Medical Intervention for Transgender People In recent years, many advances have been made in medical care especially for transgender people. Research for transgender people started in the early 20th century. However, It didn't become known to the public until the 50s, when the first American traveled to Europe to have gender affirming surgery. Since then many improvements have been made, including making treatment safer and more accessible. While surgery and hormones used to be risky and expensive, it is now covered by most insurance plans and FDA approved. One type of treatment for transgender people is HRT, or Hormone Replacement Therapy involves giving a person hormones to make their bodies better reflect their gender. Transgender men …show more content…
There are many different types of surgery depending on your needs. Surgery for transgender men usually comes in 2 forms, top surgery and bottom surgery. Top surgery involves the removal of breast tissue to form a more masculine chest. Top surgery is most commonly performed as Double Incision which means making 2 separate incisions under the pectoral. Top surgery can also be preformed with the peri-aeroler method where 2 incisions are made under the areola. This leaves little to no scarring. Bottom surgery for transgender men is much less researched. There are currently 2 forms, medioplasty and Phalloplasty. Phalloplasty involves taking a skin graft from either a forearm or abdomen. It leaved extensive scarring on the arm and is expensive. Surgery for transgender women is much more researched. There is bottom surgery and then cosmetic surgery. Vaginoplasty, aka bottom surgery has been performed since the early 1900s and is low risk. Cosmetic surgery for transgender women consists of a few different surgeries, facial feminization, which transplants cartilage and bone to give a softer facial appearance, Voice feminization, which thins vocal cords to make pitch of voice higher, tracheal shave, which shaves the cartilage known commonly as the “adams apple”, and lastly augmentation of either the breasts or buttocks to give the body a more feminine form. Some people choose to undergo one or all of these surgeries, some people undergo
“The Myth of Trans Regrets”, covers topics discussed in this piece such as, attitudes of the patients after transforming through, hormone therapy, chest surgery, genital surgery and overall. Colin Close and GATE conducted the study, “Report of the 2011 Transition Survey”, used for the results in the image. (See figure 1)
A transgender, 25 year old woman named Avery Edison travelling from London, England was detained at Pearson Airport by Canada Border Service Agency. According to her, the reason for her detention was due to an immigration issue involving her overstaying a previous student visa. Despite being identified as a female on her passport, Avery had male genitalia. Avery tweeted that she would be assessed by a nurse before being placed in a male or female cell. However, the fact that she had male genitalia resulted in her being sent to Maplehurst, Correctional Centre in Milton, Ontario which is a prison for males where Avery stayed for one night. In the article, it is stated that Avery had concerns regarding potential sex attacks towards her in the
Imagine going through life believing that you were born into the wrong body. This is how a transgender feels as they go through life. A transgender is a person who whose self-identity does not conform unambiguously to male or female sex. This topic is very controversial due to many arguments about the differences between the male and female physique. The natural biological differences between males and a females play a huge role in this controversy.
There is a great deal of confusion around this word because of the meaning behind it. There are two generally accepted root meanings of the word “trans” in transgenderism: across and beyond (Lund, 2012, p.8). In the case of gender nonconformists, this refers to the “beyond” definition, where they view themselves outside of the binary structure of male and female. The “across” meaning applies to those that do not believe they were born on the correct side of that line and seek to cross it, usually physically while some choose to simply self-identify. At the turn of the century, psychologists said at least 2% of American children feel this sense of “being born in the wrong body”, and with the U.S. Census of 2000 reporting over eighty thousand citizens under the age of 20, that means almost two thousand children fell into this group (Part Six: Transgender in America, 2001, p.75). While there has been a great deal of progress as far as resources and options for these “crossing” trans individuals, there have also been a lot of
Transgender is defined by Wikipedia as, “the state of one's gender identity (self-identification as woman, man, neither or both) or gender expression not matching one's assigned sex.” The article explains how a transgender individual may define themselves as having the characteristics that are normally associated with a particular gender but will choose to identify elsewhere on the gender continuum. It use’s the love story of Rhys Ernst and Zackary Drucker as an example. It took five years for Zackary to transition from male to female and Rhys from female to male. But both truly believe that they were born the wrong gender, and choose to correct this wrong with hormone treatments, surgery and personality changes that to the more tradition eye may seem absurd and abnormal. This is one of the main reason such transgender couples are talking about their transformations. To beach this gap between transgender’s and the rest of the population. It is believed that by educating society, we are more likely to accept something than if we do not fully understand the parameters that surround such an issue.
