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Harney refuses to guarantee funds for rape crisis centre

  • 20-06-2010 12:25pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 7,941 ✭✭✭


    I find she is attacking all sources to do with the woman,man and child in Ireland and the family.
    THE Government has failed to guarantee future funding for a key rape crisis centre despite the number of people using the service rocketing in the wake of recent reports on child abuse.
    http://www.independent.ie/national-news/harney-refuses-to-guarantee-funds-for-rape-cr

    I read this article and to think this poor girl after her ordeal she had to travel to be given proper care,sickens me.


    Graveyard rapists flee after attack on girl (16)
    http://www.herald.ie/national-news/graveyard-rapists-flee-after-attack-on-girl-16-2227582.html
    Is rape on a high.I have met a few people who haven been raped,from a good few years back before it was talked about and they suffer terribly.
    Is Ireland going backwards.

    Sorry mods i put in wrong title can you fix please to Harney refuses to guarantee funds for rape crisis centre,please.Thanks Casey


«1

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,587 ✭✭✭Pace2008


    caseyann wrote: »
    Graveyard rapists flee after attack on girl (16)
    http://www.herald.ie/national-news/graveyard-rapists-flee-after-attack-on-girl-16-2227582.html
    Is rape on a high.
    According to the CSO there was a drop in recorded cases of rape in Q1 of this year compared to the same period in 2009 (page 4 of the document), and this is a better metric for determining whether or not rape is on the up in Ireland than one newspaper article.

    Don't know if the figures have been rising over, say, the last decade though. Maybe you could have a dig around on the CSO website and find out.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,022 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,095 ✭✭✭ANXIOUS


    As im sure everyone feels their should be no expense spared when treating victims of this sicking crime. I can see where their would be a decrease in spending depending on the occurance of this crime.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,986 ✭✭✭✭mikemac


    On arrival in Cork the teenager then learned that she had to be examined by a male doctor “I would like to say that it's a disgrace that there is no Rape treatment centre in Kerry and after my niece travelled to Cork she had to be examined by a male doctor because there were no female doctors on call,” the girl's aunt added.

    All doctors have the same training, it's a bit of an insult to this doctor who did their job and now the family didn't want him at all, they wanted someone else.

    Sure the girl is traumatized and has to travel to Cork for medical examination but it's not always possible to choose your doctor


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,902 ✭✭✭✭28064212


    Link in OP (to Harney story) isn't working, page is here. Something of a non-story IMO (and this is coming from someone who thinks Harney is an abomination unto the health service). If she guarantees their funding, does she then have to respond to every request from every area for funding to be guaranteed? What if the options are to reduce the funding to the Rape Crisis Centre or close down a children's ward?
    All doctors have the same training, it's a bit of an insult to this doctor who did their job and now the family didn't want him at all, they wanted someone else.

    Sure the girl is traumatized and has to travel to Cork for medical examination but it's not always possible to choose your doctor
    +1. If the doctor is qualified to do the job, that's all that matters. What if she had been raped by a black man? An American? A red-head? What if it had been a woman who raped her? She's not going to want a female doctor if she's just been assaulted by a woman. Should they have an army of doctors for her to choose who she's most comfortable with? Rape is a horrific, traumatic experience, and everything feasible should be done to lessen the trauma, but people have to recognise the limits of what can be done

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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,819 ✭✭✭dan_d


    28064212 wrote: »
    Link in OP (to Harney story) isn't working, page is here. Something of a non-story IMO (and this is coming from someone who thinks Harney is an abomination unto the health service). If she guarantees their funding, does she then have to respond to every request from every area for funding to be guaranteed? What if the options are to reduce the funding to the Rape Crisis Centre or close down a children's ward?

    +1. If the doctor is qualified to do the job, that's all that matters. What if she had been raped by a black man? An American? A red-head? What if it had been a woman who raped her? She's not going to want a female doctor if she's just been assaulted by a woman. Should they have an army of doctors for her to choose who she's most comfortable with? Rape is a horrific, traumatic experience, and everything feasible should be done to lessen the trauma, but people have to recognise the limits of what can be done

    As a woman, if that happened to me, I'd want a woman doctor too. I usually ask for a woman doctor at doctor's surgery specifically when I attend. There are some things a man will never understand no matter how much training he has. But that's just my personal opinion.

    As for the money...well, I suppose it's to be expected. Have to make sure the consultants get their wages.:rolleyes:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,149 ✭✭✭✭Lemming


    dan_d wrote: »
    As a woman, if that happened to me, I'd want a woman doctor too.

    I wonder whether it was the girl herself who actually objected, or a family member (like her aunt perhaps?).

    I imagine (and "imagine" is the only qualified statement either of us can make here dan_d), that if I were a rape victim (yes, men get raped too) whatever sex/race/hair-colour the doctor was would be about the last thing on my mind ...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 19,608 ✭✭✭✭sceptre


    You might all find this a more rational report. What Harney said (see the Irish Times report, also reported on newstalk) is that she wanted the current level of funding to be maintained.

    The Shane Hickey-penned story in the Irish Indo, meanwhile, chose to concentrate on the calls by Ellen O'Malley-Dunlop, CEO of the DRCC, that the fund be ring-fenced and the lack of a declared commitment by Harney to do that. Assuming that Harney was asked, I rather suspect the exchange ran something along the lines of: "Are you going to maintain the current level of funding?", "Yes, I hope to do that", "Are you going to ring-fence the funding?", "I'd first have to talk to the HSE about that", "Well she didn't say yes so that's a no, I can fill my 400-word allowance with that, boo-ya, go me". Made for a "better" headline than "Dublin Rape Crisis Centre CEO calls (or pleads, if you like boompf) for funding to be ring-fenced". (don't get me wrong, I'd probably get over the lack of principles in writing something like that if the pay was good enough but that's because I'm currently poor)

    That'd be (at best) two rather different takes on what is essentially one story. I'll let you judge for yourselves which was the more rational newspaper report on the whole thing. I try not to criticise the Irish Independent more than once every two days for sensationalising something out of control and I already did that yesterday elsewhere on this forum. Not that they're the only culprits by a long shot but they're doing it quite a lot lately rather than just taking a declared editorial position on things, which would at least show some balls. I would, however, strongly recommend that anyone commenting take the time to read all three news reports that I've linked to in this post. After that, decide whether stones should be thrown and, if so, at whom.

    As for the side-discussion on the fleeing graveyard rapists, that's got nothing to do with the funding for the DRCC or the attitude from either the Minister or the HSE executive as to funding for the DRCC. Perhaps there should be better facilities available in Kerry or more money available to the KRCC. Or specific types of doctor available 24/7 for such incidents in Cork. But it's sod-all to do with the declared thread topic, which is "Harney refuses to guarantee funds for rape crisis centre". Of course the Herald is part of the same group as the Irish Independent, which I add en passant.


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,549 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    Can I just say that anyone who feels sickened, outraged, ashamed etc about this story is perfectly free to go into their nearest RCC or bang a cheque in the post:

    http://www.drcc.ie/fundraising/donations.htm

    Personally, I don't think it is the government's job to fund charities and other NGOs because this means that they have to endow one worthy cause over another.

    If people are genuinely concered about the plight of rape victims, a donation is a discrete way of making a difference. Blaming the government is all fine and well, but doesn't help in circumstances where our deficit is spiralling out of control.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    I don't consider myself to be unusually imaginative, but this man understands why a woman who has been raped might have a problem about being examined by a male doctor, and believes that her needs be treated as important. It's not a reflection on any male doctor, but a recognition of the devastating impact of rape.

