Quote from: Undead Cat on July 22, 2017, 02:39:15 AM
I have found this article and it lists the risks associated with hormone therapy in transmasculine and transfeminine people and its quite depressing (also because they don't compare it with cis people risks in their biological hormones ) : http://www.endocrinologistmelbourne.com.au/transgender/
That's a fairly misleading list. Furthermore, medically speaking, an 'increased risk' could mean that you have--drumroll, please--a whopping 0.4% higher chance of an issue arising.
Want to know who else has an 'increased risk' for all those issues they pointed out? Natal males.
Look, if you eat decently, exercise, undergo HRT therapy with a licensed endocrinologist and just generally look out for your well-being, you'll be just fine.
And even if you don't exercise and eat like a pig, you'll be no more at risk than any other dude for developing hypertension, cardiovascular disease and all the other stuff.
Guess what? Your AFAB body isn't exactly a gift, either. Right now, even though you're not doing
anything, you're at a much higher risk for cervical/ovarian/breast cancer, a host of autoimmune disorders (3/4 of the sufferers are women), UTIs, kidney/bladder infections, etc. Several doctors have told me that the longer a female-bodied individual remains reproductively active (such as someone beginning their period at 11 and ending at 50), the higher they're at risk for contracting all the female related cancers. That's a crock of **** and a terrible design flaw if you ask me, but that's the reality of the situation.
You're at risk no matter what you do because everything in life comes with risk factors.