PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Sally Nichols TI - Women's preferences for sex of doctor: a postal survey DP - 1987 Dec 01 TA - The Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners PG - 540--543 VI - 37 IP - 305 4099 - http://bjgp.org/content/37/305/540.short 4100 - http://bjgp.org/content/37/305/540.full SO - J R Coll Gen Pract1987 Dec 01; 37 AB - A random sample of 512 women were sent a questionnaire to determine whom they see and whom they would prefer to see for primary and preventive health care, including screening for breast and cervical cancer. The response rate was 86%. The majority of women had had at least one cervical smear test, most of them carried out by a general practitioner. Two thirds of the women had had a physical breast examination, but only one third had been shown breast self-examination techniques – again the general practitioner was the health professional most often involved. The women's preferences for who to see for primary and preventive health care were problem/procedure specific. Less than one in 10 said they would prefer to see a female general practitioner for general health problems, compared with nearly six out of 10 for women's health problems. Similarly, almost 60% would prefer to see a female health professional for cervical screening and for breast screening by physical examination and instruction in self-examination. Just under half of all the respondents – two fifths of the over 45 years age group and half of the younger women – said they would prefer a female doctor for breast screening by mammography. A female general practitioner was the first choice for cervical screening for the highest proportion of women (41%) and the proportion was even higher among women from the manual classes and among older women from the nonmanual classes. More women general practitioners might increase compliance rates for cervical screening among these high risk groups.