The most common issue transgender individuals face every day is bathroom use. When a transgender person uses the bathroom that corresponds to their gender identity, it boosts well-being. It is legal to for transgender individuals to use whichever bathroom
“The federal government and almost every state recognize transgender people’s right to change their name and to have identification documents with the gender marker that matches their gender identity.” (Jami Kathleen Taylor, 2007) There are a lot of misconceptions on what the meaning of transgender is, some think that they only become the person whether it is male to female, or female to male after surgery. What people fail to realize is that every transgender person transitions in their own way.
If you identify as transgender it means you feel like you are a different gender than which you were assigned at birth. Though transgender typically refers to transitioning to the opposite gender, it is an umbrella term for any other genders such as
There are very few times when someone comes out as transgender and their lives are still relatively easy to manage. There are a copious number of people who oppose this lifestyle and want no one to be apart of it.... ... middle of paper ... ...
Sanchez, N. F., Sanchez, J. P., & Danoff, A. (2009). Health care utilization, barriers to care, and hormone usage among male-to-female transgender persons in New York City. American Journal of Public Health, 99(4), 713-719.
In conclusion, transgender children is not a problem that can be diagnosed or even cured with holistic medicine or even going to “straight camp.” In children they are only expressing what they feel about themselves to be true and just want that dream to become a reality. They hope for there parents to understand and to treat them as the sex they so desperately want to be.
Gender is seen as a spectrum, and one can fall anywhere on this spectrum. Again, according to Sam Killerman, being transgendered means living "as a member of a gender other than that expected based on sex assigned at birth." Just because a person is born with male genitalia does not mean they have to be male.
Now I am going to describe why some men and women want to change their gender, what are the impacts on individuals and in the society? According to the research by American Psychological Association, a transsexual is a person who changes his or her sex—physically, legally, or both. Clinically speaking, a person who was assigned female at birth but identifies and lives as a man is referred to as a transsexual man, or transman, or female-to-male (FTM); a male-to-female (MTF) person is a transsexual woman or transwoman (Glicksman). Some people drop the transgender label after they have transitioned to their new gender.
Government agencies such as the Affordable Care Act law defines no sexual discrimination including gender identity, transgender status prohibits majority of insurance companies and healthcare providers from refusing to cover transition-related treatments or using incorrect pronouns under the law. However, the greatest effect can only occur when we — as an American society — change our paradigm. What we can do to help to contribute the changes of degrading experience for many LGBT people in healthcare setting are educating ourselves and creating more awareness in general public to ensure that everyone needs to be treated equally whoever they are. We should be more open-minded to create a welcoming and acceptable workplace environment inclusive of all trans people, to prevent transgender from getting reluctance to reveal their sexual orientation or gender identity to their health providers by training on the full scope of this minority group health in medical schools, and to keep fighting for the state-laws to ensure equality in for transgender individuals in the public utilities and services since only almost half of U.S. states discriminating against transgenders is considered
Gender reassignment is a very controversial topic. Does it really work, can surgery really change your gender? People will always tell you about all the things that go right with surgery, but does anyone truly pay attention to the significant problems that this surgery can cause? Gender reassignment surgery (GRS) is a surgical procedure by which a person’s physical appearance and function of their existing sexual characteristics are altered to resemble that of the other sex. It is said that this surgery is used to treat gender identity disorder (GID), which describes the condition in which an individual identifies with a gender inconsistent or not culturally associated with their assigned sex. Having surgery performed can cause both physical and mental tribulations. While death is an unlikely result of complications, things do go wrong, as with all surgeries there are risks. There are also major mental, physiological, social and emotional side effects. Surgery will not fix the underlying psychological problems that cause the request for surgery. Anyone considering surgery needs to proceed with caution, as it can result in irreversible damage.