Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Search For Trans-Sensitive And Competent Health Care Often Frustrating, Hurtful

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Apr, 2015 12:17 PM
    TORONTO — Canada's health-care system may be built on the premise of equal access for all, but the transgender community says the provision of services for those who don't conform to traditional notions of male and female can be far from universal.
     
    A common complaint is that many doctors and other medical practitioners lack an understanding of what it means to be transgender, and even seeking routine care can lead to invasive and irrelevant questions about sexual orientation and genitals.
     
    And with some practitioners, the response to a transgender patient can be outright hostility.
     
    "Health care is incredibly inaccessible for most trans people across the country," says Ryan Dyck of the LGBTQ advocacy organization Egale Canada. "Finding a health-care professional outside the MTV — Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver — is pretty difficult.
     
    "And the reality is prejudice and discrimination against trans people in this country is extremely high, and so quite often trans people will encounter doctors who simply say 'I won't treat you because your trans.'"
     
    Dr. Carys Massarella, lead physician at the transgender care clinic Quest Community Health Centre in St. Catharines, Ont., says many doctors feel uncomfortable dealing with transgender patients because they've had virtually no training in medical school or as interns and residents.
     
    "Some of the clients I see in the clinic, there's no question that they're afraid to tell their doctor because they think the doctor will fire them if they identify as (transgender)," she says.
     
    "Or if they do disclose to their doctor, their doctor has a very negative attitude towards it, like 'You can't be serious? Why would you do that? You'll ruin your life.'
     
    "I remember I had one patient whose doctor told them they should pray."
     
    A study she co-authored, published last year in the Annals of Emergency Medicine, found that 21 per cent of about 400 transgender Ontarians in the 2009-2010 Trans Pulse survey reported having avoided hospital emergency room visits over concerns about how they would be treated.
     
    More than half of those who did seek care at an ER in their "felt" gender reported negative responses, such as hurtful or insulting language, being belittled for being trans, being told practitioners did not know enough to provide care, and in some cases, being refused care.
     
    Still, attitudes in the medical community are slowly starting to change, says Massarella, herself a transgender woman. 
     
    "There are more doctors now who are willing to entertain the idea at least that you have persons who may have this transgender identity. They want to do the right thing, but often they don't know what to do."
     
    Increasingly, medical schools are including LGBTQ issues in their curriculum, notes Massarella, who teaches one such course at McMaster University in Hamilton.
     
    "The med students are demanding it, quite frankly," she says. "There's a huge need and desire for young doctors and medical students. They want to learn about this. They want to be able to treat their trans and queer-identified clients in a respectful way."
     
    Massarella says the Quest clinic is one of a handful of centres across the country for transgender children and adults that offer a safe, supportive environment for patients as they navigate transition socially, medically and, if they so choose, surgically.
     
    Patient care is based on the assumption that questioning gender is not a pathological illness, but simply a person recognizing their core identity.
     
    "And that's the kind of health care they're looking for," she says. "They're not looking for people to fix them. They're looking for people to help them."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Targeted Shootings In Surrey And Delta Happening Due To Two Ethnic Gangs Warring For Territory: RCMP

    Targeted Shootings In Surrey And Delta Happening Due To Two Ethnic Gangs Warring For Territory: RCMP
    The names released by police are Adam Lakatos, Derrick Bequette, Chadanjot Gill, Shakiel Basra, Sukhpreet Pansal, Sukhraj Chahal, Tirath Taggar and Charandeep Tiwana, all from Surrey or Delta.  Mounties have determined 11 of 19 shootings are related to groups of South Asia and Somalian descent

    Targeted Shootings In Surrey And Delta Happening Due To Two Ethnic Gangs Warring For Territory: RCMP

    Afghan Immigrant Who Nearly Decapitated Wife Appeals Conviction, Asks For New Trial

    Afghan Immigrant Who Nearly Decapitated Wife Appeals Conviction, Asks For New Trial
    TORONTO — An Afghan immigrant found guilty of second-degree murder after nearly decapitating his wife is appealing his conviction, arguing the judge who presided over his trial made several errors.

    Afghan Immigrant Who Nearly Decapitated Wife Appeals Conviction, Asks For New Trial

    New Westminster Teen Who Died In Vernon While Rock-Climbing With Friends Identified As Taylor Archer

    New Westminster Teen Who Died In Vernon While Rock-Climbing With Friends Identified As Taylor Archer
    The BC Coroners Service says Taylor Archer of New Westminster, B.C., was climbing near the King Edward access logging area with some friends.

    New Westminster Teen Who Died In Vernon While Rock-Climbing With Friends Identified As Taylor Archer

    2 Pilots From Missing B.C. Plane Found Dead Amid Wreckage Near Mt. Seymour: Official

    2 Pilots From Missing B.C. Plane Found Dead Amid Wreckage Near Mt. Seymour: Official
    VANCOUVER — Search and rescue crews have found the bodies of two pilots in and around the wreckage of a cargo plane that crashed in heavily treed mountains north of Vancouver. 

    2 Pilots From Missing B.C. Plane Found Dead Amid Wreckage Near Mt. Seymour: Official

    B.C. Man Alleging 'false Imprisonment' In China To Get Day In Canadian Court

    B.C. Man Alleging 'false Imprisonment' In China To Get Day In Canadian Court
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man has won the right to sue a company in a Canadian court that he alleges conspired with Chinese authorities to force him to spend years behind bars in China.

    B.C. Man Alleging 'false Imprisonment' In China To Get Day In Canadian Court

    Conservatives Fuel Opposition To Ontario's Sex-Ed Curriculum: Liberal Minister

    Conservatives Fuel Opposition To Ontario's Sex-Ed Curriculum: Liberal Minister
    TORONTO — Conservative groups are fuelling the vocal opposition to Ontario's new sex-education curriculum, Liberal Education Minister Liz Sandals said Tuesday as thousands of people protested outside the legislature.

    Conservatives Fuel Opposition To Ontario's Sex-Ed Curriculum: Liberal Minister