Abstract
Objective:
Patient-centered care is a core value of both Family Medicine and Obstetrics & Gynecology. We sought to know if patients prefer being offered a mirror to see their cervix and external genitalia during asymptomatic speculum exams (Mirror Pelvic Exam, MPE). Additionally, we explored clinicians' (medical assistants, residents, and faculty) opinions about offering patients a mirror during exams.
Methods:
The patient portion was a cross-sectional mixed-methods survey of people presenting for cervical cancer screening at a residency-based Family Medicine Clinic. Patients took a presurvey, were offered a mirror to see their external genitalia and/or their cervix during the exam, and then took a post-survey. The clinician portion was a mixed-methods survey given at the initiation of the study and after the four-month patient survey period.
Results:
While only half the patients (n = 22) accepted the use of a mirror, the majority preferred being offered and felt offering a mirror should be a routine part of the well-exam. Being offered a mirror did not bother anyone. Free responses further emphasized that patients preferred being offered the MPE. Over half of clinicians (n = 51) felt the MPE was a good idea, but only a third felt it would improve patient satisfaction. Some did not offer the MPE due to thinking patients would not want the option, lack of comfort with the MPE, or concerns about slowing down clinic flow.
Conclusion:
Patients prefer being offered the MPE while clinicians did not have insight into patients’ preferences. Our results suggest clinician perceptions about offering the MPE are a barrier to the MPE as a standard of care.
Introduction
The dual purposes of this study are to discover whether patients prefer being offered a mirror to see their cervix and external genitalia during asymptomatic speculum exams and clinician perceptions of the mirror pelvic exam (MPE). Anecdotes in historical texts document an increase in the popularity of teaching women to use mirrors and plastic speculums to self-examine as part of the feminist movement.1–3 Some medical and nursing texts also recommend offering a mirror as part of a pelvic exam (MPE).4–6 The MPE is suggested to help with anxiety, knowledge, and empowerment;3,5,6 however if patients prefer being offered a mirror and if offering and acceptance affect outcomes have been sparsely studied. A 1979 survey published in the Journal of Family Practice found the majority of the 977 women surveyed wanted to know more about the pelvic exam and their own anatomy, but only 46.5% would want to use a mirror if it was offered. 7 In a study where women were randomized to receive a standard pelvic exam versus an MPE with a focus on education about anatomy and the exam, 87.7% said using the mirror made them feel more relaxed and 80.6% would choose this option in the future. 8 A 1989 German study (with an abstract available in English) reported greater satisfaction with the well woman exam when a mirror is used, but also found a link between patients accepting a mirror and their own pre-exam comfort with their bodies. 9 In a more contemporary study of women presenting to a gynecological clinic for vulvar pathology, women were allowed to choose to use a mirror to see their external genitalia, and those who accepted said they would prefer this option in the future. Acceptance resulted in enhanced levels of control and knowledge but not pain or vulnerability. 10
Despite prior studies indicating the benefits of incorporating the MPE, it has not become standard in clinical practice. Critics of the use of MPE propose concerns about the difficulty of the utilization of the mirror during the exam, the expense of stocking mirrors in the clinic, hygiene concerns, and prolonged exam time. 10 Data is also lacking regarding the attitudes of physicians, nurses, and medical assistants regarding the MPE. Knowing and incorporating patient preferences is in line with patient-centered care, a core value of both Family Medicine and Obstetrics & Gynecology, 11 so our main outcome measure of the patient survey was a patient preference in being offered a mirror to see their external genitalia and cervix during a well exam. Secondary outcomes were acceptance rates and clinician perceptions of offering the MPE.
Materials and Methods
Study design
Our study is a novel study based on a review of the survey procedures used by Tam et al, 10 inclusion of the Female Genital Self-Image Scale (FGSIS),12,13 and discussion with our nursing staff and physicians. The patient portion was a cross-sectional survey of people with cervixes and female genitalia presenting for well exams (asymptomatic patients having cervical cancer screening with a speculum exam). We utilized pre- and post-exam surveys to assess patient characteristics and acceptability of the intervention. The clinician portion was pre-and post-intervention assessments of physician and medical assistant attitudes towards the MPE (Supplementary Data S2).