    I don't accept johnnyskeleton's implication that giving assistance to rape victims should be regarded as a charity that is not entitled to state support. The reason why rape crisis centres exist is that there was a significant shortcoming in state provision, and the reason why government has given them financial support is that they were undertaking work which most people would regard as being part of the responsibility of the state. If I were attacked, beaten, and bloodied, the state has emergency services that would assist me, and those services are more or less adequate; if a woman were attacked and raped (an offence that is usually greater) the state's emergency services were less adequate, and the rape crisis centres emerged to supplement the state's inadequate provision.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,902 ✭✭✭✭28064212


    I don't consider myself to be unusually imaginative, but this man understands why a woman who has been raped might have a problem about being examined by a male doctor, and believes that her needs be treated as important. It's not a reflection on any male doctor, but a recognition of the devastating impact of rape.
    How is it possible to handle that? There are few enough specialised doctors that can handle a rape case without restricting it further. What about instances where the aggressor was a woman and/or the victim was a man? What about when the aggressor was of the same race as the doctor? Hell, what if the rapist was a doctor? I don't think the victim would be too keen on being examined, but it's necessary. There's about a hundred factors that could remind a victim of the ordeal they've gone through, and trying to cater for that is impossible. Just concentrate on providing the best service possible and leave it at that

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    28064212 wrote: »
    How is it possible to handle that? There are few enough specialised doctors that can handle a rape case without restricting it further. What about instances where the aggressor was a woman and/or the victim was a man? What about when the aggressor was of the same race as the doctor? Hell, what if the rapist was a doctor? I don't think the victim would be too keen on being examined, but it's necessary. There's about a hundred factors that could remind a victim of the ordeal they've gone through, and trying to cater for that is impossible.

    All of which seems to be a case for not taking the victim's feelings into account. Let's remember that most rape victims are women, and most rapists are men. And let's remember that the impact of rape is not merely physical, and that a medical examination after a rape is physically and psychologically invasive.
    Just concentrate on providing the best service possible and leave it at that

    The best service possible would include respecting the victim's feelings about what doctor conducts the examination.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,902 ✭✭✭✭28064212


    All of which seems to be a case for not taking the victim's feelings into account. Let's remember that most rape victims are women, and most rapists are men. And let's remember that the impact of rape is not merely physical, and that a medical examination after a rape is physically and psychologically invasive.



    The best service possible would include respecting the victim's feelings about what doctor conducts the examination.
    None of which explains how it's remotely possible to cater for all eventualities. Or even most of them.

    And you're right, a medical examination after a rape is physically and psychologically invasive, regardless of who does the examination. Trying to allow for hypothetical victims' feelings is an impossible task. You give the doctors whatever specialised training is necessary, and you let them do their job. Should we spend a couple of hundred million euro having a team of doctors on standby ready to step in, depending on what the victim's are more comfortable with?

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,149 ✭✭✭✭Lemming


    All of which seems to be a case for not taking the victim's feelings into account. Let's remember that most rape victims are women, and most rapists are men.

    Most reported rape victims are female, committed by male attackers.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    28064212 wrote: »
    ... Should we spend a couple of hundred million euro having a team of doctors on standby ready to step in, depending on what the victim's are more comfortable with?

    How do you arrive at a figure of a couple of hundred million euros?

    We might have a dedicated service, analogous to the State Pathologist's Office. It possibly should have a number, perhaps 12-20, of suitably skilled medical people who are quite mobile and can move to where the victims are. I would imagine that most of these people would not be full-time, but would be paid a retainer, attendance fees, and expenses for travel and accommodation. The costs, with some administrative staff and appropriate laboratory facilities, might fall within the range €2-10m, and much of it would not be an additional cost, as most of these things happen and are paid for already under different structures.

    And let's be realistic about things: almost all victims would probably prefer that the medical examiner be female, so most of the specialists attached to the service should be female.

    Frankly, I am repelled by the idea implicit in what you say that a woman who has been raped should be subjected to medical examination by a man if, in her distressed state, she wants no man to come near her.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    Lemming wrote: »
    Most reported rape victims are female, committed by male attackers.

    Cheap shot stuff.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,902 ✭✭✭✭28064212


    How do you arrive at a figure of a couple of hundred million euros?

    We might have a dedicated service, analogous to the State Pathologist's Office. It possibly should have a number, perhaps 12-20, of suitably skilled medical people who are quite mobile and can move to where the victims are. I would imagine that most of these people would not be full-time, but would be paid a retainer, attendance fees, and expenses for travel and accommodation. The costs, with some administrative staff and appropriate laboratory facilities, might fall within the range €2-10m, and much of it would not be an additional cost, as most of these things happen and are paid for already under different structures.

    And let's be realistic about things: almost all victims would probably prefer that the medical examiner be female, so most of the specialists attached to the service should be female.

    Frankly, I am repelled by the idea implicit in what you say that a woman who has been raped should be subjected to medical examination by a man if, in her distressed state, she wants no man to come near her.
    What if they don't want any strangers to come near them? Quite likely, in fact more likely then just not wanting a male doctor. And are we just completely dismissing the needs of a man who's just been raped (about 1 in 7 of rapes involving penetration are performed on a man), or a woman that's just been raped by another woman?

    Where would this centre be based? Athlone, middle of the country? So if you're raped in Kerry, you have to wait for the specialist to travel down? The OP quoted the story of the girl who was raped in Kerry, and it was bad enough that they had to travel to Cork to be examined. The State Pathologist isn't exactly an emergency response department, nor do they have to allow for their victims needs. 20 part-time doctors is not even close to enough to cover the country's rape crisis needs on a 24/7/365 basis, never mind the extra strain trying to allow for what the victim would be most comfortable with
    Cheap shot stuff.
    Not particularly. Men are 8 times less likely to report sexual violence against them to the Gardai

    Source for stats

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,149 ✭✭✭✭Lemming


    Cheap shot stuff.

    Not really. Pusing aside the reality of reported vs. unreported rape as its another thread on its own, there's an awful lot of noise about needing female doctors for medical examination of rape victims when the obvious is being ignored;

    I'll stick to the pragmatic, unforunate as it is in being reality since anything else is opinion.
    1. There is an acute shortage of frontline hospital staff - in the form of both nurses and doctors. Most of these work exceedingly long shifts at a stretch, in order to ensure coverage
    2. THere is a hyper-acute shortage of money for public services.
    3. Medical examination - as unfortunately necessary as it is - will by its nature be invasive regardless of whomever carries it out

    At the end of the day, with the above pointed out, it comes down to there being a doctor available that matches the patient's request.

    Further, We have no idea if the girl in question was informed that there were no female doctors available and/or that one would not be available for 'n' amount of time; giving her the option of waiting or opting for an available doctor. All we have is her aunt and a vested interest (a regional rape crisis centre wanting more money) banging a drum.


    Now by all the above said and done;

    What makes you think that a doctor's sex has in determining their ability to deal with a rape victim? I've encountered a few female doctors with the bed-side manner of a dead badger. Likewise a few male doctors of same. I wouldn't have wished any on somebody with a broken bone, never mind a rape victim. By contrast, I've encountered a few of each that are the direct opposite and great with patients.

