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- <text id=92TT0791>
- <title>
- Apr. 13, 1992: Did His Doctor Love Him to Death?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 13, 1992 Campus of the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 61
- Did His Doctor Love Him to Death?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A dispute over a Harvard psychiatrist's unconventional role-
- playing highlights troubling medical issues involving intimacy
- with patients
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis--Reported by Hannah Bloch/New York, with
- other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> To his Mexican immigrant family, Paul Lozano was a star.
- A brilliant and shy student from El Paso, he had gained entry to
- one of the nation's most elite institutions: Harvard Medical
- School. His future seemed assured. But during his third year of
- studies, Lozano became homesick and depressed. He got a list of
- Harvard-recommended therapists and called the first name on the
- alphabetical roster: psychiatrist Margaret Bean-Bayog. A
- clinical assistant professor at the medical school, she had a
- reputation as a gifted lecturer and dedicated researcher into
- substance abuse.
- </p>
- <p> But what followed for Lozano, his grieving family claims,
- was a death spiral into infantilism and madness. On April 2,
- 1991, just a few months before he was to receive his M.D.,
- Lozano, 28, injected himself with a lethal dose of cocaine. Last
- week Dr. Bean-Bayog, 48, found herself before the Massachusetts
- medical licensing board refuting charges by Lozano's family that
- she had driven him to suicide by seducing him into a lurid
- affair, brainwashing him into thinking that she was his loving
- "Mom" and he her baby boy, and then dumping him when he could
- no longer pay for treatment.
- </p>
- <p> Lozano's family, which is suing the psychiatrist for
- malpractice and "wrongful death," offers some extraordinary
- evidence. Among the items they retrieved from his Boston
- apartment were children's books such as Goodnight, Moon,
- inscribed in Bean-Bayog's hand to "the baby"; tapes in which the
- therapist instructs Lozano to repeat 10 times, "I'm your Mom,
- and I love you, and you love me very, very much"; flash cards
- made by the psychiatrist, one of which refers to missing "the
- phenomenal sex"; photographs taken by Lozano that show
- Bean-Bayog snuggling a stuffed bear; and a series of letters and
- stories she wrote to him playing out fantasies about maternal
- love and devotion. More perplexing still are dozens of pages in
- her handwriting that describe her sadomasochistic sexual
- fantasies. Lozano's sister claims her brother said he and the
- psychiatrist had an affair.
- </p>
- <p> Despite such evidence, the case against Bean-Bayog is by
- no means airtight. In testimony before the state board, the
- psychiatrist denied ever having sex with Lozano and maintained
- that he was far more disturbed than his family is letting on.
- She described him as "chronically suicidal," the victim of
- "horrendous childhood abuse," a drug user, and a liar subject
- to delusions of sexual abuse involving both her and another
- female psychiatrist. Though a social worker who had worked with
- Lozano challenges this depiction, other therapists familiar with
- the case support Bean-Bayog's account.
- </p>
- <p> The psychiatrist concedes that her treatment of Lozano was
- "somewhat unconventional" but says she turned to it only after
- routine therapy failed and after Lozano suggested that he found
- the notion of a loving, nonabusive mother comforting.
- Role-playing mother and son, she says, was a useful method of
- calming his behavior and helping him confront traumatic
- childhood memories. As for the flash card mentioning "phenomenal
- sex," the psychiatrist says it was a statement dictated by
- Lozano referring to his relationship with a girlfriend. She
- admits the sexual fantasies are her own dreams but says they
- were never meant to be shown to Lozano: he broke into her office
- and stole them, she contends. Far from cutting his life short,
- Bean-Bayog says she helped sustain him for four years. She
- believes his death was accidental.
- </p>
- <p> Wherever the truth may rest, the Lozano case illustrates
- the tangle of emotions and desires that wind through many
- doctor-patient relationships. Surveys indicate that between 7%
- and 13% of healers within an array of specialties--including
- psychologists, gynecologists, surgeons and family practitioners--have had some erotic contact with their patients. Public
- outrage over such cases has led eight states to pass legislation
- in recent years making sexual abuse of patients a crime.
- </p>
- <p> Medical organizations have been revising their ethical
- codes. Last year a Canadian task force recommended that doctors
- wait two years between treating a patient and becoming sexually
- involved. For psychotherapists, the prohibition is much
- stronger: intimacy with a former patient is never acceptable.
- While U.S. doctors are fairly unanimous in opposing sex with a
- current patient, they are divided over guidelines concerning
- former patients. In the view of the American Medical
- Association, a relationship with a former patient is unethical,
- no matter how much time has elapsed since treatment, if it
- exploits the "trust, knowledge, emotion or influence derived
- from the previous professional relationship."
- </p>
- <p> The greatest potential for such exploitation arises in the
- field of mental health, because of the intimate and emotional
- nature of psychotherapy. According to one study, 86% of
- therapists acknowledge sometimes feeling attracted to their
- patients. Another study showed that half of psychologists have
- seen at least one patient who has been sexually intimate with
- a prior therapist. (In about 90% of those cases, a male
- therapist was involved with a female patient.)
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, mental-health professionals are
- supposedly better trained than other doctors to deal with the
- sexual feelings that arise during treatment. A patient's
- emotions toward the therapist are in fact a major tool in
- therapy. In a process known as transference, patients shift to
- the counselor the myriad feelings--love, lust, anger, hate,
- admiration, envy--that they harbor for significant people in
- their lives, including parents, siblings, lovers. By discussing
- those feelings in the safe shelter of a therapist's office,
- clients can confront troubling issues from their past.
- </p>
- <p> Of course, therapists are not automatons; their feelings
- can be stirred in sessions every bit as much as are those of
- patients. Sometimes those emotions shift onto the client, a
- process called countertransference. When a woman counselor takes
- up with a male patient, the impulse is often a "fantasy that
- love will cure the patient," says psychiatrist Glen Gabbard of
- the Menninger Clinic, who points to the romance between the
- therapist played by Barbra Streisand and Nick Nolte's character
- in The Prince of Tides. "The movie would have you believe that
- what was helpful to him was her love for him, not her
- professional expertise."
- </p>
- <p> When therapists feel themselves drawn into an emotional or
- sexual relationship with a patient, they are supposed to consult
- colleagues for guidance. Bean-Bayog seems to have done just
- this. Last week a clinical social worker in Boston said that
- Bean-Bayog had discussed her sexual attraction toward a
- Mexican-American patient in a teaching session. Bean-Bayog also
- repeatedly sought advice on the Lozano case from senior
- psychiatrists. Said one of her colleagues: "She had
- consultations at every stage of the game." He points out that
- a therapist who is abusing a patient is unlikely to be so open.
- </p>
- <p> Last week the Massachusetts licensing board criticized
- Bean-Bayog for "departing from accepted standards of medical
- practice" in her treatment of Lozano, but it came to no
- conclusion about the charge of sexual misconduct. Pending
- further hearings, the board decided to allow the doctor to
- continue to see patients under the supervision of another
- psychiatrist. The plight of this respected therapist caught up
- in one of the great hazards of her profession has stirred
- sympathy within the Boston psychiatric community. "There is a
- strong tension within us that we should be able to heal, comfort
- and cure terribly troubled people--particularly gifted, young
- people," says one therapist who is familiar with the case. "I
- am inclined to think this has all the hallmarks of a real
- tragedy of good intentions to cure and heal, and something went
- awry."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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