Survey tool
The patient-focused survey had two parts (Supplementary Data S1). The first was a pre-exam survey incorporating the 4-question FGSIS-4 and prior exposure to the use of a mirror during a well woman exam. The FGSIS-4 is a validated scale that positively correlates female genital self-image with sexual function. 13 We included the FGSIS-4 to see if there was any connection between comfort with one’s anatomy and acceptance/preference to be offered a mirror. 9 Patients were offered a mirror to see their external genitalia prior to the speculum exam and again after the speculum was in place to see their cervix. They then took a post-experience survey to assess acceptance or refusal, and if they prefer being offered a mirror during the exam. We aimed to design an efficient survey to answer the question of whether patients prefer being offered a mirror, and so we considered but then ultimately excluded questions about pain, vulnerability, a sense of control, and comfort to avoid a survey that would fatigue the patients. There was a free-response section for patients to explain their responses. As the goal of our initial survey is to know if people with cervixes, as a universal group, should be offered a mirror during an exam, we did not include questions about age, race/ethnicity, prior pathology, or pregnancy. A potential future study could identify which demographic groups prefer using a mirror during the exam, but this was not our current study’s purpose.
There were also longitudinal surveys of nursing staff, faculty, and resident physicians (clinicians) before the start of the patient survey administration period (after education about the process) and then after the patient survey collection period was completed (Supplementary Data S2). The clinician-focused surveys asked about opinions on the burdens and benefits of offering mirrors. These were given prior to the study roll-out in January and after study completion in June.
After survey creation, they were reviewed by the Graduate School of Medicine statistician, our research coordinator, and a librarian with expertise in plain language use in surveys. The patient survey was then tested with five clinic patients and the clinician survey was tested with two medical assistants not working in our clinic and two OB/gyn’s in our system’s residency program with no changes recommended. The patient survey was then translated into Spanish by a professor of Spanish language with prior experience translating medical documents for our clinic.
This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB) at the University of Tennessee Graduate School of Medicine, approval number 5001.
Participants
The survey was offered to any person fluent in English or Spanish presenting to our Family Medicine residency clinic for asymptomatic cervical cancer screening over the age of 18 between February 1 and May 31, 2023. Not every patient who has cervical cancer screening at our clinic identifies as a woman, so we prefer to describe our participants as patients. Exclusion criteria were non-English or Spanish-speaking patients, any inability to complete the survey, or any physical or cognitive condition that would affect the participant’s ability to visualize the mirror during the examination.
Exclusion criteria for clinicians included anyone who did not participate in pap smears or well exams.
Data analysis
We hypothesized that less than 10% of patients would have used a mirror to see their cervix previously, over half of patients offered a mirror will accept the mirror, over half of patients will prefer being offered a mirror, and clinicians will be hesitant at first but more comfortable after they have incorporated offering a mirror into the exam.
Frequency and percentage statistics were used to describe the responses to survey questions. Chi-square and Fisher’s Exact Test were used to compare independent groups on survey responses. Statistical significance was assumed at an alpha value of 0.05 and all analyses were performed using SPSS Version 29 (Armonk, NY: IBM Corp.).
Open-ended responses were sorted into descriptive themes by one member of the study team. Two other team members then checked the themes against the specific responses to ensure agreement, and then each response was assigned an appropriate theme(s). A fourth research team member then assessed the themes and agreed with the classifications.
Results
Twenty-two patients participated in the study, average age of 40 (SD 13.9). This was estimated to be potentially a third of patients who had well exams during the four-month study period of Feb 1 to May 31 based on billing for 221 pap smears during the same academic year. Eleven patients accepted the MPE, with one of the 11 only using the MPE to see their cervix but not their external genitalia. Eleven patients did not accept the MPE. One patient checked the box indicating that they had accepted the mirror, but as all their other responses indicated they had not used the mirror, this patient was coded as having declined the MPE. In the pre-survey, eight patients had used a mirror to see their external genitalia before (36.4%), and two had seen their cervix before (9.1%). Of patients who had seen their external genitalia before, five accepted the MPE, and three declined.
