Quote from: kelly_aus on November 01, 2015, 03:27:25 PM
Not one of the dozen or so Brits I know from another site has had to do any kind of RLT before hormones - iirc, they cover 5 of the GIC's.. It's also against NHS clinical guidelines..
Well, the guidelines are taken very loosely and there is a great variation in how they are taken. Also, the NHS often don't meet their guidelines. For example there is a requirement of the NHS to see everyone 18 weeks from referral, and they don't meet that. I would not count on them following their own rules. This is also what Healthwatch (our NHS watchdog found when they appraised transgender services).
Regardless of how you take the guidelines, if your friends had transitioned in recent history, they will have had several waits before HRT, even without the RLE...
1. GP to local Psych (this is optional at the local health cares discretion - they required it in my area for example. The wait was 16 weeks for that from referral)
2. Referral to GIC
This varies according to GIC. 52% of people go through Charring cross. The wait time there is 52 weeks. Other places the wait can be up to 89 Weeks.
3. Time until diagnosis as transgender
This, according to my GIC, typically required 3 visits or more (they can keep you waiting wile they decide and each visit is 3-4 months apart). Mine took a year. I had already changed all documents and had been full time and blah blah blah before I met them. No mental or physical health complications or other consideration, just standard process.
4. Wait to see endocrinologist following approval
3-4 months.
Sure. You can do all that before transitioning, but if you want to wait nearly two years before starting your transition. There is no quick route to hormones in the NHS or any kind of treatment. You have to be 'diagnosed' before they will start treatment so you need to get in the GIC out with approval and into the endo. That's why every single trans person I have met in the UK has done one of two things, probably in about 50-50 split; waited about 2 years to get hormones, transitioning anyway; self medicated. I do know one person who could afford to go private, though their script is for spironolactone and the NHS ones are for goserelin (which is better but much more expensive). Also, if you go private, you can have a harder time accessing services such as surgery and gender recognition.
A good option if you have money is to go private and initiate the GIC route at the same time. That way you can take private scripts until the GIC process is complete and still have the GICs support when it comes to surgery and other things.