2015
DOI: 10.1111/jsm.13033
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Partial Treatment Requests and Underlying Motives of Applicants for Gender Affirming Interventions

Abstract: Introduction Historically, only individuals with a cross-gender identity who wanted to receive a full treatment, were eligible for “complete sex reassignment” consisting of feminizing/masculinizing hormone treatment and several surgical interventions including genital surgery (full treatment). Currently, it is unclear what motives underlie a request for hormones only or surgery only or a combination of hormones and surgery (e.g., a mastectomy), but no genital surgery (partial treatment). … Show more

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Cited by 110 publications
(69 citation statements)
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“…Up until recently, transgender-affirming medical treatment was inherently sequential and binary (Beek, Kreukels, Cohen-Kettenis, & Steensma, 2015). At the CEGD, the sequential order of treatment raised explicit challenges considering varying eligibility criteria (e.g., BMI) and implicit moral questions regarding the eligibility of those seeking individual treatment steps.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Up until recently, transgender-affirming medical treatment was inherently sequential and binary (Beek, Kreukels, Cohen-Kettenis, & Steensma, 2015). At the CEGD, the sequential order of treatment raised explicit challenges considering varying eligibility criteria (e.g., BMI) and implicit moral questions regarding the eligibility of those seeking individual treatment steps.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is particularly important for transgender people as they have been found to report a high prevalence of depression and anxiety [15, 16], which could be managed with physical activity. Furthermore, physical activity and sport can also contribute towards maintaining the appropriate weight necessary to undergo gender-confirming surgery, acknowledging that not every transgender person will wish to do so [1, 2, 17]. …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We acknowledge that not all trans people wish to take cross-sex hormones or undergo gender-related surgeries; a growing number of trans people express a wish for partial treatment. 24 Once trans people have undergone their desired treatment, follow-up care can be organized at the service if they wish. 16 The study received ethical approval from the Research and Development Department from the Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust on behalf of the local ethics committee in line with Health Research Authority guidance.…”
Section: Participants and Proceduresmentioning
confidence: 99%