormous
number of people in a community is influenced or even "taken"
by some "ideas" that might be either right or wrong. It's needless
to point out the tragic consequences of the acceptance, by the majority
of people, of mistaken points of view. This is so because, in their position,
the recognition of the mistake becomes very hard and meets a lot of resistance.
The dominant (dis)orientation that characterizes traditional women's
medicine seems to be unanimously accepted by most of the professionals devoted
to it. As a consequence and due to their ignorance of the problem, patients
and people in general blindly tend to accept the "official" position.
In this way, the almost absolute majority of gynecologists and obstetricians
mistakenly suppose that: 1) the integrated practice of gynecology and obstetrics
by the same doctor is fundamental for the practice of women's medicine;
thus, every gynecologist must be an obstetrician and vice-versa; 2) gynecology
is a fundamentally surgical speciality; therefore, every gynecologist must
also be a surgeon specialized in female pelvic surgery (or gynecological
surgery).
The mistaken supposition that every gynecologist should also be an obstetrician
is almost unanimous. The fact that obstetrics actually is a speciality
that requires surgical mastery ends up by "closing" the equally
insane cycle that "demands" surgical practice on the part of every
gynecologist. In this way, the eternal obstetric-surgical grip upon gynecology
is maintained, with all of its regrettable consequences for medical assistance
to women.
Here we have, therefore, an absolutely fantastic series of conceptual
mistakes that continue being endlessly perpetuated in the history of women's
medicine. In my book "Novas Perspectivas em Ginecologia" ("New
Perspectives in Gynecology") I hope I have demonstrated that, according
to the more elementary medical and scientific principles of reasoning, the
official orientation that regrettably dominates all women's medicine is
totally devoid of any logical basis, and constitutes a serious "disorientation."
The suppositions that the usual "gyneco-obstetrics" are based
upon are nothing but vicious standpoints perpetuated by socio-cultural and
pseudo-scientific conditioning that, at the same time, are very useful for
the maintenance of some "professional strategies" that have proved
to be very advantageous for the physicians who work within this traditional
context.
One of these suppositions is what I call the "obstetric view of
women," an archaic standpoint still deeply-rooted in our culture which,
in a tendencious way and in opposition to the reproductive, psychological
and existential reality of modern women, still holds that women's fundamental
role consists on conceiving, gestating and giving birth to children. In
"Novas Perspectivas em Ginecologia" I demonstrated how this excessive
emphasis on women's maternal side had a great influence on women's medicine,
giving rise to the already mentioned "obstetric view of women"
which, in turn, is partly responsible for the persistent and irrational
obstetric dominance over gynecology.
The regrettable and sad reality is that, in a conservative society as
this one we live in, to act in the area of women's medicine according to
a wrong but traditionally instituted model becomes not only "more successful"
(?!?) but also professionally more " advantageous." Worst of all
is that, as I have already demonstrated, the persistence of that situation
is incompatible with the evolution of medicine. The problem is aggravated
by the fact that most women have absolutely no knowledge of that
since, for many years, they have been systematically deceived and "confused"
by the prevailing (dis)orientation that characterizes official women's medicine
- that is, "gyneco-obstetrics."
Copyright Nelson Soucasaux 2004
____________________________________________
Nelson Soucasaux is a gynecologist dedicated to clinical, preventive
and psychosomatic gynecology. Graduated in 1974 by Faculdade de Medicina
da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, he is the author of several
articles published in medical journals and of the books "Novas Perspectivas
em Ginecologia" ("New Perspectives in Gynecology") and "Os
Órgãos Sexuais Femininos: Forma, Função, Símbolo
e Arquétipo" ("The Female Sexual Organs: Shape, Function,
Symbol and Archetype"), published by Imago Editora, Rio de Janeiro,
1990, 1993.
Web site: www.nelsonginecologia.med.br
<http://www.nelsonginecologia.med.br>
Email: [email protected]
More articles by Dr. Soucasaux:
Anatomical drawings - Anovulatory
cycles - Archetypal aspects of the female genitals
- The breasts: some morphological aspects - Colposcopy - Endocrinology
of menstruation - The curious relations between
androgens and estrogens in women - Female sexual
response - The Gräfenberg Spot (G-Spot)
- Gynecological assistance: the three basic areas
- Gynecologist versus obstetrician: what lies
behind the combination? - "Gyneco-obstetric-surgical"
stubborness and the perpetuation of one of the greatest mistakes of
women's medicine - Mayer-Rokitansky-Kuster-Hauser
(MRKHauser) Syndrome - Menstrual toxin: An
old name for a real thing? - Nature and the ovaries
- Oral hormonal contraceptives (the "Pill")
- The Ovaries: Some Functional and Archetypal Considerations
- Peculiarities of the Female Genitals' Sensory Innervation
- Physiology of menstruation - Polycystic
ovaries syndrome - The Possibility of Becoming Pregnant,
Its Implications for Women, and Abortion - Premenstrual
congestion of the breasts - Premenstrual syndrome
(PMS) - The Psychology of Gynecology - Psychosomatic and symbolic aspects of menstruation
- Psychosomatic gynecology - Symmetric
Patterns in the Female Genitals - Uninterrupted
use of hormonal contraceptives for menstrual suppression: why I do not recommend
it - The uterine cervix - Uterine
contractility - The Uterus and the Female "Passive-Active"
- Women's corporeal consciousness and experience,
and see his Art of Menstruation
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