Dear Susan's Place,
My name is Megan Weinand and I am an openly lesbian and cisgender woman, who is a first-year medical student at the Boston University School of Medicine. I have been reading the Susan's place wiki a lot to learn more about transgender health and topics to be a better informed, self-educating ally!
I am also involved with transgender medical research here in medical school, and I am part of a 4-student led-project that is joint public health and medical students, known as
The Binding Health Project. We started this project last September when I started school because we all realized that
there is no current medical research on the topic of Chest Binding (!), and on top of that, all four of us queer students have many friends who experienced serious medical events from binding, like broken ribs, stress fractures, coughing up blood, and more. We created a survey that we just released 3 days ago in order to learn more and advocate for the health of individuals who bind! Binding is often recognized as important for both transgender and non-trans* folk alike, and for many trans* folk it is cited as the first and most important step of the transition! Therefore we want to stress that we absolutely recognize how important binding is, and the results of our survey would not be to discourage those who bind to not do so, but rather to highlight the topic for health providers as something to be aware of, and to assess improved ways to up the safety (and comfort!) of those who bind. (I.e., were certain types of binders less associated with health problems? Is there a sweet spot, perhaps 10 hours/a day where binding doesn't cause painful physical health issues but is still associated with positive mental health impacts and mood?) Our long-term goal is not only to put the topic of Chest binding on the radar for health providers, and to inform/empower individuals who bind with previously unpublished information about the medical aspects of binding, but also to advocate for the coverage of top surgery (for those who desire it), by citing long-term effects of binding.
In order to help thank the community for this time in completing the survey (about 5-10 minutes maximum, only 20 questions mainly multiple choice!)
we are donating 5$ for every 50 respondents to the In A Bind project, which donates new and gently used binders to binding folks in need. [p.s. we are currently almost at 400 respondents after just 72 hours, so hopefully we can make a sizable donation to their project!!] The more responses we have, the better "statistical power" we have, and the more leverage we will be able to have to advocate for our beloved community in the medical sphere and beyond! (Many people say that trans*/genderqueer/binding health is a "niche" issue - and we are out to prove that it IS NOT!

I apologize for the length of this message, but I wanted to be as open and detailed as possible about our project! We have a website, where you can take the survey
here., a
tumblr and Twitter (
@BindingProject) where you can also learn more about us and the project. Lastly, if you have any questions about our project, please do not hesitate to email us at
bubindingproject@gmail.com; we are so grateful to the community for their time in taking this survey, as well as re-tweeting/blogging/tumbling/posting/FB-ing/emailing this link to as many people as they know!
Thank you again for your time, and please don't hesitate to contact us (myself-Megan, Alix, Kimberlynn and Ivy) with any questions you might have - we are so grateful for your time and support!
Lots of queer love!
-Megan Weinand
Boston Univ. Medical Student 2017 and openly lesbian & cisgender

megan.weinand@fulbrightmail.org
p.s. - below is a bit of a "blurb" about our project for those even more interested!

Thanks again!!
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To our beloved community,
PLEASE SIGNAL BOOST.The Binding Health Project seeks to expand and contribute new information on the physical and mental health effects of chest binding. Within the context of this study, binding refers to the process in which an individual compresses or binds the chest, often for extended periods of time. While this process provides the person with a number of benefits, the long term physical health effects of binding have not yet been studied. This survey is designed to gather information on these effects through questions that are both quantitative and qualitative in nature. It is intended for female-assigned-at-birth (FAAB) and intersex folks 18 years and over that have bound or currently bind their chests. It is the aim of the Binding Health Project to provide individuals, communities, and health care providers with information to promote the health of those who bind.
Our goal is to use the results from this survey to advocate for the health of persons who chest bind. We hope to build a knowledge base that currently does not exist for people who bind, their providers, and the communities that support them. Thank you so much for your time and participation in this survey!
Thank you for taking our survey and please feel free to distribute widely! We truly appreciate your time in helping us to better address the health topics that impact individuals who bind.
Click
here to take our survey.
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EDIT: April 6th, 2014
Also, this topic got moved from the Medical board to this FTM board - I want to acknowledge that I don't have control over this move, and primarily would also like to point out just to be clear that this is actually not a "FTM" survey at all - while maybe people who bind identify as FTM, many *do not*, and so I want to make it clear that this topic was moved by an administrator and not myself. :-/ This survey is open to ANYONE who identifies as FAAB or intersex who chest binds or did so in the past (18+yo) - we have had many femme and women-identified cisgender women who have taken the survey and so I want to stress the inclusiveness of both our survey and this research.
Thanks so much,
Megan
p.s. here is a link with a flyer too, if that helps spread the word better!
http://bindinghealthproject.wordpress.com/spread-the-word/