Quote from: Nero on November 03, 2007, 05:43:02 AM
May be some discrimination. Women usually do it for medical problems, and us doing it is seen as cosmetic. And surgeons who do transsurgeries know they can get away with charging more. But, what can you do.
Doesn't seem like 'some' discrimination. Sounds like total, across the board discrimination with potentially life-threatening consequences.
You're very likely right, Nero, and it's seen as cosmetic, but this is totally insane -- cosmetic surgery on an internal organ that, being internal, can't be seen?
So far as I have found out, women get hysterectomies for the same reasons FTMs do. Health reasons. It's like the 3rd most common surgery performed in the US, and it's most often done because of fibroids, and it is very often elective in the sense that the woman will not die without it -- the fibroid tumors are benign, but can be uncomfortable and cause cramping and bleeding. Evidently doctors recommend that FTMs get hysterectomies because about 25% of us will get fibroids after long-term use of T, and some unknown percentage get other undesirable (and even more dangerous) side-effects going on with those innards. Every bit as health-valid as women getting hysterectomies because of fibroids. More valid than them getting it as an alternative to tubal ligation with the added side-benefit of stopping periods, and I know somebody who had that done for like twelve hundred bucks, with the rest of the bill paid by a charity that helps women with their 'health care' bills.
So far, the only price comparison I've found between garden-variety hysterectomy and hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (ovariohysterectomy, where they remove the ovaries and fallopian tubes, too) says that taking out those parts at the same time won't add to the surgery cost at all.
If what I'm finding out is really true, this is discrimination of a most dreadful kind. Most transpeople are underemployed and consequently poor, and doctors are doubling their price for a surgery that over a quarter of transmen will need to prevent/end a life-threatening or at the least painful problem?
Well, there's a mission for you, Chris the activist bro.