    Personally, I think that a) the victim should be given the choice of receiving help ASAP or having to wait at their own discretion until help that they deem suitable is available, and b) any doctor (regardless of sex) that may potentially have to deal with rape should be given some sort of rape counselling training - if even at a rudimentary level - to allow them carry out medical examination in as sensitive a manner as possible.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    It's a waste of time discussing such matters with people whose views seem not to be informed by any sort of compassion.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,149 ✭✭✭✭Lemming


    It's a waste of time discussing such matters with people whose views seem not to be informed by any sort of compassion.

    This is a discussion site. Not everyone is going to agree with how you see things.

    I do sympathise with rape victims - as I do any victim of violent crime who is left mentally and/or physically scarred for life.

    But, firstly I take anything I read in a paper with a pinch of sale as I have witnessed first-hand how a journalist will paint a government spokesperson's (DoJ) words to suit their own agenda (guess what that is? Newspaper sales). And there is so very little in the article being discussed to go on. And secondly, as unfortunate as it is, we live in an imperfect world and can only do the best that we can do (consider that people have died en route to hospitals in this country due to extremely long commutes and/or non-availability of ambulance resources). Had the medical staff at Cork not done their very best to help the girl, I'd draw umbrage at their insensitivity. If they did their best with what was available, then there's little else that can be done right now given the state of the nation's finances, unless they can redirect existing funding or delivery more efficiency elsewhere to cover the additional costs being demanded in providing additional medical staff


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,902 ✭✭✭✭28064212


    It's a waste of time discussing such matters with people whose views seem not to be informed by any sort of compassion.
    It's a waste of time discussing such matters with people whose views seem not to be informed by any sort of realism. So instead of working to improve the services to the best of their ability, they have to deal in impossibilities? Should we focus all funds into time travel so we can go back and make sure it never happened in the first place? Where's your compassion for the victims that don't fall into the "standard"?

    If there happens to be two doctors qualified to examine in the centre, and the victim requests one of them, then by all means allow the victim to choose. But it is not in any way feasible to provide a roster of doctors to cater for whatever the victim will be most comfortable with

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    Lemming wrote: »
    ...
    I do sympathise with rape victims - as I do any victim of violent crime who is left mentally and/or physically scarred for life.

    But that sympathy seems not to extend far enough for you to accept that a rape victim should have the right to have a female doctor conduct the examination. In your first post in this thread, you said: "I imagine (and "imagine" is the only qualified statement either of us can make here dan_d), that if I were a rape victim (yes, men get raped too) whatever sex/race/hair-colour the doctor was would be about the last thing on my mind ... ", and let that stand there as if it were a case for not recognising that a rape victim might want a female doctor to conduct the examination. It's not a case for anything; it's your speculation (happily, untested) about how you, as a man, might feel.
    But, firstly I take anything I read in a paper with a pinch of sale as I have witnessed first-hand how a journalist will paint a government spokesperson's (DoJ) words to suit their own agenda (guess what that is? Newspaper sales). ...

    My comments in this thread are not based on newspaper reports of any one situation. I am advocating the case for making female doctors available for medical examination in rape cases, and allowing the victim the right to have one of those doctors deal with the case.

    There is no shortage of women doctors in this country, and I am confident that the majority would, even if off duty at the time, be willing to come on duty to deal with a rape case. The Gardaí almost always manage to find a woman member of the force to deal with women who have been raped or sexually assaulted. I am sure that in some cases an off-duty officer comes in. It seems reasonable to suppose that the medical profession would be similarly willing to be helpful.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,948 ✭✭✭gizmo555


    There is no shortage of women doctors in this country . . . .

    Which country are you in?

    Maternity unit may close over shortage of doctors (Irish Times, 15/06/10)

    Hospital wards to close over shortage of doctors (Irish Times, 29/05/10)

    Doctor shortage adds to HSE’s ills (Sunday Business Post, 11/04/2010)

    Shortage of junior doctors adds to A&E headaches (Irish Independent, 30/03/10)


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 18,375 CMod ✭✭✭✭Nody


    My comments in this thread are not based on newspaper reports of any one situation. I am advocating the case for making female doctors available for medical examination in rape cases, and allowing the victim the right to have one of those doctors deal with the case.

    There is no shortage of women doctors in this country, and I am confident that the majority would, even if off duty at the time, be willing to come on duty to deal with a rape case. The Gardaí almost always manage to find a woman member of the force to deal with women who have been raped or sexually assaulted. I am sure that in some cases an off-duty officer comes in. It seems reasonable to suppose that the medical profession would be similarly willing to be helpful.
    Tell you what, you point out exactly what part of the hospitals services available today should be cut/have a price added to compensate the cost. How about we cut the 20 Mil from young mother support, or from long term care, is that ok with you? Because you're arguing for money to be taken from some where (there is no additional money to take and if you mention Banks or Builders then you clearly have marked yourself as utterly ignorant about economy) to pay for all of this, so please do tell what service do you want to cut to compensate?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    gizmo555 wrote: »
    Which country are you in?

    Maternity unit may close over shortage of doctors (Irish Times, 15/06/10)

    Hospital wards to close over shortage of doctors (Irish Times, 29/05/10)

    Doctor shortage adds to HSE’s ills (Sunday Business Post, 11/04/2010)

    Shortage of junior doctors adds to A&E headaches (Irish Independent, 30/03/10)

    FFS! There is no shortage of women among the population of doctors in this country. If a doctor is to be assigned to a particularly sensitive case, such as a rape, it's an administrative decision to choose one of the women in the profession.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    Nody wrote: »
    Tell you what, you point out exactly what part of the hospitals services available today should be cut/have a price added to compensate the cost. How about we cut the 20 Mil from young mother support, or from long term care, is that ok with you? Because you're arguing for money to be taken from some where (there is no additional money to take and if you mention Banks or Builders then you clearly have marked yourself as utterly ignorant about economy) to pay for all of this, so please do tell what service do you want to cut to compensate?

    No, I'll tell you something different: rape is important.

    The "system" recognises that at many levels, and resources are already used to deal with rape cases. What I am arguing is very simple: where a medical investigation is conducted in a rape case, and the victim is too distressed to allow a man conduct an intimate examination, then a woman doctor should be found. It's not a matter of finding significant extra resources; it's mainly a matter of how resources are deployed.

    Further, I would say that if there are insufficient resources assigned to deal with rape, then the funding must be found. I don't buy into your game of choosing what to cut in order to fund it. That's strawman stuff. And the rules you apply to your game are pettifogging: why should it be funded by cutting hospital services rather than cutting something completely different or, heaven forfend, by raising some revenue?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,948 ✭✭✭gizmo555


    FFS! There is no shortage of women among the population of doctors in this country. If a doctor is to be assigned to a particularly sensitive case, such as a rape, it's an administrative decision to choose one of the women in the profession.

    Not if there happens not be a woman doctor on duty at the time, or if they are all otherwise occupied. The point is it's all very well to say there should be a "right" to be examined a female doctor - and I'd have some sympathy with the idea - but if the resources aren't there, there's no way to guarantee it can effectively be exercised.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Arts Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 18,375 CMod ✭✭✭✭Nody


    No, I'll tell you something different: rape is important.

