• @Volkditty@lemmy.world
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    445 months ago

    I got my vasectomy done through Planned Parenthood. I had to go in for a screening first where they asked questions like, “Are you sure you want to do this?” and I said yeah and they said, “Really sure?” and I said yeah, so they said “OK cool, come back in two weeks and we’ll snip snip.”

    Very easy process, highly recommend.

    • @meco03211@lemmy.world
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      395 months ago

      When I broached the subject with my doctor he asked how many kids I have. I said 0. He seemed to have more of a personal reaction as if a friend had said that and he started to push back ever so slightly saying something like “but kids are great”. I just responded matter of factly that that shouldn’t matter. He instantly snapped out of it and back to doctor mode, apologized, and set up the referral. I was snipped inside a month with not another whisper of hesitancy from anyone.

    • @Apepollo11@lemmy.world
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      215 months ago

      Had mine done through the NHS. Basically two questions, “do you have children already” and “how long since your last child was born?”.

      If you haven’t had kids yet, you just need to explain why you want a vasectomy, usually with a specialist. If your last child was born less than two months ago, they want you to wait (apparently a lot of men’s first reaction to the realities of having a baby is to try to ensure it won’t happen again).

      • @Mango@lemmy.world
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        -15 months ago

        Why should I have to explain my choices regarding my body? Take my money and do your job or don’t and I’ll go to someone else who will.

        • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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          105 months ago

          Because medical ethics requires some degree of confidence that you’re not making a permanent decision that you’ll regret.

          Unnecessary hurdles like mandatory waiting periods, refusing to do it without someone else’s consent, or refusal to do it at all if you’re childless are wrong, but making sure someone understands the procedure and it’s consequences and that what they’re asking for is actually solving the complaint they want to solve is just being responsible.

          Doctors aren’t mechanics.

            • @OutsizedWalrus@lemmy.world
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              45 months ago

              Sure, but you still need to convince someone else you are informed and educated on the risks and outcomes.

              You get a handful of really bad stories, but most doctors just want to make sure they don’t have a patient knocking on their door complaining that this vasectomy thing isn’t what they wanted.

            • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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              75 months ago

              It is entirely your decision. It’s also their decision if they can ethically perform the procedure.

              Some people read that a vasectomy can be reversed and understand that they are 100% reversible 100% of the time. If someone says they want a vasectomy so they can skip other forms of birth control until they’re ready to have kids, the doctor needs to correct their misunderstanding before they can ethically perform the procedure.

              “Informed consent” requires making sure the individual is “informed”, “able to consent”, and “consenting”.

            • @Apepollo11@lemmy.world
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              55 months ago

              NHS = National Health Service

              It’s what we have in the UK, and essentially means that all your health care is free.

              Vasectomy = free. Having a baby in hospital = free. CAT scan = free. Insulin = free.

              Admittedly, it’s paid for in taxes, but at a small fraction of the cost of the American way of doing things.

        • Phoenixz
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          45 months ago

          Because sometimes its about protecting yourself from yourself.

          Making sure someone wants a vasectomy because they have all the children they want is a different thing from wanting a vasectomy as a jump scare reaction to just having had a baby and oh shit oh shit, let me do something I’ll regret later.

          Fully agree that doctors take precautions with procedures that are hard to reverse or potentially irreversible.

            • Phoenixz
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              25 months ago

              Alright, so next time when you drunkenly stumble into a heavy traffic road, I’ll let you die

              If infind you on the ground having a heart attack, I’ll just leave you to die

              When you are about to eat poisonous food, I won’t warn you, go right ahead.

              You “i never make mistakes!!” Guys are tiring

        • @Hawke@lemmy.world
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          105 months ago

          Because like it or not, it’s not the doctors job to do whatever you want no questions asked. It’s to evaluate need, desire, and risks and advise and act accordingly.

          The doctor who would perform an unnecessary procedure without doing that is just as bad as the one who refuses. Maybe worse.

          • @Mango@lemmy.world
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            -45 months ago

            It doesn’t need to be necessary. It’s not their call. It’s no different from getting an abortion.

            • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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              55 months ago

              Sterilization is quite a bit different from abortion.

              An abortion is a choice not to have a child. Sterilization is a choice to permanently alter your body such that you can never have children.

              A doctor talking to a patient to ensure they understand a procedure and it’s consequences and that those consequences are what they want when those consequences are permanent is just responsible.

              It’s entirely the patients decision, but that doesn’t mean the doctor shouldn’t confirm their intent.