In the patient post-survey, all who accepted could see their external genitalia and cervix. Of all 22 patients, 17 (77.3%) said they liked being offered a mirror (95% of the 18 respondents to that question; four patients had left that question blank). Twenty patients (90.9%) said being offered a mirror did not bother them (100% of 20 respondents to that question) and 19 (86.3%) said being offered a mirror should be a routine part of the exam (95% of 20 respondents to that question). The two patients who did not respond and the one patient who disagreed that being offered a mirror should be a routine part of the exam all declined to use the mirror.
Our patients had mainly positive responses to the FGSIS-4 scores (Table 1) so we were not able to assess the impact of scores on opinions about the MPE. The three people who disagreed with any of the FGSIS-4 questions all declined the MPE, but this was not statistically significant (p = 0.20).
Patient Female Genital Self-Image Scale Scores
Fifty-two percent of residents (13 of 25), 25% of faculty (3 of 12), and 29% of medical assistants (4 of 14) were able to help patients see their external genitalia; 40% of residents, 25% of faculty, and 29% of medical assistants were able to help patients see their cervixes. Aside from a reduction in concerns about cleanliness, opinions about the MPE did not change significantly after the study period (Table 2).
Clinician Pre- and Post-Responses
MPE, Mirror Pelvic Exam.
While clinicians were not as likely to agree the MPE would improve patient satisfaction as they were to think it was a good use of time or a good idea, only agreeing the MPE would improve patient satisfaction had an association with successfully helping patients to see their external genitalia (p:eg < 0.03) and cervix (p:c < 0.003) during the MPE. Clinician role was not associated, nor was agreeing on the post-survey that they had enough training, concerns about the cleanliness of the mirror, concerns about dropping the mirror, that the MPE to see external genitalia or cervixes was a good idea, that the MPE was a good use of time, or that the MPE would improve patient outcomes.
Open-ended results
Both surveys had open-ended questions to better understand people’s perspectives on the MPE. Eight of the ten patients (Table 3) who declined the MPE wrote in reasons of disinterest, time, comfort, or concerns that they would be unable to participate due to habitus, positioning, or the size of the mirror. Patients wrote they accepted out of curiosity or wanting knowledge about their own bodies, or to be helpful to the study. Half of the acceptors had some difficulty seeing that was overcome by positioning, angling of the mirror, or explanation of anatomy by their doctor. All patients who wrote in liked being offered the mirror; those that declined did not accept due to disinterest or lack of concern, with one respondent wishing there was a bigger mirror. We used a hand mirror, but other studies have used larger birthing mirrors for the MPE. 10 Empowerment, body positivity, and interest (with subgroups of curiosity and empowerment) were given by patients that accepted as reasons why they liked being offered a mirror, why being offered did not bother them, and why they thought being offered a mirror should be a routine part of the pap exam.
Patient Free-Response Sections
Very few open-ended responses were given for the clinician pre-survey, all by medical assistants. Two wrote that they did not think patients would be interested due to wanting the exam to be over quickly, and one had concerns about whether the physician versus the medical assistant would be in charge of offering the mirror. The clinician post-survey responses to questions about whether their perceptions had changed or if there was anything else they wanted to say fell into themes of interest (either the patients were not interested in the MPE, or the clinicians themselves forgot to offer; as well as surprise that patients were so interested in the study and their anatomy) opportunity (they did not have a pap during the study period); learning (that patients enjoyed learning or that clinicians thought patients learning about their anatomy was important); comfort (some clinicians felt uncomfortable with offering the mirror), time (some did not offer the MPE because they did not want to delay clinic flow); and responsibility (medical assistants felt it was the doctor’s role to offer the survey, doctors felt it should be the medical assistant’s role, and so neither offered). Of 27 total write-in responses to these two questions, 10 commented on patients not wanting to use the mirror and eight expressed that they themselves did not offer the MPE-either out of lack of interest in the study or feeling uncomfortable with offering patients the mirror.
