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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTransgender? A Doctor Won’t See You Now
Trans patients face do-or-die situations when trying to find transition care. But the medical community is not ready for them.
In August 2014, Kailey Truscott went to her primary-care doctor with a letter and a mission. The letter, from a therapist, confirmed what shed known since she was 7she was a woman. The doctors appointment was to begin medical treatment so her body would reflect that fact.
But the path to transition wasnt so simple. Her doctor didnt balk, but she didnt write a prescription for estrogen, either. Shed never provided hormone therapy to a transgender person before, she told Truscott. She didnt feel comfortable starting now.
But she didnt leave Truscott in the lurch. Instead, about a week later, she called Truscott with mixed news. Shed found a clinic that could do transition care. But it was more than two hours away from the small western Maryland town where Truscott lives.
Its the only place around here that I could find, Truscott, 31, remembered her doctor saying.
Now, when she needs transition-related care, Truscott drives an hour to a Metro station, takes a train for another hour, and then walks for 15 minutes to Whitman-Walker Health, an LGBT clinic in Washington, D.C. Imagine when my appointment is at 8 a.m., she joked.
Even in areas where transgender patients flock to get care, providers can be hard to find, said Barbara Lewis, a Whitman-Walker physicians assistant who has been providing care to transgender patients for decades."
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/09/19/transgender-a-doctor-won-t-see-you-now.html
MineralMan
(146,195 posts)transgender transitions would be hesitant to provide those services. If I were in that situation, as a patient, I'd certainly want someone familiar with the transition process to provide care. It's unfortunate that this person has to travel to see an experienced physician, but I think that's preferable, overall.
It's difficult to live in the boonies and have specialized medical needs.
lindysalsagal
(20,448 posts)the limitations of their expertise. If they mess up, we'll sue them. Their insurance requires them to limit their practices to where they feel their training is adequate to the task.
Let's face it: Transgender medicine is almost unknown. Can you name one med school or hospital or internship that specializes in it? If you can, it's one of a very few, so most people who need one will only find one nearby if they're in large cities.
Doctors are not god, as much as we'd like them to be.
Yo_Mama
(8,303 posts)The GP did what the GP could - found a source where such treatment could be knowledgeably provided.
It's a rare condition, so a lot of people will have to travel to get proper care.