    The "system" recognises that at many levels, and resources are already used to deal with rape cases. What I am arguing is very simple: where a medical investigation is conducted in a rape case, and the victim is too distressed to allow a man conduct an intimate examination, then a woman doctor should be found. It's not a matter of finding significant extra resources; it's mainly a matter of how resources are deployed.
    Great then lets pay them 100 Million each as compensation as well, rape is important after all and money are flying out of our ears at the moment.
    Further, I would say that if there are insufficient resources assigned to deal with rape, then the funding must be found. I don't buy into your game of choosing what to cut in order to fund it. That's strawman stuff. And the rules you apply to your game are pettifogging: why should it be funded by cutting hospital services rather than cutting something completely different or, heaven forfend, by raising some revenue?
    20 Billion in the reds, , there is NO beeping money available at the moment. Now you talk about raising funds? From what? Where? You are aware that we're missing ~15 to 18 Billion EUR a year today with out any additional expenses. So I'll play with you, please tell us how and were you will find the funding to save the ~15 Billion required on a year basis and from there you can then look at getting your funding.

    You call it playing a game, I call it basic fundamentals of economy, everything has a price that needs to be paid. If you want to increase something you get to decrease something else and since this is tax money we're talking about it that means services to the public to be cut.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    There are many reasons why rape is under-reported in this country, and why very many reported cases do not get as far as the courtroom. I am sure that one of the reasons is the manner in which cases are treated by "the system".

    The mindset that has given us an inadequate system seems to be reflected in the tone of many of the posts here: it might cost some money; it might be inconvenient to meet the victim's needs (which might be unreasonable anyway); it's not very important.

    I'll waste no more of my time in debating with people who live in a world that is so unlike mine.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,149 ✭✭✭✭Lemming


    But that sympathy seems not to extend far enough for you to accept that a rape victim should have the right to have a female doctor conduct the examination. In your first post in this thread, you said: "I imagine (and "imagine" is the only qualified statement either of us can make here dan_d), that if I were a rape victim (yes, men get raped too) whatever sex/race/hair-colour the doctor was would be about the last thing on my mind ... ", and let that stand there as if it were a case for not recognising that a rape victim might want a female doctor to conduct the examination. It's not a case for anything; it's your speculation (happily, untested) about how you, as a man, might feel

    And now you're putting words in my mouth. I at no point in time said that a victim should not have the right to choose a doctor. You seem to have glossed over my subsequent comment regarding providing options in very a la carte cherry picking fashion; that I believe the victim should have the option put before them. But reality being reality, options may not always be what are considered best desirable; in this case that there will always be a doctor of your choosing at hand, prompting you to either opt for receiving help in short order, or having to wait until a doctor you do want becomes available.

    What I also inferred with my "if I was " comment was simple; to somebody in need (and I would consider a rape victim to be somebody desperately in need), a doctor ... any doctor ... represents help. The alternative is to sit in suffering until a doctor that one chooses becomes available.
    My comments in this thread are not based on newspaper reports of any one situation. I am advocating the case for making female doctors available for medical examination in rape cases, and allowing the victim the right to have one of those doctors deal with the case.

    In that we are on agreement. I never said I wasn't. You did.
    There is no shortage of women doctors in this country, and I am confident that the majority would, even if off duty at the time, be willing to come on duty to deal with a rape case. The Gardaí almost always manage to find a woman member of the force to deal with women who have been raped or sexually assaulted. I am sure that in some cases an off-duty officer comes in. It seems reasonable to suppose that the medical profession would be similarly willing to be helpful.

    The problem; in context of the original post; in relation the above is that we're talking about a more rural area where there clearly is a shortage of female doctors. I'd dare say there's a shortage of medical services in general for such areas given teh number of very high profile deaths/incidents that have occured over the last decade in that regard.

    You are talking about cities for both medical services and Gardai; where this isn't an issue owing to numbers and proximity/availabillity at short notice.

    And again, I will pull you back to the point of frontline medical staff doing long shifts. So you have an off-duty female doctor. She's done 36 hours straight, and then gone on a two hour commute home since this is a rural area. Whilst I would praise her for being prepared to come back in at a moments notice; you raise other issues - some of which set dangerous precedent and can easily lead to further harm and/or death.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,792 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Nody wrote: »
    Tell you what, you point out exactly what part of the hospitals services available today should be cut/have a price added to compensate the cost. How about we cut the 20 Mil from young mother support, or from long term care, is that ok with you? Because you're arguing for money to be taken from some where (there is no additional money to take and if you mention Banks or Builders then you clearly have marked yourself as utterly ignorant about economy) to pay for all of this, so please do tell what service do you want to cut to compensate?

    :confused: Your argument makes no sense. The money to pay female doctors to do rape treatment wiould be the money given to the male doctors who currently do the rape treatment. No extra money is needed, simply a change in direction in where the money is currently going.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,792 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Lemming wrote: »
    And now you're putting words in my mouth. I at no point in time said that a victim should not have the right to choose a doctor. You seem to have glossed over my subsequent comment regarding providing options in very a la carte cherry picking fashion; that I believe the victim should have the option put before them. But reality being reality, options may not always be what are considered best desirable; in this case that there will always be a doctor of your choosing at hand, prompting you to either opt for receiving help in short order, or having to wait until a doctor you do want becomes available.

    While it is true that there cant always be a choice, that doesn't mean that simple choices shouldn't be made available. A hospital shouldn't even need to ask for certain choices, a woman coming in for rape treatment is not going to want a man doing it. And, obviously certain choices cant be met (many rape victims wont want to be seen by a doctor at all be cause of the shame), but having female doctors for rape victims is not an massively inconveniencing choice.
    Lemming wrote: »
    What I also inferred with my "if I was " comment was simple; to somebody in need (and I would consider a rape victim to be somebody desperately in need), a doctor ... any doctor ... represents help. The alternative is to sit in suffering until a doctor that one chooses becomes available.

    You are talking from position of massive ignorance of what a rape victim mentally goes through. A doctor does not represent help to a rape victim. Even if a rape victim is badly physically hurt, a doctor will do nothing to ease the mental anguish that the victim feels, and may even aggrivate it through no fault of their own. Rape victims are not wholly rational, not for a good while after the event.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,902 ✭✭✭✭28064212


    :confused: Your argument makes no sense. The money to pay female doctors to do rape treatment wiould be the money given to the male doctors who currently do the rape treatment. No extra money is needed, simply a change in direction in where the money is currently going.
    So just ignore male victims' needs, or victims raped by women? If not, that means maintaining double the staff again. What about a victim where the rapist was black, or asian, or any of a hundred other factors that will make the victim equally as uncomfortable as their gender? How many preferences do you cater for?
    While it is true that there cant always be a choice, that doesn't mean that simple choices shouldn't be made available. A hospital shouldn't even need to ask for certain choices, a woman coming in for rape treatment is not going to want a man doing it. And, obviously certain choices cant be met (many rape victims wont want to be seen by a doctor at all be cause of the shame), but having female doctors for rape victims is not an massively inconveniencing choice.

    You are talking from position of massive ignorance of what a rape victim mentally goes through. A doctor does not represent help to a rape victim. Even if a rape victim is badly physically hurt, a doctor will do nothing to ease the mental anguish that the victim feels, and may even aggrivate it through no fault of their own. Rape victims are not wholly rational, not for a good while after the event.
    And it may have nothing to do with with sex they are. You're right, rape victims may not be wholly rational, which means there's absolutely no way of knowing what would set them off. Many victims may even be reassured by a strong positive male figure as a counterpoint to the animal they encountered earlier. It is impossible to predict, and impossible to cater for, what a victim may or may not feel

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,792 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    28064212 wrote: »
    So just ignore male victims' needs, or victims raped by women? If not, that means maintaining double the staff again.

