Ms. Wang has been plagued by a poor appetite and frightening nightmares ever
since she had an X-ray taken of her chest in Beijing Yizhuang Hospital in early
October.
 Wang poses with the
X-ray she had taken at Beijing Yizhuang Hospital October 7, 2006. [China
Times] |
On October 7, 2006, while having an X-ray in Yizhuang Hospital in
southeast Beijing, Ms Wang, a native of northwest China's Gansu Province, was
asked by the doctor to strip from the waist up and was later asked to strike
various poses, greatly embarrassing and enraging the woman, the
Beijing-based China Times reported.
"He knew from my accent that I am not from Beijing, and asked me where I come
from first," Wang was quoted as saying. "Then he asked me to strip from the
waist up, including the bra, lest the clothing affect the results. Since both my
sister-in-law who accompanied me to the hospital, and I had never an X-ray taken
before, I did what he told me to do. "
"Then, commenting that my hairstyle looked nice, he asked me to tie up my
hair, and even stepped forward to adjust it. The whole process lasted more than
ten minutes." Wang was quoted as saying.
"I could stand no more, and started to cry. I fled before it ended," Wang
said.
When Wang's husband Zhang found out what had taken place, he was infuriated.
After soothing his wife, Zhang called several large hospitals to clarify
what had happened.
"They said it is not necessary to strip from the waist up in order to take an
X-ray. As long as there are no metal pieces on the clothes, the x-ray film can
be taken normally," Zhang told the paper, saying the Yizhuang Hospital was
taking advantage of patients.
According to Zhang, Wang has been in bad mood since her visit to the
hospital, showing a poor appetite and having nightmares.
"We hope the hospital will give us a satisfactory reply," Zhang was quoted by
the paper as saying.
The hospital authorities, however, justified the doctor's requirements,
blaming Wang's strong emotional reaction on a lack of communication with the
doctor.
"When taking an X-ray, sometimes the doctor asks a patient to take off his or
her clothes, and sometimes not. Both are normal. In Wang's case, insufficient
communication is to blame," vice president of Yizhuang Hospital Han told the
paper, promising to do more to strengthen mutual communication.
A senior doctor with the Radiation Section of the Beijing Friendship Hospital
told the paper that whether or not a patient is required to strip depends on
which part of the body is X-rayed. In the case of a chest X-ray, stripping is
not required, provided there are no metal objects or buttons to interfere with
the process.
Ma, a lawyer with a Beijing-based law firm, believes what Wang experienced in
the hospital constitutes a civil dispute, and the hospital should apologize to
the victim.