by Andrew Malekoff
In the 1980’s I held a part
time job as a psychiatric crisis counselor for an emergency room nearby my home
in Long Beach. I carried a beeper and was on call nights and weekends. I
handled some of the crises over the phone. Many calls required my presence at
either the ER or, in some cases, the police station.
The calls involved people
with thoughts or actions related to suicide; substance use issues; family
conflicts; or people with mental illness experiencing disturbing symptoms such
as hallucinations or delusions.
Sometimes crisis calls were more
benign. They included people seeking advice or referrals, or people who simply
wanted to make human contact in the middle of the night to combat their
loneliness.
A few of the crisis calls
have not escaped my memory. One of them involved a young Black woman who told
me that she had been raped. She said she came to the ER to request an examination.
In the course of my
intervention in the ER I asked the on duty nurse if the woman was given a “rape
kit,” a sexual assault forensic exam to preserve potential DNA evidence and
receive important medical care. The nurse said she had not. When I asked
why not, she gestured with her head towards the chief emergency room physician
and rolled her eyes.
I approached him and asked
him the same question, “Why not?” With no change of expression he said
matter-of-factly, “Because she’s crazy.” I said, “What has that got to do with
it.” He did not respond.
I returned to the woman and
asked her again, “Would you like to be examined?” She nodded yes.
I circled back to the doctor
and said, “If you’re telling me that you are refusing her a “rape kit,” I am
including that in my crisis note which will be read by government officials
that support this hospital. I will state that the patient reported being raped,
requested a rape kit and that you denied her the examination.” He appeared surprised to be challenged and
finally said, “I’ll give her a kit but don’t ever question my authority again.”
As I was following the
proceedings leading up to the most recent Supreme Court nomination and the
protests led by women, I found the term “rape culture” popping up repeatedly on
social media.
Emilie Buchwald, author of Transforming
a Rape Culture describes
rape culture as “a complex of beliefs that encourages male sexual
aggression and supports violence against women. A rape culture condones
physical and emotional terrorism against women as the norm.”
Women Against Violence
Against Women (WAVAW) Rape Crisis Centre in Vancouver, BC, Canada further states that “rather than
viewing the culture of rape as a problem to change, people in a rape culture
think about the persistence of rape as just
the way things are.”
Perhaps the most disturbing
aspect of rape culture is that, to a large extent, it is accepted as inevitable
when, in fact, it is an “expression of values and attitudes that can change.”
Parents can teach their
children not to condone sexual violence in everyday language and reject the
sexual denigration of women and girls. Schools can teach comprehensive sex
education that includes values and attitudes. The justice system can punish rapists
and not their victims.
And, medical personnel who
perform forensic exams can be properly trained.
Published in Blank Slate
Media’s TheIslandNow.com on Oct. 9, 2018, link: https://theislandnow.com/opinions-100/kids-first-end-rape-culture/
Andrew Malekoff is the
Executive Director of North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center, which
provides comprehensive mental health services for children from birth through
24 and their families. To find out more, visit www.northshorechildguidance.org.
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