    No it doesnt, just keep it simple. People get examined by the opposite sex that attacked them. If this is not possible due to budgetary or personel reasons, then have a female doctor. Why female? Because male rapists outnumber female rapists. So a female doctor is statistically more likely to be prefered.
    28064212 wrote: »
    What about a victim where the rapist was black, or asian, or any of a hundred other factors that will make the victim equally as uncomfortable as their gender? How many preferences do you cater for?

    As many as you can. Its better than throwing you hands up in the air and saying we cant cater for all preferences, so lets not cater for any.
    28064212 wrote: »
    And it may have nothing to do with with sex they are. You're right, rape victims may not be wholly rational, which means there's absolutely no way of knowing what would set them off. Many victims may even be reassured by a strong positive male figure as a counterpoint to the animal they encountered earlier. It is impossible to predict, and impossible to cater for, what a victim may or may not feel

    I think its fairly obvious that the last things a person raped by a man wants is another man touching them. Because that all a rape victim will see when a doctor comes to examine/treat them. Its a simple thing to avoid, so why not, where possible, avoid it? Why is better to just throw your hands up in the air and say we cant cater for all preferences, so lets not cater for any?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,149 ✭✭✭✭Lemming


    No it doesnt, just keep it simple. People get examined by the opposite sex that attacked them. If this is not possible due to budgetary or personel reasons, then have a female doctor. Why female? Because male rapists outnumber female rapists. So a female doctor is statistically more likely to be prefered.

    So what you're saying is that the criteria for hiring a doctor now rests on their sex. As opposed to say; the merits of whether or not they are the best choice available from the rest of the prospective employees.

    I see. That is also known by another name; beginning with "D".


    The bottom line is that there will always be a balancing act between what is desirable and what is possible. How many patients die each year on waiting lists for life-saving operations? How many children are abused or otherwise neglected due to failure of social services (and believe me I can tell yuo a few appallingly shocking dept. social welfare cases ... )? How many people die each year because there aren't enough ambulances or even a single air ambulance for more isolated regions?

    Rape victims should be given the option of who they'd want examining them - assuming they seek help in the first place - but again, that option may not (and indeed is not) always possible and they should be informed where that is the case and what if any alternatives can be arranged.

    Trying to claim that you should discriminate against one sex or one ethnicity over another for employment, or that you should double-up doctors (thus creating even more waste and more expense in an already diabollically inefficient service) when the money isn't there is madness.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,792 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Lemming wrote: »
    So what you're saying is that the criteria for hiring a doctor now rests on their sex. As opposed to say; the merits of whether or not they are the best choice available from the rest of the prospective employees.

    No, I'm saying to criteria on choosing a doctor for rape treatment rests on both their sex and their ability to do the treatment. Really poor attempt to strawman my position.
    Lemming wrote: »
    I see. That is also known by another name; beginning with "D".

    Yes, but is acceptable discrimination. Just like discriminating against prospective doctors who dont actually have sufficient training is acceptable training. Doctors who are going to be treating rape victims need to be able to perform the treatment properly, while keeping the patient calm and reassured, and should be women, seeing as we cant afford to pay doctors to give victims the choice and more often than not, rape victims are women who were raped by men.
    Lemming wrote: »
    The bottom line is that there will always be a balancing act between what is desirable and what is possible. How many patients die each year on waiting lists for life-saving operations? How many children are abused or otherwise neglected due to failure of social services (and believe me I can tell yuo a few appallingly shocking dept. social welfare cases ... )? How many people die each year because there aren't enough ambulances or even a single air ambulance for more isolated regions?

    And bringing in extremes is supposed to show how my point is wrong how? I'm not saying that you have to cover every possible preference. I'm not even saying you need to cover any. You just need to look at the numbers and see that more often than not, men are rapists, not women, so odds are a female doctor will be better for the rape victim than a male doctor. Different or specific doctor nationalities or hair colours or heights or any other arbitrary nonsense configuration you will pull out of the air are irrelevent to the issue being discussed.
    Lemming wrote: »
    Rape victims should be given the option of who they'd want examining them - assuming they seek help in the first place - but again, that option may not (and indeed is not) always possible and they should be informed where that is the case and what if any alternatives can be arranged.

    Agreed, things dont always work out perfectly in real life. But seeing, like I already said, that women are victims of men, wouldn't you expect that the default choice for a doctor be a woman?
    Lemming wrote: »
    Trying to claim that you should discriminate against one sex or one ethnicity over another for employment, or that you should double-up doctors (thus creating even more waste and more expense in an already diabollically inefficient service) when the money isn't there is madness.

    The latter claim is bs and you know it, I never claimed that you need to double up on doctors. The first claim is something which happens in many situations anyway (they can get a female guard to comfort a female rape victim easily enough and no screams discrimination), and is perfectly valid. You are screaming discrimination when all it is is picking the right person for the job. Sometimes that means picking someone of a specific race or sex. To think otherwise is naive and in, its own way, quite discriminatory.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,149 ✭✭✭✭Lemming


    No, I'm saying to criteria on choosing a doctor for rape treatment rests on both their sex and their ability to do the treatment. Really poor attempt to strawman my position.

    Show me the strawman please. Hospitals do not just 'hire' doctors to sit around and wait for rape victims; that's a total waste of a valuable resource. Again, clinics may have doctors - or consultants - that come in for a few hours a week to provide specific services; and without knowing the ins and outs of how the rape crisis centre entities are structured I would imagine that they operate in similar fashion given the apparent lack of funding to be able to provide sustained coverage.

    So, if you are talking about hiring for a rape crisis centre; it would be pruddent to have a mixture of doctors (by gender and/or religion) on rotation in so far is practically possible.
    Yes, but is acceptable discrimination. Just like discriminating against prospective doctors who dont actually have sufficient training is acceptable training.

    /facepalm.

    What did I say? Allow me to refresh y our memory Mark;
    Lemming wrote:
    So what you're saying is that the criteria for hiring a doctor now rests on their sex. As opposed to say; the merits of whether or not they are the best choice available from the rest of the prospective employees.

    What you've just described as "acceptable" discrimination is not discrimination. It's called "best person for the job" because clearly said prospective doctors who lack sufficient training don't match the criteria for the job at hand. Just like in any other profession/field of work. What you are arguing for is not 'best person' for the job, but selection based on gender not medical skill/training/experience.


    [SNIP lots of repetition]

    The latter claim is bs and you know it, I never claimed that you need to double up on doctors.

    My apologies; you have since clarified that to suggest that doctors should be female on the off-chance that a rape victim happens to come forward.

    Your argument is utterly absurd unless you are speaking strictly in the context of rape-crisis centres; at which point you conveniently ignore the sensitivities of every other rape demographic that does not fall under one particular category. Bravo.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,792 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Lemming wrote: »
    Show me the strawman please.

    You claimed that I was saying that the criteria for hiring a doctor now rests on their sex, as opposed to the merits of whether or not they are the best choice available from the rest of the prospective employees. I said no such thing,because that would be ridiculous position to take, hence you tried to strawman me into it because it is easier to refute. My position is that people should be given a choie on who treats them after a rape. If they cant be given a choice, then the default doctor should be female, as females are usually the victims of male atackers.
    Lemming wrote: »
    Hospitals do not just 'hire' doctors to sit around and wait for rape victims; that's a total waste of a valuable resource.

