Las Vegas OB-GYN ‘Vagina Whisperer’ is accused of sexual misconduct by Nevada Medical Board

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An OB-GYN doctor in Las Vegas who called herself the “vagina whisperer” has become the subject of a sexual misconduct complaint filed by the Nevada Board of Medical Examiners.

dr. George Peter Chambers reportedly took pictures of patients’ genitals and offered others to pay for nude photos for his ‘portfolio’.

Chambers has been licensed in the state since 2003 and is facing a number of allegations from three separate patients between 2018 and 2020.

One patient said he “humiliated and sexually humiliated her” during an alleged investigation, using slang to describe his actions.

The doctor had an Instagram account under the name “vagina whisperer” until last Thursday.

dr. George Chambers, an OB-GYN from Las Vegas, who called himself the ‘vagina whisperer’, has been charged with sexual misconduct

dr. George Peter Chambers has been licensed in the state of Nevada since 2003

The first patient, a 36-year-old woman identified in the complaint as patient A, reportedly saw Chambers for a consultation in November 2020.

Chambers allegedly used the woman’s cell phone to take pictures of her vaginal area, before later asking the woman to text him some of the pictures he took.

Patient A said she wasn’t comfortable with that because she wasn’t sure the data was being exchanged securely, but she sent the photos to Chambers anyway.

The complaint also suggests that details in her medical record do not match what actually happened during her investigation in which she claims to have been “humiliated and sexually humiliated” by Chambers.

Patient A contacted the Las Vegas Police Department weeks after her session with Chambers.

Patient B, a 35-year-old woman, was also a patient of Chambers for many years before having an appointment with him in October 2018.

An advertisement for Dr. George Chambers, OBGYN, of Las Vegas, on the Yelp page for his company Chambers & Associates OBGYN and Gynecological Surgery. Three patients have reported their encounters with the doctor who allegedly wanted to take pictures of their vaginas with his cell phone

On that occasion, Chambers allegedly offered to pay patient B or other patients $1,000 for nude photos he claimed to be using in an ad for his practice.

Chambers said they were “alleged to be used in an advertisement for his services” and “not for purposes of medical research or treatment”.

“Patient B” said Chambers often seemed “very focused on sex” and would ask invasive questions.

“He was different from other OBGYNs,” she said. “He wouldn’t wait for me to ask a question about my sexual health, he just fires questions…I sit in the room feeling like I have no choice but to answer these questions.”

“He also asked me about past trauma, things like that. I was raped when I was 16 years old. He knew these kinds of things. He was very nice. I felt heard. I entrusted him with a lot of personal information.’

But her opinion suddenly changed when she heard him make “inappropriate comments” about women and their vaginas.

He is also said to have shared personal medical information with nurses, including that she had been ‘raped’.

When the couple were alone, he asked her, “Have you ever posed nude?”

Chambers had a strong presence on social media including Instagram and TikoTok before suddenly deleting his accounts on Thursday

‘I said: ‘No, why do you ask that?”, patient B is said to have responded. “And then he told me he needs models to pose nude for his ads for his labiaplasty website.”

“It was very awkward. I didn’t know what to do or what to say. I kept trying to divert the conversation from that topic,” she explained to The beast.

Chambers tried to convince her to pose and promised to give a copy of the photos to her husband.

“But make sure your husband doesn’t know I was the photographer. You can’t tell him I was the photographer and you can’t tell him where the photo was taken,” he advised her.

“I want the real women, the women who’ve been through so much,” Chambers is said to have told her, at which point he’d grabbed his phone and showed her a photo of women crouching in front of the camera.

“He told me he does this with his patients. He told me that his patients get very provocative and seductive in front of him, especially when he tells them to “fuck the camera”.

“I felt hurt, ashamed, and angry,” Patient B said, “and I knew I’d never go back there.”

The medical examiner’s complaint describes his requests as “sexually suggestive and/or sexually degrading” to the patient and alleges Chambers violated professional boundaries.

In some cases it is not clear whether patients knew the OB-GYN knew they were in front of the camera

A similar incident occurred in patient C, a 27-year-old female.

The complaint details how she went to Chambers in October 2019 to be treated for pelvic pain and undergo routine gynecological care.

Patient C told Chambers she was struggling financially, the complaint said.

Chambers allegedly told her he was looking for models for his “portfolio” work or for an ad offering her $1,000 to participate.

Chambers told her he was “looking for models to participate in a photo shoot that would take pictures of the model’s vaginal area and naked body.”

The patient said she was also promised a USB stick containing ‘boudoir’ photos from the session, the complaint details.

Patient C says she thought it was strange that Chambers asked for pictures of her vaginal area, because he had never performed cosmetic procedures on her in that area.

At least one patient has claimed that Chambers’s suggestions for photography bordered on the pornographic

Chambers is alleged to have insisted on photographing his patients’ genitals and offered up to $1,000

Two of the patients identified in the complaint said they came forward to prevent other women from experiencing the same.

“I knew the situation was not normal, it felt wrong, and many things Dr. Chambers were done and said, shocked and completely upset me,” Patient A said. “But my frame of reference kept me from recognizing in those moments, the true nature of what was happening to me,” she said. The everyday beast.

Chambers’ own website says he specializes in obstetrics and gynecological surgery.

It praised how heonly aboard a certified Nevada obstetrician and gynecologist who is also certified in sexual health medicine,” adding, “As a gynecological surgeon raised and positively influenced by women, Dr. Chambers that all women want to look and feel beautiful.”

“I am living my dream every day because I am blessed to have discovered my true purpose in life,” Chambers wrote in his bio on the site that has been removed.

‘I use four principles when I approach patient care: 1. I give the women in my family the same care I would like. 2. I follow the basic rules of surgery to ensure a safe outcome for my patients. 3. I respect the human body; so I make surgical incisions that are aesthetically pleasing to my patients and to me. 4. I am proud of my work.’

Pictured, the office of Dr. George Chambers, who led Chambers & Associates OB-GYN and gynecologic surgery in Las Vegas, Nevada

His TikTok and Instagram accounts also shared videos of surgeries and close-ups of vaginas.

‘[Chambers] has demonstrated a pattern of not using the reasonable care, skill or knowledge commonly employed by obstetricians-gynecologists in good standing by repeatedly committing sexual inappropriateness with more than one patient,” the board wrote in the complaint.

The Examining Board said Chambers “has repeatedly exploited his relationships with patients and violated patients’ trust by committing sexual inappropriateness that constitutes sexual misconduct” and that his “repeated acts of sexual misconduct” and violations of medical practice have “damaged the trust and undermine the public’s respect’ for the medical profession.’

Chambers has been charged with disruptive conduct, unreliable conduct, conduct intended to deceive, failure to maintain accurate medical records, continued failure to practice medicine properly, and conduct that violates a patient’s trust and relationship with the patient for financial or other personal gain.

Chambers now has 20 days to respond to the allegations, after which the Nevada Board will hold a formal hearing.

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