Two Florida college students say they were forced to submit to vaginal probes as part of a medical training program and were threatened with blacklisting if they declined.
A federal lawsuit against Florida’s Valencia State College claims the school would “browbeat” students who did not consent to the exams, threatening to lower their grades and blacklist them in the medical community.
The plaintiffs, who were not identified, enrolled in Valencia’s competitive medical diagnostic sonography program in 2013. The suit says that a second-year student who was nicknamed the “TransVag Queen” explained to them that students should undergo transvaginal ultrasound procedures to become better sonography technicians.
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“During orientation, the clients were told that these were voluntary procedures. However, as time went on, it became very clear that they were not voluntary,” Christopher Dillingham, a civil rights attorney in Winter Park, Florida, told NBC News.
The students allege they had to have the procedures done regularly, including by a male student, and then by other students in the program — even though there were anatomically correct simulators on which they could practice. Students also had clinical practice at hospitals, where they performed the same procedures on actual patients.
When the students expressed concerns to program chair Barbara Ball, she told them “they could find another school if they did not wish to be probed,” the suit says.
The students had no privacy, the suit goes on to say, claiming they had to take their clothes off in a restroom and then walk across the classroom to the sonography stations with a towel draped over them. Once they got to the stations, the situation only got worse, it said.
“In some cases, the student would have to sexually ‘stimulate’ Plaintiffs in order to facilitate inserting the probe into Plaintiffs’ vaginas. Plaintiffs experienced discomfort and embarrassment each time they had to endure this forced probing of their sexual organs,” the lawsuit claims.
But the students claim they were told they needed to participate.
“The college’s instructors retaliated against them by saying they would reduce their grades, they would blacklist them within the medical community, and they would not be able to get a job,” Dillingham said.