    Who said they did?
    Lemming wrote: »
    Again, clinics may have doctors - or consultants - that come in for a few hours a week to provide specific services; and without knowing the ins and outs of how the rape crisis centre entities are structured I would imagine that they operate in similar fashion given the apparent lack of funding to be able to provide sustained coverage.

    So, if you are talking about hiring for a rape crisis centre; it would be pruddent to have a mixture of doctors (by gender and/or religion) on rotation in so far is practically possible.

    Yes it would. But if you cant afford to have a selection (money is an issue, as you keep pointing out) then surely the gender and religion of doctor most likely to be rquired should be the one employed.
    Lemming wrote: »
    /facepalm.

    What did I say? Allow me to refresh y our memory Mark;
    Lemming wrote:
    So what you're saying is that the criteria for hiring a doctor now rests on their sex. As opposed to say; the merits of whether or not they are the best choice available from the rest of the prospective employees.

    What you've just described as "acceptable" discrimination is not discrimination. It's called "best person for the job" because clearly said prospective doctors who lack sufficient training don't match the criteria for the job at hand. Just like in any other profession/field of work. What you are arguing for is not 'best person' for the job, but selection based on gender not medical skill/training/experience.

    Still doing the same strawman after claiming you arent? How very dishonest of you. I already said that the gender discrimination is on top of the other required qualifications, not replacing them. I explained this in the rest of the paragraph you cut out:
    Doctors who are going to be treating rape victims need to be able to perform the treatment properly, while keeping the patient calm and reassured, and should be women, seeing as we cant afford to pay doctors to give victims the choice and more often than not, rape victims are women who were raped by men.
    Lemming wrote: »
    My apologies; you have since clarified that to suggest that doctors should be female on the off-chance that a rape victim happens to come forward.

    Strawman again. My position is that doctors who are chosen to treat rape victims should be female (we are in a thread about the rape crisis centre, did you not realise that is the context we are discussing?) not doctors in general. Rape victims have a whole mental anguish side of their ordeal to go through, usually a lot worse than the physical event that happened to them, and reducing that is an important part of their treatment.
    Lemming wrote: »
    Your argument is utterly absurd unless you are speaking strictly in the context of rape-crisis centres; at which point you conveniently ignore the sensitivities of every other rape demographic that does not fall under one particular category. Bravo.

    Now, now, you cant have the best of both worlds. When its suggested that we should give victims the choice of who treats them, its "we cant afford to have that many doctors/ what if they want a doctor who's half swahili/half lithuanian, blonde, green eyed and likes long walks on the beach and we cant find one and they die from waiting too long" and when its suggested to keep the same number of doctors, but cater for the simplest most common preference (ie a woman doctor) to cover the most victims, its "you're discriminating against everyone else".


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,549 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    I don't accept johnnyskeleton's implication that giving assistance to rape victims should be regarded as a charity that is not entitled to state support.

    Well they are a registered charity so whether or not you agree with me doesn't really amount to much. As regards state support for charities, I never said that DRCC or RCNI should be excluded from the list of charities that the state should support - I said that I don't agree with the state endowment of charities (other than international aid to which we are committed by international agreement). Furthermore, accepting the reality of government payments to charities, just because the government gives them some money doesn't mean that they have to give all the money asked for.

    But the real point is this - let's stop blaming the state for its failings, our state simply doesn't have the money. It's not like blaming the gardai where they are exclusively within the state's control and do not normally accept private donations (other than e.g. concert security type payments). If I want to give €5 to help rape victims then I can, if I don't then I wont. So people who want to help rape victims should put their hands in their own pockets and not sit back and demand that the state look after it. For example, should the government also pay all the bills of the Simon Community, Treshold etc?

    There isn't an unlimited pot of gold that the state can simply pluck money from, so all worthy causes need to be balanced.

    FWIW DRCC is one of the charities that I do give money to when I give donations and I have in the past collected money for them on their flag day. That still doesn't mean I think they should get state support though.
    The reason why rape crisis centres exist is that there was a significant shortcoming in state provision, and the reason why government has given them financial support is that they were undertaking work which most people would regard as being part of the responsibility of the state.

    I wouldn't consider it part of the responsibility of the state, anymore than I would consider counselling for any other trauma the responsibility of the state. If the state provides such services, they do so as a social benefit, not as a basic function and therefore there is no absolute requirement for them to provide it. There is also good argument to suggest that rape counselling services should be independent.
    If I were attacked, beaten, and bloodied, the state has emergency services that would assist me, and those services are more or less adequate; if a woman were attacked and raped (an offence that is usually greater) the state's emergency services were less adequate, and the rape crisis centres emerged to supplement the state's inadequate provision.

    Perhaps you don't understand the work that they do. When a person is sexually assaulted (not necessarily a woman by the way) they get emergency treatment from a special HSE unit in their area (e.g. in Dublin it's in the Routunda). Nothing to do with the RCNI.

    The rape crisis centres were set up as voluntary NGOs to provide counselling and advocacy services for the victims of sexual assault. There are also other places to go to if you have been the victim of a violent non-sexual assault - and these aren't provided by the State either.


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,549 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    :confused: Your argument makes no sense. The money to pay female doctors to do rape treatment wiould be the money given to the male doctors who currently do the rape treatment. No extra money is needed, simply a change in direction in where the money is currently going.

    Is it possible that there are not enough female doctors who are prepared to do this work? Don't forget that someone who is tranied to do brain surgery is not the right person to perform even a minor foot surgery.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,902 ✭✭✭✭28064212


    I think its fairly obvious that the last things a person raped by a man wants is another man touching them. Because that all a rape victim will see when a doctor comes to examine/treat them. Its a simple thing to avoid, so why not, where possible, avoid it? Why is better to just throw your hands up in the air and say we cant cater for all preferences, so lets not cater for any?
    Why is that obvious exactly? Based on what you think they might feel? You said yourself that rape victims are not wholly rational in the aftermath of the event. You have no idea what might be going through their head. Neither do I, but I'm not the one arguing that we change hiring policies on the basis of what I think they will be feeling.
    Now, now, you cant have the best of both worlds. When its suggested that we should give victims the choice of who treats them, its "we cant afford to have that many doctors/ what if they want a doctor who's half swahili/half lithuanian, blonde, green eyed and likes long walks on the beach and we cant find one and they die from waiting too long" and when its suggested to keep the same number of doctors, but cater for the simplest most common preference (ie a woman doctor) to cover the most victims, its "you're discriminating against everyone else".
    Eh, no. That's two options, that doesn't comprise a complete evaluation. We can't afford that many doctors, and it is discrimination, the two are not mutually exclusive. You are claiming that we should hire female doctors to be sensitive to the needs of women who are raped, even though there's no evidence to suggest that would be helpful in any way, and completely ignore any possible men's needs who have been raped, even though they're already much less catered for by rape support.

    If we have two equally qualified doctors applying for a rape unit examination post, one's a woman who thinks rape victims were "asking for it", the other's a man who is capable of exerting a calming influence in distressed people, should the woman be hired?

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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,948 ✭✭✭gizmo555


    My position is that doctors who are chosen to treat rape victims should be female

    You're going round and round in circles.

