Medico-legal documentation of rape or sexual assault: are community-service doctors equipped for the task?

Background: Following upon two-year internship, community-service doctors make mistakes when they deal with evidence of medico-legal examinations in various settings. These mistakes result in alleged perpetrators being released by courts. This study investigated undergraduate clinical forensic medic...

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Main Authors: Lamaine Fouche, Johan Bezuidenhout, Chantelle Liebenberg, Anthonio Oladele Adefuye
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2018-03-01
Series:South African Family Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj/article/view/4680
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spelling doaj-9859051ca4234d2a9587ee7c6ffd412d2020-11-25T03:26:08ZengAOSISSouth African Family Practice2078-61902078-62042018-03-0160110.4102/safp.v60i1.46803829Medico-legal documentation of rape or sexual assault: are community-service doctors equipped for the task?Lamaine Fouche0Johan Bezuidenhout1Chantelle Liebenberg2Anthonio Oladele Adefuye3University of the Free StateUniversity of the Free StateUniversity of the Free StateUniversity of the Free StateBackground: Following upon two-year internship, community-service doctors make mistakes when they deal with evidence of medico-legal examinations in various settings. These mistakes result in alleged perpetrators being released by courts. This study investigated undergraduate clinical forensic medicine training, based on experiences and opinions of community-service doctors. This article focuses on incidents of alleged rape cases only. Methods: The study was a quantitative retrospective cohort study that made use of a questionnaire with an adapted Likert scale. An electronic survey tool was employed to target 150 community-service doctors throughout South Africa. Percentages are used to display results. Results: A response rate of 59.3% was achieved. Although 80% of the participants reported that they had undergraduate training on how to manage alleged rape or sexual assault cases, only 11.4% of the participants had hands-on exposure to an alleged rape case during their undergraduate training. In addition, the majority of the participants (77.1%) never had undergraduate training on how to complete the J88 form. These findings indicate that clinical forensic training in the undergraduate medical programme does not adequately prepare community-service doctors to meet the challenges of clinical forensic practice. The current curriculum should be adapted to address these shortcomings. Conclusions: Perpetrators cannot be convicted if evidence collected cannot stand up in court. Proper training of undergraduate medical students prior to their community-service posting will ensure that medico-legal documentation is completed correctly, leading to the presentation of credible evidence in a court of law in order to ensure successful conviction of alleged perpetrators. Full text of the research articles are available online at www.medpharm.tandfonline.com/ojfp) S Afr Fam Pract 2018; DOI: 10.1080/20786190.2017.1348046https://safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj/article/view/4680clinical forensic medicinecommunity-service doctorsmedical trainingmedico-legal documentationsexual assault
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lamaine Fouche
Johan Bezuidenhout
Chantelle Liebenberg
Anthonio Oladele Adefuye
spellingShingle Lamaine Fouche
Johan Bezuidenhout
Chantelle Liebenberg
Anthonio Oladele Adefuye
Medico-legal documentation of rape or sexual assault: are community-service doctors equipped for the task?
South African Family Practice
clinical forensic medicine
community-service doctors
medical training
medico-legal documentation
sexual assault
author_facet Lamaine Fouche
Johan Bezuidenhout
Chantelle Liebenberg
Anthonio Oladele Adefuye
author_sort Lamaine Fouche
title Medico-legal documentation of rape or sexual assault: are community-service doctors equipped for the task?
title_short Medico-legal documentation of rape or sexual assault: are community-service doctors equipped for the task?
title_full Medico-legal documentation of rape or sexual assault: are community-service doctors equipped for the task?
title_fullStr Medico-legal documentation of rape or sexual assault: are community-service doctors equipped for the task?
title_full_unstemmed Medico-legal documentation of rape or sexual assault: are community-service doctors equipped for the task?
title_sort medico-legal documentation of rape or sexual assault: are community-service doctors equipped for the task?
publisher AOSIS
series South African Family Practice
issn 2078-6190
2078-6204
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Background: Following upon two-year internship, community-service doctors make mistakes when they deal with evidence of medico-legal examinations in various settings. These mistakes result in alleged perpetrators being released by courts. This study investigated undergraduate clinical forensic medicine training, based on experiences and opinions of community-service doctors. This article focuses on incidents of alleged rape cases only. Methods: The study was a quantitative retrospective cohort study that made use of a questionnaire with an adapted Likert scale. An electronic survey tool was employed to target 150 community-service doctors throughout South Africa. Percentages are used to display results. Results: A response rate of 59.3% was achieved. Although 80% of the participants reported that they had undergraduate training on how to manage alleged rape or sexual assault cases, only 11.4% of the participants had hands-on exposure to an alleged rape case during their undergraduate training. In addition, the majority of the participants (77.1%) never had undergraduate training on how to complete the J88 form. These findings indicate that clinical forensic training in the undergraduate medical programme does not adequately prepare community-service doctors to meet the challenges of clinical forensic practice. The current curriculum should be adapted to address these shortcomings. Conclusions: Perpetrators cannot be convicted if evidence collected cannot stand up in court. Proper training of undergraduate medical students prior to their community-service posting will ensure that medico-legal documentation is completed correctly, leading to the presentation of credible evidence in a court of law in order to ensure successful conviction of alleged perpetrators. Full text of the research articles are available online at www.medpharm.tandfonline.com/ojfp) S Afr Fam Pract 2018; DOI: 10.1080/20786190.2017.1348046
topic clinical forensic medicine
community-service doctors
medical training
medico-legal documentation
sexual assault
url https://safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj/article/view/4680
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