Susan's Place Logo

News:

According to Google Analytics 25,259,719 users made visits accounting for 140,758,117 Pageviews since December 2006

Main Menu

GCS/SRS in Massachusetts

Started by oogie292, September 06, 2016, 08:03:52 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

oogie292

Hi all, my name is Jane. I am a 24 year old MTF and I have been on hormones for 5 years. Last year I had my breast augmentation and I finished laser hair removal. My next step is to pursue GCS. Since I live in Massachusetts, it is covered by my insurance. Which is simply fabulous I must say. I spoke with Blue Cross today and they said that there are two surgeons in MA that are doing this. However, they only started doing surgery last month (August 2016). Since they are so new it makes me a little scared. I would prefer to go to someone who is experienced so I asked what if I went out of state and they replied with "there is a possibility it could be covered, the surgeon would have to submit a request to us." I still need to get my therapy letters in order so I still have time but I would feel strange flying out to a consult and not knowing whether it would be covered there. Has anyone else dealt with this dilemma in MA? What would you do? Thanks all for your help!
  •  

Valwen

I live in mass and have been working towards grs..having it done in Boston wood save so much money, mostly on travel costs and hotel stay. I figured it to be at least 2000 dollars. My current problem with them is like most surgeons they require a bmi under 30.

As for there experience they may not have been performing grs for long but both have long surgical history in similar fields. One is head of urology work decades of experience and the other is a plastic surgeon who ha performed genital reconstruction on cis woman.

I worry about there lack of experience as well but given how hard it is to get it covered out of state it is likely my best choice.

Serena
What is a Lie when it's at home? Anyone?
Is it the depressed little voice inside? Whispering in my ear? Telling me to give up?
Well I'm not giving up. Not for that part of me that hates myself. That part wants me to wither and die. not for you. Never for you.  --Loki: Agent of Asgard

Started HRT Febuary 21st 2015
First Time Out As Myself June 8th 2015
Full Time June 24th 2015
  •  

Devlyn

I did a little poking around, the news indicates there are now over a hundred people on the waiting list.

If you have concerns about the lack of experience, ask if any necessary revisions will be free during your consultation.

Hugs, Devlyn
  •  

SadieBlake

It wasn't hard to get covered out of state prior to the BMC team starting up. I don't know what it's going to be like now and as I'm entirely willing to bear the cost of travelling for surgery in SF, the only question is will I be able to get insurance approval.

On the one hand when I first contacted BCBS on this (I think that was in May) I learned that they were in the midst of contracting with BMC for GCS so that is in place now and they're the default provider.

On the other hand Oates and Slama are starting out at only 1 procedure per month I think I was told it will be 2 per month by end of year and they're targeting weekly surgeries by mid next year. That suggests to me that they're not going very far into their patient list anytime soon. So I'm hopeful that just based on demand I will be covered for surgery with Dr Satterwhite where I have a tentative date in July '17.

About results, I'm on the fence. I am certainly more inclined to someone who's making this their life's work. Oates and Slama have absolutely impressive credentials, however I very much like that Satterwhite and others are so dedicated to our community and everything I hear suggests he's choosing to advance the state of the practice of neo-vaginoplasty.

I'll be glad to hear from other MA based people what they are learning and of course i'll be noting back as I learn anything myself.
🌈👭 lesbian, troublemaker ;-) 🌈🏳️‍🌈
  •  

SadieBlake

Quote from: Devlyn Marie on September 06, 2016, 12:27:22 PM
I did a little poking around, the news indicates there are now over a hundred people on the waiting list.

If you have concerns about the lack of experience, ask if any necessary revisions will be free during your consultation.

Hugs, Devlyn

I'm registered with BMC, per my conversation that 100 was a soft number, I have no idea how they're going about scheduling. On the other hand that was based on mid-July so I imagine the list is growing.
🌈👭 lesbian, troublemaker ;-) 🌈🏳️‍🌈
  •  

oogie292

Thank you all for your responses. I feel a little better knowing how much actual "surgical" experience they have. I guess I will see if I can pursue surgery out of state and if that doesn't work then I will have to stay in Boston. By the time they get to the end of that 100 people list they should have some experience anyways.
  •  

Devlyn

I'm in Weymouth, by the way. We should have a Susan's M->-bleeped-<-s shindig sometime.  :laugh:

Hugs, Devlyn
  •  

laurenb

Hi Guy's. Glad I saw this thread. I've got my first appointment at Fenway for HRT next week but have been watching to see if anyone is doing SRS in Boston. You'd think with our Boston medical community we'd be on the cutting edge (sorry maybe poor choice of words) of this. I'm on Cape Cod but would love to meet anyone/all of you. Please let me know if there's ever a meet up.
Lauren
  •  

Karen_A

I had my SRS back in 1998...

I has insurance coverage so I could go anywhere... At the time the 3 best known surgeons in North America were Eugene Schrang in Wisconsin, Dr. Menard in Montreal and Dr. Toby Meltzer who was then in Oregon... (the 1st 2 are now retired)

Although a lot of locals went to Montreal because it was close, I had met enough people who had post-op issues after Montreal that I was not going take a chance by going there.

