No. A doctor will keep the confidentiality of the patient unless they feel the teenager is in danger or if a crime has been committed.
No. An ethical doctor keeps his patient's confidentiality.
Your parents should already know. The only way to truly know if you have a mental illness is to be diagnosed by a doctor, and if you are underage, your parents will be told. If you have diagnosed yourself, it isn't accurate and you could easily be wrong.
no, and its not precise with a woman either
They can't if you're a guy, and not conclusively if you're a girl, the preasance of a hymen (or lack there of) is not nessecarily reliable, because the hymen can be broken while playing sports, or masturbating, and (obviously) during intercourse. So if you have a largely intact hymen, the doctor will assume (not that they care) that you are a virgin. And if not, they won't be able to draw a conclusion (nor will they want to) about wether or not you are a virgin, they won't tell your parents anyhow, so it really doesn't matter.
1) A doctor cannot tell for sure if you are a virgin or not. It is possible to have sex without tearing the hymen (I assume you are a girl), and it is also possible to tear the hymen without having sex.2) Your doctor is legal bound by Doctor-Patient Confidentiality, which means that they legally cannot tell your parents, even if you tell your doctor that you are not a virgin.3) Your doctor will likely ask whether or not are sexually active any time you go in for a check up. This is for your own well-being, as if you are sexually active they may test you for Sexually Transmitted Infections and/or give you a pelvic exam and pap smear (which tests for cervical cancer). If your doctor asks, you should answer them honestly, as these tests are important to your health.
Speak and tell. Write and make them read. Go to doctor who will tell them. Tell a relative or friend, who tell your parents.
no. if you're about to die than probably. I wouldn't tell a family doctor though....wouldn't they just feel obligated to tell your parents?? For your 'best interests'
A doctor can tell by doing a pelvic exam.
Since the hymen can break quite easily many women don't have it when it's their first time and the doctor can never tell why it is gone. So the doctor can not tell.
The Blessed Virgin Mary's parents (Saint Anne and Saint Joachim) are mentioned in the Apocryphal books.
No actually not, it's part of patient confidentiallity for your doctor to keep that information to him/herself. Minors can even get perscriptions for birth control without parents knowlege in some states. It would show up on the insurance bill though.
If the child is under 18 and the doctor feels it is necessary to tell the parents, then yes. But if the parents dont ask, then the doctor wouldn't perform a drug test and would usually have no way of knowing.
No, not unless you give your gynecologist permission.