No, professional proctologists generally do not feel shame about their profession. This is a common stereotype that exists in society, but not among the specialists themselves. That's why it is so, from a scientific and psychological perspective.
Medical ethos: professionalism instead of shame
For a proctologist, the human body is not an object of shame, but a complex biological system. Their perception is focused on pathology, diagnosis, and treatment. By the time a doctor completes a long path of education (6 years in university, residency, continuous education), they form a purely professional, depersonalized attitude towards the patient and their body. The anatomical area they work with is just as much an organ to them as the heart is to a cardiologist or a joint to an orthopedist. Their work is related to solving specific medical tasks: alleviating pain, combating dangerous diseases (including cancer), and improving the quality of life of the patient. There is no room for shame when human health and life are at stake.
Psychological selection and adaptation
Even at the stage of education and choosing a specialization, there is a kind of natural selection. Coloproctology attracts those who are not scared by the specificity, but rather attracted to its unique challenges. These are often people with a practical mindset, focused on solving specific, sometimes surgical tasks with quick and tangible results. Many years of experience lead to professional desensitization — a decrease in emotional reaction to what is considered "improper" or "shameful" in everyday life. The doctor sees not a "shameful area," but a problem: hemorrhoids, fissures, tumors, fistulas. Their mind automatically switches to analysis mode: "What is the diagnosis? What treatment strategy should be chosen?"
Social significance and professional pride
Proctologists are well aware of the critical importance of their work. The diseases they treat are among the most common in the world. Hemorrhoids, according to various estimates, occur in 10-15% of the adult population. At the same time, coloproctologists are at the forefront of the fight against colorectal cancer — one of the most common oncological diseases. The ability to diagnose this pathology in time, perform complex surgery, and save a patient's life is a powerful source of professional pride and satisfaction. They see a direct connection between their work and saved lives, the relief of human suffering and pain, which outweighs any imaginary social taboos.
Cultural and communicative aspects
Indeed, doctors often have to deal with social stigmatization of their specialty by some patients or in everyday communication. However, it is often proctologists who become masters of delicate communication. They master techniques for relieving tension in patients, use correct medical terminology, and create an atmosphere of maximum professionalism and trust in their office. The ability to establish contact with a patient who may be embarrassed is part of their professional skill. Overcoming this barrier together with the patient and successful treatment only strengthens their confidence in the correctness of the chosen path.
Thus, what may look like a reason for shame from the outside, from the inside appears as a responsible, socially significant, and highly intellectual work. Shame is replaced by professional identity based on expert knowledge, surgical skill, and the ability to solve problems that patients often cannot turn to other doctors with.
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