    It is already official policy that:

    Sexual Offences

    The Gardai will show special sensitivity if you are a victim of a sexual offence.

    If it is appropriate, your case will be dealt with by a special Garda unit for domestic violence and sexual assault investigation. There is a special, fully equipped suite for victims of rape and sexual assault (and for other serious crimes) at Store Street Garda Station, Dublin.

    The Gardai will try to make sure that the Garda and the doctor who are helping you are of the same gender.

    You will be told about special support agencies dealing with sexual offences.


    But the operative word in the highlighted sentence is "try" - it is not possible to guarantee that the treating doctor will be the same gender as the victim, especially given the acute shortage of non-consultant hospital doctors which has already been highlighted, and which is forecast to get markedly worse from the start of next month.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,792 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Is it possible that there are not enough female doctors who are prepared to do this work? Don't forget that someone who is tranied to do brain surgery is not the right person to perform even a minor foot surgery.

    True. If its not possible then its not possible. But I dont think thats what some people here are arguing. They are arguing from a point of view that there is enough, but we shouldn't bother because of difficult or supposed expense.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,792 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    28064212 wrote: »
    Why is that obvious exactly?

    Because they would feel degraded because of the rape by a man in the first place.
    28064212 wrote: »
    Based on what you think they might feel?

    I know someone who was raped.
    28064212 wrote: »
    You said yourself that rape victims are not wholly rational in the aftermath of the event. You have no idea what might be going through their head.

    Just because they arent entirely rational, doesn't mean we cant figure out whats going on in their head (to some extent). Most rape victims wont want to be treated by anyone after their ordeal, little enough of the treatment is actually physically necessary, its also done for a report for the guards, so the benefit of it may not be immediately apparent to them.
    28064212 wrote: »
    Eh, no. That's two options, that doesn't comprise a complete evaluation. We can't afford that many doctors, and it is discrimination, the two are not mutually exclusive.

    I covered this already, are you not paying attention? If you cant hire more doctors, then the current ones should be female, as they are more likely to be needed. It is discrimination, but its the same discrimination we use in all hiring process, its discriminating in favour of the person most likely to be needed.
    28064212 wrote: »
    You are claiming that we should hire female doctors to be sensitive to the needs of women who are raped, even though there's no evidence to suggest that would be helpful in any way

    Really? You dont think that a woman who was raped by a man could possibly not want a man examining and touching her for at least a while afterwards? You are incredibly naive to think this isnt the case.
    28064212 wrote: »
    , and completely ignore any possible men's needs who have been raped, even though they're already much less catered for by rape support.

    Unfortunately for men, they are in the minority as rape victims, and as people keep pointing out, we cant afford enough doctors to give them a choice. So we make the choice that will afford the statistically most likely victim, while keeping costs at the same level.
    28064212 wrote: »
    If we have two equally qualified doctors applying for a rape unit examination post, one's a woman who thinks rape victims were "asking for it", the other's a man who is capable of exerting a calming influence in distressed people, should the woman be hired?

    No, because the woman isn't qualified to do it, I did already say that the female doctor should also be qualified.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,792 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    gizmo555 wrote: »
    You're going round and round in circles.

    It is already official policy that:

    Sexual Offences

    The Gardai will show special sensitivity if you are a victim of a sexual offence.

    If it is appropriate, your case will be dealt with by a special Garda unit for domestic violence and sexual assault investigation. There is a special, fully equipped suite for victims of rape and sexual assault (and for other serious crimes) at Store Street Garda Station, Dublin.

    The Gardai will try to make sure that the Garda and the doctor who are helping you are of the same gender.

    You will be told about special support agencies dealing with sexual offences.


    But the operative word in the highlighted sentence is "try" - it is not possible to guarantee that the treating doctor will be the same gender as the victim, especially given the acute shortage of non-consultant hospital doctors which has already been highlighted, and which is forecast to get markedly worse from the start of next month.

    I haven't gone round and round in circles, my point has stayed the same since the start. My points have been rebuttals to the strawman arguments for why we cant or dont need to have female doctors for rape victims. I recognise it cant always be possible, but it should be rare that we cant.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,792 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    I wouldn't consider it part of the responsibility of the state, anymore than I would consider counselling for any other trauma the responsibility of the state.

    Why? (just out of curiosity) Treatment for physical maladies is the responsibility of the state (state run hopitals), so why not mental ones?
    If the state provides such services, they do so as a social benefit, not as a basic function and therefore there is no absolute requirement for them to provide it.

    Flawed logic here, no? "They dont have to do it, because they only do do it if they feel like doing it".
    There is also good argument to suggest that rape counselling services should be independent.

    Why? (again, just out of curiosity)


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,549 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    Why? (just out of curiosity) Treatment for physical maladies is the responsibility of the state (state run hopitals), so why not mental ones?

    Treatment of physical illness is not a responsibility of the state, rather it is a benefit provided by the State because we voted for it and pay taxes for it. For example, the US Federal Government do not provide universal healthcare, Ireland provides a level of universal healthcare (but its crap and if you want to be seen before you keel over you should probably get private health insurance), the UK government provides a fully free system but it's a bit hit and miss and the French government provides a good system for free. None of these countries could be said to have the responsibility for healthcare in the same way that they have a responsibility to maintain the peace, freedom and democratic rights of their citizens. Also, as a matter of law, if the Irish government doesn't provide a certain health service they cannot be sued to compel them to provide it (e.g. Sinnott v Minister for Education).

    I think the Irish healthcare system is too expensive as it is (i'd like to have the French system, but we don't have the money for it) so it needs to reduce the services it provides. Generally, secondary services such as counselling are lower priority to emergency care and the like. A better comparison is not to compare rape counselling with primary medical care 9e.g. put broken leg in plaster) but rather secondary or complimentary care such as physiotheraphy (which the State also doesn't always provide for free).
    Flawed logic here, no? "They dont have to do it, because they only do do it if they feel like doing it".

    No. There are some things that the government is required to provide. In Ireland, the government is required to provide primary education by the Consitution. Most democratic governments are required to provide a police force, army, courts system and electoral systems.

    In addition to that, governments have a non mandatory function to provide benefits of a social nature e.g. social welfare payments, free secondary education, free healthcare, subsidies for business, public transport, utilities (until recently telecoms, electricity and gas were all provided by the state).No government is required to provide any of these services at all, although most western governments provide some of these services in part. However, the fact that they provide some of this service does not require them to provide more. For example, the fact that there are regular busses in Dublin does not mean that the government is required to provide regular busses in Athlone; the fact that the government provides grants to students of UCD, Trinity, DCU etc does not mean that they have to provide grants for Griffith, Portobello, RSCI etc. The fact that they provide some level of healthcare does not mean they have to provide healthcare on a par with private health providers. Etc.

    It's all about balance.

    For me, I see Rape Counselling as a non-government / charitable service. I don't see it as being something the State should provide and it is certainly not required in the same sense as the Gardai are required.

    Why? (again, just out of curiosity)

    So that rape victims are not pressurised into testifying in a prosecution if they don't want to. Other people simply don't trust the government to run a competent and anonymous service. Also, one of the services they provide is to accompany rape complainants into court and advocate for rape complainants' rights in the criminal justice system generally. Occasionally, the rights of a complainant and the duties of the DPP conflict, in which case it is best that the complainant has an independent (as opposed to state controlled/sponsored) advocate/companion.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,792 ✭✭✭Mark Hamill


    Treatment of physical illness is not a responsibility of the state, rather it is a benefit provided by the State because we voted for it and pay taxes for it.

