Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
The college in Beijing was at the center of public rage after he allegedly asked the student to prove that she was in her period to get the right to the hospital.
The viral video shot inside what seems to be a clinic and posted in the social media this month shows a young woman who asks in an elderly woman: “Should every menstrual girl take pants and show you before they can get a painful note?”
“Mostly yes,” the elderly woman replies. “This is the rule of the school.”
Local media determined the location of the video as a clinic at the University College of the Handan Institute, which later stated in a statement that its staff “adhered to the protocol”. But social media users have indicated the meeting as a serious invasion of privacy.
Neither the student nor the Gengedan Institute immediately answered the BBC News requests.
Both the video and the school statement and the school statement were shot, although screenshots and fragments were recycled on the Internet, including state media.
In his statement of May 16, the Gengedan Institute said that the video of the incident distributed on the Internet was “distorted” – and that the institution had the right to engage in legal actions against those who “viciously distributed false videos”.
The statement also said that the staff performed a proper procedure during the meeting, for example, “initiating clinical work after receiving a student permission” and did not use tools and did not carry out physical examination.
The employee did not answer when the student asked for written evidence of school regulation to check the students’ menstrual status. She later asked the student to go to the hospital.
In the social media, the incident caused anger and sarcasm to the rules of the school.
“My head hurts, should I open the skull and call it a day?” Wrote one social media user.
“Let’s just take the sanitary venue and paste it on the sick note,” another Weeba said.
The Gengdan Institute’s employee told the local Dute News outlet that the school may have created a rule of menstruation to scare students from the forgery periods to get sick notes.
But this argument has hollow among social media users.
“If they worry that students use their periods as justification several times a month, why not make it record? It is not that difficult,” one person wrote on Weibo.
The state media also went into the discussion.
“Menstruation is already an intimate topic for women. Such rules will make students feel very uncomfortable and even adversely affect students’ psychological well -being,” Chinese National Radio said.
Currently, the Gengedan Institute joins the List of Higher Institutions across the country that have been under fire for what many see the fist that control their students in rethinking and attempts.
Last year, some universities were criticized for banning bed curtains in dormitories. Students often use curtains for privacy in common rooms, but school authorities have stated that they are a danger of fire and safety.
In addition, during the popular holiday season last year, last year some universities made strict recommendations for students who planned to travel. This included the avoidance of solo trips, road trips or bicycle security trips – which many saw as institutions that exceed their powers in the private life of students.
On the Social Media website Xiaohongshu, a user who claims that a student of the Gengdan Institute said “the school clinic deserves all the criticism he receives.”
“I heard from some older students that this thing continued for a while. Some girls have talked before, but nothing was done,” the user wrote.
“I am glad that this time it did relevant topics. People were not silent.”