Caring for affective subjects produced in intimate healthcare examinations

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Abstract

This article is about the feelings – affect – induced by the digital rectal exam of the prostate and the gynaecological bimanual pelvic exam, and the care doctors are or are not instructed to give. The exams are both invasive, intimate exams located at a part of the body often charged with norms and emotions related to gender and sexuality. By using the concept affective subject, we analyse how these examinations are taught to medical students, bringing attention to how bodies and affect are cared for as patients are observed and touched. Our findings show both the role care practices play in generating and handling affect in the students’ learning and the importance of the affect that the exam is (or is not) imagined to produce in the patient. Ours is a material-discursive analysis that includes the material affordances of the patient and doctor bodies in the affective work spaces observed.

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Gleisner, J., & Johnson, E. (2023). Caring for affective subjects produced in intimate healthcare examinations. Health (United Kingdom), 27(3), 303–322. https://doi.org/10.1177/13634593211020072

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