    Whose responsibility is it then?
    No. There are some things that the government is required to provide. In Ireland, the government is required to provide primary education by the Consitution. Most democratic governments are required to provide a police force, army, courts system and electoral systems.

    So you think the governmenst requirements are purely based on what the constitution says, and the constitution is infallible and shouldn't or doesn't need to be changed? Is there not a difference between what a government is minimally required to provide and what a responsible government should provide?
    In addition to that, governments have a non mandatory function to provide benefits of a social nature e.g. social welfare payments, free secondary education, free healthcare, subsidies for business, public transport, utilities (until recently telecoms, electricity and gas were all provided by the state).No government is required to provide any of these services at all, although most western governments provide some of these services in part. However, the fact that they provide some of this service does not require them to provide more. For example, the fact that there are regular busses in Dublin does not mean that the government is required to provide regular busses in Athlone; the fact that the government provides grants to students of UCD, Trinity, DCU etc does not mean that they have to provide grants for Griffith, Portobello, RSCI etc. The fact that they provide some level of healthcare does not mean they have to provide healthcare on a par with private health providers. Etc.

    It's all about balance.

    Is that not more about supply and demand? Governments dont supply all of these benefits in every area because either the demand isn't there to justify it, or the government cant sufficiently support it (and other places will suffer).
    For me, I see Rape Counselling as a non-government / charitable service. I don't see it as being something the State should provide and it is certainly not required in the same sense as the Gardai are required.

    Tell that to a rape victim. Tell an injured person that requires physiotherapy to regain function in their limbs that physiotherapy isn't something that should be state provided/supported. You start ignoring these things, victim support, post medical care, even things like public transport and certain areas of tax relief and funding and you create wells. Wells which people fall into and are unable to get out of, because they cant deal mentally, physically or financially with the real world. Then they just become burdens of the state.
    So that rape victims are not pressurised into testifying in a prosecution if they don't want to. Other people simply don't trust the government to run a competent and anonymous service. Also, one of the services they provide is to accompany rape complainants into court and advocate for rape complainants' rights in the criminal justice system generally. Occasionally, the rights of a complainant and the duties of the DPP conflict, in which case it is best that the complainant has an independent (as opposed to state controlled/sponsored) advocate/companion.

    OK, thanks.
    One thing though, would it not be possible for victim support groups to be state sponsored, yet independent of the DPP? Its not like the DPP would control their funding.


  • Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Politics Moderators Posts: 14,549 Mod ✭✭✭✭johnnyskeleton


    Whose responsibility is it then?

    No one's and everyone's. Many people in the state pay privately for health care, is it the state's responsibillty to reimburse them? If you look across the world, there are many states which do not provide healthcare to their citizens. Are they failing in their responsibility, or are they merely trying to balance the books in countries which cannot afford the same levels as the west?
    So you think the governmenst requirements are purely based on what the constitution says, and the constitution is infallible and shouldn't or doesn't need to be changed? Is there not a difference between what a government is minimally required to provide and what a responsible government should provide?

    Not based purely on the constitution, but where the constitution or an international agreement requires something then it is a responsibility of the state to comly. Other than that, the only thing that a government is required to provide is the minimum necessary to maintain civil society. Governments can and do provide additional services, but the point is that these are optional benefits, and if we start to think of them as responsibilities or entitlements then we lose a part of our own autonomy and sense of perspective. Ireland may well go into a situation where it cannot afford to maintain the levels of public healthcare that it currently does. The government may have to cut back on this. It is not that the government is somehow failing in its duty, it is merely dividing out the money it receives as best it can.
    Is that not more about supply and demand? Governments dont supply all of these benefits in every area because either the demand isn't there to justify it, or the government cant sufficiently support it (and other places will suffer).

    Governments are generally immune to supply and demand factors because they do not need to turn a profit on any particular venture. But you are getting the essential point which is that the government has to make choices as to how it spends its money.

    The analogy with a person who earns 35k a year and spends 60k is apt. This person is paying approximately 20k in charitable donations, 20k for health and education and another 20k on day to day living (with quangoes here being like expensive coffees in starbucks or whatever). This person used to spend about 5k on maintenance and repairs to their house, but they have stopped that now, and each year they are paying more and more in interest because they are borrowing 25k a year to fuel their borrowing.

    So that person has to decide whether to make cuts to his expenditure or ask his boss to pay him more. The risk with the latter is that if he asks his employer to pay him more his employer might give him a better hourly rate, but will reduce his hours so that his net income is less than it was. As regards cuts, he really doesn't want to stop giving money to charity because most of these people are his friends and helped him get his job, and if the charity stops completely they could starve or turn to crime. Equally, if he cuts down on his education his employment prospects long term will suffer. Without repairing his house it will fall apart and no foreigners will come visit him anymore (bringing gifts), and equally if he cuts down on health it has unfortunate consequence. In each instance there is a reason not to cut, but cut he must because he cannot continue to borrow.

    So if the government has the responsibility to pay for all this health, education, social welfare etc then it is going to sink. Thankfully, it does not have to provide these services and will survive, but in surviving it has to choose some of these worthy causes over others.

    Relating it back to rape counselling, if the government decides that this is not as important as, say, an extra classroom in a school in Kerry, then this is a choice that the government is entitled to make.
    Tell that to a rape victim. Tell an injured person that requires physiotherapy to regain function in their limbs that physiotherapy isn't something that should be state provided/supported. You start ignoring these things, victim support, post medical care, even things like public transport and certain areas of tax relief and funding and you create wells. Wells which people fall into and are unable to get out of, because they cant deal mentally, physically or financially with the real world. Then they just become burdens of the state.

    So the state should provide everything to everyone who wants something? Then no one would work, everyone would demand every service. That's great in theory, but it is not exactly a practical solution, particularly since, as set out above, we are currently providing almost twice the level of government services that we can afford to pay for, which is not sustainable. So yes, rape victims will have to rely on private charity, injured persons will have to pay for their own physio or do without.

    You talk about wells that people fall into, and sure enough sometimes this can be avoided by providing some government support. But on the other hand too much government support can create wells of its own - worse wells because a person might try to get themselves out of their own mess but will expect the government to get them out of a state created mess. It's about balance and in my opinion the government currently provides too much public service at too high a cost.

    OK, thanks.
    One thing though, would it not be possible for victim support groups to be state sponsored, yet independent of the DPP? Its not like the DPP would control their funding.

    Yes of course, but it is the perception as much as the reality. But even where there is an independent state sponsored organisation it could still fall, to a greater or lesser extent, to state pressure. Private organisations can too, but are less likely IMO. By the way, I'm not saying that they definately should not be state sponsored, only that State sponsored is not always a good thing.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,934 ✭✭✭OhNoYouDidn't


    dan_d wrote: »
    As a woman, if that happened to me, I'd want a woman doctor too. I usually ask for a woman doctor at doctor's surgery specifically when I attend. There are some things a man will never understand no matter how much training he has. But that's just my personal opinion.

    With all the sensitivity required here, he is not there to 'understand'. He is there to perform an examination to establish if an assault occured and try and find some DNA evidence for evidentiary reasons.

    Should the Gardaí investigating only be women too?


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