News and Events => Science & Medical News => Topic started by: Felix on November 15, 2011, 10:57:37 PM Return to Full Version

Title: Health care of transsexual persons causes unnecessary suffering
Post by: Felix on November 15, 2011, 10:57:37 PM
EurekAlert (American Association for the Advancement of Science)
Signe Bremer
University of Gothenburg
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/uog-hot111511.php (http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/uog-hot111511.php)

In 1972, Sweden became the first country in the world to legislate healthcare for transsexualism within the state-financed healthcare system. In an international perspective, this was considered to be radical. It was expected that the life situation of people in the transsexual group would improve, now that state-financed healthcare was available for this group. A thesis published at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, however, describes this care as an oppressive gender-conservative system that causes suffering for transsexual persons.

"Those who qualify for gender-corrective measures also known as sex reassignment treatment, become legally acknowledged as the gender in which they recognise themselves. But a prerequisite for this is that they lose something: namely the possibility of having biological children, since the law states that a transsexual person must be sterilised (sterile) ", says ethnologist Signe Bremer. Her thesis describes studies of autobiographical blogs and in-depth interviews with people at various stages of gender-corrective care.

The requirement for sterilisation is not the only aspect that causes suffering. The compulsory psychiatric gender investigation of minimum duration 2 years for those who wish to change their legal sexual identity can also give rise to anxiety.

"Waiting is sometimes experienced as being nearly impossible to bear", says Signe Bremer.
Title: Re: Health care of transsexual persons causes unnecessary suffering
Post by: Butterflyhugs on November 16, 2011, 12:40:53 AM
It sounds like Sweden still has in place the "guidelines" that were around when MtF SRS was first becoming "readily" available in the United States (1970s-ish) and the Harry Benjamin Standards of Care were put into effect. If you didn't fit the mold of "I absolutely hate everything about my male body and have always known that I should have been a girl!"--what came to be termed the "true transsexual"--you were denied access to SRS.