health

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WPATH Releases New Edition of Standards of Care

wpath logoMINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL (September 25, 2011)-The World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) will release a newly-revised edition of the Standards of Care for the Health of Transsexual, Transgender, and Gender Nonconforming People, on September 25, 2011 at the WPATH conference in Atlanta.

The revised Standards of Care can be found here


The SOC is considered the standard document of reference on caring for the transsexual, transgender, and gender nonconforming population. The newly-revised SOC will help health professionals better understand how they can offer the most effective care to these individuals. The SOC focuses on primary care, gynecologic and urologic care, reproductive options, voice and communication therapy, mental health services and hormonal and surgical treatment.

"The latest 2011 revisions to the SOC realize that transgender, transsexual, and gender nonconforming people have unique health care needs to promote their overall health and well-being, and that those needs extend beyond hormonal treatment and surgical intervention," said SOC Committee Chair, Eli Coleman, PhD, Professor and Director at Program in Human Sexuality, University of Minnesota.

This is the seventh version of the Standards of Care. The original SOC were published in 1979. Previous revisions occurred in 1980, 1981, 1990, 1998 and 2001.

The search for genital justice... - Exerpts from a recent letter

Hello <3
 
I am writing to request a referral to a University Physicians Network provider for gender reassignment surgery.
 
I am a transsexual woman who has been on hormone replacement therapy since June of 2005.  I have been performing the "inguinal tuck" (storage of the gonads within the inguinal canals) daily since early in 1999.  My physical anatomy has gradually changed to almost completely resemble the exterior of a natal female's body when I am properly tucked, but for several reasons, I require further medical intervention to promote my long term physical health.

First Post-T Doctor's Appointment

Today was my first appointment with Dr. G since beginning testosterone. I reported changes which basically boiled down to genital growth, extremely high sex drive, and the power fluctuations previously mentioned. I brought up the issue of spotting and she is sending me for a pelvic ultrasound. Normally, I wouldn't think anything of this but because of family history of ovarian cancer, Dr. G wants to play it safe. I am curious in finding out how I could be spotting after having an endometrial ablation in 2004.

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