Discussion
The major findings of this study are that patients preferred being offered an MPE while physicians and medical assistants did not have insight into this preference. Studies done periodically over the past five decades have shown that patients prefer being offered a mirror and that there are outcome benefits to the MPE. Our study adds to the body of research on the MPE by assessing clinician opinions in addition to patient preferences. Failure of the MPE to become standard clinical practice may be based on the clinician’s viewpoint rather than patient preference.
Our clinician post-survey free responses tended towards the negative. We estimate that only a third of potential patients were surveyed during our study period; this may have been due to some clinicians not offering the survey to their patients. However, some clinician free responses commented on being surprised at how much patients liked being offered a mirror. It cannot be known if the universal offering of the survey and MPE would have resulted in more patients saying they did not want to be offered a mirror or if the trend toward positive reception of the MPE would have continued. Clinician reluctance was an unexpected variable in the administration of this research project, but with the unpredictability of anticipating each potential well speculum exam in our Family Medicine clinic across more than 50 clinicians (medical assistants, residents, and faculty) we were not able to assure universal offering of the survey and MPE.
While only half of the surveyed patients accepted the MPE, most preferred being offered the mirror. A patient-centered approach to clinical care is a core value of Family Medicine, 11 and our results offer even more support for offering the MPE. Part of our motivation to do this study was to know why the MPE is not universally taught nor offered in practice despite previous research supporting patients’ preference for being offered this exam.8,10,14 Clinician reluctance may help explain why this is not routinely taught and not yet routinely offered in the clinical setting, despite recommendations to offer the MPE in resources used for teaching the pelvic exam.4–6
The Female Genital Self-Image Scale has been shown to be predictive of gynecological exam behavior, in that surveyed women with higher FGSIS scores were more likely to have received a gynecological exam in the last 48 months. 12 We chose to include this scale in our survey to assess whether genital self-image may affect a patient’s desire to view their own anatomy and/or to be offered a mirror. Since the FGSIS-4 scores of patients in our study were nearly universally positive, we could not explore the association between the FGSIS and preferences about the MPE.
Limitations and during-study troubleshooting
During the study period, we had monthly meetings to assess the project. After the first month of the project, we found there was confusion as to whether the point of the study was the MPE itself or offering the survey. Clinicians had not been offering the survey to patients they felt were not likely to elect for an MPE. Once we discussed this in nursing, resident, and faculty meetings clinicians began to offer the survey more consistently. Clinicians also noted that some patients had difficulty with the MPE due to body size or core strength but that raising the head of the exam table or working on mirror angling helped. We feel this experience is useful as it replicates what might happen if a clinic were to set a goal of incorporating the MPE and uncovers some potential real-world barriers to the MPE as standard practice.
After using the novel survey tool, we noted that it did not capture some useful information. We could not tell if the inability to help patients see their external genitalia and cervix was because clinicians did not offer the MPE or because they offered and were not successful during the MPE. However, for our population, all patients who accepted did say they successfully saw. We also did not ask clinicians on the post-survey if they would change their practice to offering the MPE. Our questions on thinking this was a good idea, a good use of time, or likely to improve patient satisfaction can hint at clinician preference, but asking directly would be more helpful to know if clinicians would change their practice to match patient preference.
Conclusions
Patients prefer being offered the MPE. Clinicians (nursing, residents, faculty) tended to agree the MPE was a good idea but did not have insight into patients’ preferences to be offered the MPE. Our results suggest clinician beliefs are a barrier to the implementation of more widespread use of MPE.
Footnotes
Authors’ Contributions
L.O. contributed to project conceptualization, investigation, methodology, project administration, supervision, data curation, formal analysis, and writing. S.H. to investigation, supervision, formal data analysis, and writing. S.M. to methodology, investigation, formal analysis, and writing. S.L. to methodology, investigation, formal data analysis, and writing, G.S. to methodology, investigation, formal data analysis, and writing; R.E.H. to data curation, formal data analysis and writing. F.A. to investigation, supervision, formal analysis, and writing.
Author Disclosure Statement
No competing financial interests exist.
Funding Information
No funding was received for this article.
Abbreviations Used
References
Supplementary Material
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