So it was between Meltzer and Schrang

Schrang was the most experienced but I heard he did not treat those of us who were bigger well and more than bit sexist... My therapist (a woman) had met him and said agreed with that assessment but said that what mattered in the long run was his how good a surgeon he was.

Meltzer had less experience but had been around long enough by then to have done a lot of patients...

I did a lot of research and found very few negatives about the surgical results of either of them and wound up choosing Meltzer who was 3000miles away because of what I heard about Schrang's behavior, and the fact I though someone a bit younger who be around for years in case I had any issues would be best

Although it when OK, because things did not ago 100% well, I still wonder if I made the best decision....

But my point is that SRS is something that surgeons need experience with (and the more the better) to get consistently good results... You only really have one chance to get this "right" and you will have to live with the result the rest  of your life...

DO a LOT of research up front and IMO this is something that should not be be skimped on...

BTW my endo mentioned the new BMC group when I last saw her ... my response was that I sure would not what to be the first one to have surgery with them!

Practice does make perfect...

Anyway just my opinion

- Karen




  •  

SadieBlake

Quote from: laurenb on September 06, 2016, 04:56:32 PM
You'd think with our Boston medical community we'd be on the cutting edge (sorry maybe poor choice of words) of this. I'm on Cape Cod but would love to meet anyone/all of you. Please let me know if there's ever a meet up.
Lauren
Yeah, I work in biomed research, albeit on the other side of the river, very much in the belly of the beast.

The thing about Boston - or probably any center of research - is that they can get a very self-centered view of the world additionally while at its best MA is one of the most liberal states, our conservatives are very conservative indeed and physicians tend to run conservative in their professional thinking.

How this sometimes plays out was yes, we're the primary center of medical technology in the of the entire world. Just as the US has the arguably most advanced medical technology in the world and yet fails to deliver the best care all too often, so I'm not at all convinced that the research hospital always delivers the best care.

Hard example: coronary bypass surgery was invented here and as coronary angioplasty and eventually stenting proved to be equal and then better in outcomes than bypass surgery, Boston was the one place where this wasn't happening. Most of the early work was done elsewhere and only after results were demonstrably better did the techniques become widely adopted here.

The BMC team have been observing procedures at UMich and Baltimore, and the surgeons in those places, like Oates and Slama have amazing resumes and accomplishments.

Physicians and especially surgeons typically come extremely confident and with good reason, it's clearly a field that attracts excellence. So I was told twice by orthopedic docs that first my knee and then a multiply fractured collarbone wouldn't gain anything from surgical repair.

In the first case I was having a lot of trouble walking even a couple of miles and when I sought a second opinion I went to one of the most experienced knee surgeons around, someone who specialized in sports medicine. I was met by a guy who was a hell if a lot more open to listening to me and he returned full functionality to the knee such that I was able to return to rock climbing and began a period of training and doing triathlon.

When I busted the clavicle I was again told by the HMO doc that I should just let it heal and that I'd be out of climbing/training commission for 4 months -- basically an entire season with no exercise. It didn't take much research on my part to find that multiple fractures of the clavicle fail to ever fully heal 30% of the time and 80% involved significant change in the shoulder structure resulting in stress on other areas. So off to the same surgeon as had worked on my knee and I was back to climbing within 2 months of the original injury.

To what Karen said, This guy was certainly brusque, and as someone who's in high demand and doing research as well it's not hard to understand. The key difference for me was he clearly listened to me and allowed me to play a role in my own care. He also knew from the first go that I'd healed fast and worked hard after the knee work to get back to full function in record time.

I don't think anyone going to the BMC team is going to be disappointed, there's nothing I want more in a surgeon than someone who's cut their teeth doing advanced procedures and I'd far rather have someone at the top of their field.

I get to talk to Satterwhite exactly a month from today and should be scheduled to talk to the BMC team soon after that. Will drop a note to this thread as that happens.
🌈👭 lesbian, troublemaker ;-) 🌈🏳️‍🌈
  •  

oogie292

Thanks again everyone, lots for me to think about!
  •  

SadieBlake

BMC just called me on an administrative thing which gave me the opportunity to check on their post op count.

They're at 15 now, a respectable number, suggests to me they're still at 2/month.
🌈👭 lesbian, troublemaker ;-) 🌈🏳️‍🌈
  •  

BrandyHanley

Has anyone here had srs bottem surgery from Dr. Oats at BMC? I had my 1st consult Wednesday, seems like i got everything in order so far. I just wanted to know i have just noticed there are several types of srs surgerys. (You'd think i would have known that before i set up a consult.) Anyways does he preform a surgery where you can still have orgasms, and where you get moist, and it looks good? I didn't think to bring it up with him because i thought every srs surgery did this. Anyone know all the types of surgerys out there for what i would be looking for? I only have 2 options BMC, or Fenway Health. Any helpful knowledge is appreciated. Thank you

Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk

  •  


Devlyn

Fenway is my provider, they referred me to Dr Oates for my orchiectomy. I thought he was great. Write down everything you just asked us, and bring it up at your consultation.

Hugs, Devlyn
  •  

jill610

On out of state coverage, if your network is the BCBS Blue network, then out of state providers should also be covered. There are about fifty domestic GCS surgeons in network on the BCBS national network, including a lot of the recognizable names (bowers, Meltzer, etc). Satterwhite is also on there though I think has a year wait right now.


  •