• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Japanese gitls afraid of going topless for school healtj check ups

lostvirgin

Alfrescian
Loyal
If it's gansiokbin doing a health check, she would have stripped naked at home and walk to the hospital.

And that's for dental. :biggrin:
 

steffychun

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://support.theguardian.com/int...medical-exams","isRemote":true}&numArticles=0








Four students walk through corridor


Parents in Japan have called on education and health authorities to end the practise of topless medical checks in schools. Photograph: urbancow/Getty Images
Japan

‘I couldn’t say no’: anger grows over topless medical exams in Japan schools​

Parents and campaigners have called on education and health authorities to end the practice of requiring children to strip off for school health checks

Justin McCurry

Justin McCurry in Osaka
Fri 6 Sep 2024 00.52 BST


“My chest was completely exposed and I felt embarrassed,” writes a Japanese girl after undergoing an annual health checkup at her middle school. Another says: “Before the exam our teacher told us we would have to lift up our tops and bra … I didn’t want to do it but I couldn’t say no.”
The testimony from two 13-year-olds, seen by the Guardian, is typical of the discomfort – and in some cases trauma – felt by children attending schools in Japan that can require boys and girls as young as five – and as old as 18 – to strip to the waist during health examinations.

It has sparked anger among parents and campaigners who have called on education and health authorities to end the practice before the new academic year begins in April.
Noriko Tabuchi, a city councillor in Matsuyama, first became aware of topless school health checkups through one of her English conversation class students. “She was 13 and hadn’t been able to tell her parents, but I could see she was troubled and asked her what was wrong,” says Tabuchi, who has since met other girls, all aged 12 and 13, who were told to strip to the waist by visiting doctors.

Young cheerleader with red silver and black pompom
Japan schools move to protect cheerleaders from upskirting at sporting events

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...eerleaders-from-upskirting-at-sporting-events
There is no unified policy on whether children should undress or remain clothed during the checkups, with local education boards left to decide in conjunction with visiting health professionals. Some schools require children to keep their bodies covered, while others insist that they remove their T-shirts and, among girls, bras. One western Japanese city senior high schools – whose oldest students are 18 – requires that pupils are topless during the checks.
Surveys show that most teachers want the requirement to end, while one poll of middle schoolchildren, aged 12-16, found that 95.5% of respondents were unhappy about removing their clothes. “The health exams can have serious repercussions for children,” says Akiyo Tanaka, a city councillor in Nishinomiya. “Some of them continue to experience trauma into adulthood.”

‘Awful to remove clothes in front of strangers’​

As the issue attracts the attention of media and national politicians, campaigners say they face resistance from the Japan Medical Association and education officials who are reluctant to take on the influential body. “In some cases, doctors, who are almost always men, have threatened to stop performing the exams if they are forced to change the procedure,” said a person familiar with the issue who asked not to be named.

“They insist it is impossible to conduct a proper exam if children are fully clothed. And the children are in no position to refuse. The schools are really concerned about this and want something to be done.”

The Japan Medical Association has not responded to the Guardian’s request for comment.

“Girls of my daughter’s age are embarrassed to talk about their bodies to their own parents,” says Chiyoko Suda, whose 13-year-old daughter begged her not to confront the school after she underwent a health check semi-naked. “So you can imagine how awful it is for them to have to remove their clothes in front of strangers.”

Some regions began conducting more invasive health checkups during the years of postwar austerity, when schools took on a bigger role in ensuring that children were healthy and properly fed.

Doctors have said topless exams are necessary to check for signs of atopic dermatitis, heart irregularities and other conditions. “Many doctors, especially senior ones, are conservative and they simply do not like to change their ways,” says Kentaro Iwata, a professor of infectious diseases at Kobe university hospital.

Asked if there was any medical basis for insisting that children remove their clothing to undergo a “proper” examination, Iwata said: “Not that I know of. It might slightly improve the quality of the sound of the heartbeat, but I do not think this contributes to improving children’s health.”
Complaints about the health exams have come from parents of children attending schools across the country, including Yokohama, where authorities said at least 16 primary schools required pupils to remove their tops and bras.

This is despite a notice issued by the education ministry at the start of the year requesting boards of education to “establish a medical examination environment with consideration for the privacy and feelings of the students” by allowing them to wear their PE kits or cover their upper bodies with a towel “to the extent that it does not interfere with the accuracy of the examination”.

The ministry also called for separate examinations for boys and girls, the use of partitions or curtains, for teachers and staff of the same sex as the children to be present, and for parents and guardians to be given advance notice that, in some cases, doctors may require children to raise their shirts to ensure an accurate diagnosis.

Kyoto city changed its policy under pressure from parents, telling schools that children should “in principle” be permitted to wear their underwear and PE kit. Other schools have followed suit.

“It would be better if the education ministry provided more specific guidelines so that local governments and schools can be consistent,” Satoshi Kodama, a professor and medical ethics specialist at Kyoto University, told the Mainichi Shimbun.
Mai Okumura said her middle school daughter had initially brushed off her health exam, during which she had to remove her T-shirt and bra. “When I asked her about it, she said it couldn’t be helped as the rules had been decided by adults,” says Okumura.

Sachiko Shimada’s daughter had been similarly reluctant to strip to the waist but felt unable to protest. “I was shocked when she came home and told me she had had to lift up her shirt and bra so that her breasts were showing,” Shimada says.

“This shows a total lack of respect for their privacy and dignity.”

The names of the children’s mothers have been changed at their request.
 

steffychun

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://www.malaymail.com/news/worl...-over-topless-medical-exams-in-schools/149480


By Malay Mail
Friday, 06 Sep 2024 1:04 PM MYT

TOKYO, Sept 6 — Japanese parents and campaigners are expressing outrage over the requirement for students to strip to the waist during routine school health exams, with many calling for an end to the practice.

The exams, which involve both boys and girls as young as five and up to 18 years old, have sparked widespread discomfort and, in some cases, trauma among students, according to a report published in The Guardian today.

“My chest was completely exposed, and I felt embarrassed,” a 13-year-old girl shared, describing her experience at a middle school health checkup. Another student expressed a similar sentiment, saying, “I didn’t want to do it, but I couldn’t say no.”

The lack of a unified policy has left the decision to individual schools and local authorities, some of which require students to remove their tops, while others allow them to stay clothed.

However, in some regions, students, including those in senior high schools, are still asked to remove their shirts and bras during the examinations.

Parents and teachers are increasingly voicing their concerns.

One poll revealed that 95.5 per cent of middle school students were uncomfortable with removing their clothes for the exams.

“The health exams can have serious repercussions for children,” said Akiyo Tanaka, a city councillor, noting that many students continue to experience trauma into adulthood.

Despite this, officials from the Japan Medical Association (JMA) and education authorities have been reluctant to change the practice.

Doctors, often male, have argued that a topless examination is essential for detecting health conditions such as heart irregularities and skin issues.

However, many disagree.

Kentaro Iwata, a professor of infectious diseases, said there is no strong medical basis for such a practice, stating, “It might slightly improve the sound of the heartbeat, but it does not significantly benefit the children’s health.”

Some regions, such as Kyoto, have begun to allow students to remain partially clothed during exams, with others expected to follow suit.

Parents, like Chiyoko Suda, whose daughter underwent the exam semi-naked, remain frustrated. “It’s awful for these girls to have to remove their clothes in front of strangers,” she said.

While the Japanese education ministry has issued guidelines asking schools to consider students’ privacy, including allowing them to wear PE kits, the implementation remains inconsistent.

Campaigners continue to push for a more comprehensive national policy that respects children’s dignity.
 
Top