I hope this helps a little! This is from the Facebook page Reinstate Gender Reassignment Surgery In Alberta. All content is public.
This data is current as of Wed. April 15, 2009
(provided by CPATH)
Few provinces provide funding for SRS/GCS
At least 4 provinces require transgender people to travel outside the province for surgical readiness assessment
No facilities offering comprehensive care from counselling to surgery
No national guidelines of care
BC
Have designated surgery assessors (3 psychiatrists, 2 psychologists) so wait time is minimal
Surgeries not covered: phalloplasty and chest contouring
FTM: Hysterectomies performed within province by many surgeons
FTM: Mastectomy– covered but have to pay private facility fees and are reimbursed $1500 – average cost per person approx. 6-7K
MTF: penectomy, orchiectomy, vaginoplasty – covered but pt has to pay travel and private stay (1K) costs in Montreal
There is a surgeon in the province trained to do these surgeries but a public facility is not being made available
Alberta
Have designated assessor: psychiatrist Dr. Lorne Warneke in Edmonton
Covered:
FTM: hysterectomy, mastectomy, chest contouring, phalloplasty
FTM: penectomy, orchiectomy, vaginoplasty
Cover 16 people per year – not cases
Surgery performed in Montreal by Dr. Brassard
in April 2009, the conservative gov't budget cut funding to SRS in the new health care budgettThis represented $700K of a $13 billion budget
Saskatchewan
No designated assessor although Dr. Donna Hendrickson was a designated surgery assessor in BC before she moved back to Saskatchewan
Trans people have to travel to the CAMH for surgery assessment
Will cover direct surgical costs of phalloplasty and penectomy, orchiectomy and vaginoplasty (amounts approx to 25% of total cost because it is performed in a private facility in Montreal)
Manitoba
No designated surgery assessor
Trans people have to travel to the CAMH for assessment
Mastectomy, hysterectomy performed in province
All other surgeries performed in Montreal with only direct surgical costs covered (same as case with Saskatchewan)
Ontario
SRS funding relisted in June 2008
Ontario Human Rights Commission found the de-listing as discriminatory
CAMH/Sherbourne Health Centre and Rainbow Health Ontario working together on a surgical assessor designate plan
Covered:
FTM: hysterectomy, phalloplasty, mastectomy, chest wall contouring
MTF: penectomy, orchiectomy, vaginoplasty
In the meanwhile, trans people are being assessed again at the CAMH
Quebec
Must first pay private sector for psychiatric evaluation and services
SRS covered only if referred by Human Sexuality Unit at Montreal General Hospital
Surgeries covered:
FTM: hysterectomy, mastectomy, chest wall contouring
MTF: penectomy, orchiectomy, vaginoplasty
Up until 2008,
Hysterectomy done in Quebec
All other surgeries performed in Czech Republic or Thailand
In 2009, this ruling was changed and trans people now have surgery performed in Montreal by Dr. Brassard.
New Brunswick/Nova Scotia/PEI
Designated assessors as of September 2008
No surgeries covered
Transgender Health lobby group is making a proposal to Ministry of Health for funding.
Newfoundland
No designated assessors
Assessor training planned for August 2009
Trans people have to travel to CAMH for assessment
Surgeries apparently covered by provincial health plan but this has not been challenged
NWT/Yukon/Nunavut
No information yet
over a year ago
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Michelle One minor update to that: It shows Alberta providing coverage...
over a year ago
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Mickey yes. It shows the coverage and then states "in April 2009, the conservative gov't budget cut funding to SRS in the new health care budget This represented $700K of a $13 billion budget"
over a year ago
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Michelle Oops - my misread. That's what I get for scanning rather than reading closely ...
sorry about that.
over a year ago
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Dominic So, does anyone know if the funding cut includes hysterectomies and mastectomies for FTM's?
over a year ago
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over a year ago
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over a year ago
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Rick Hey Kristopher and Mickey, can you tell me where you found this information on SRS (the source)? Is it avaliable online? I would love to read more on it.
over a year ago
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Mickey My information is from CPATH, the Canadian Professional Association for Transgender Health. I think their may have been some small changes in Quebec since then around referral.
over a year ago
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Rick Question: Does the funding for GRSs comes directly from the federal health canada funding given to each province?
If so, does that mean each provice just deligates funding for which they seem fit?
over a year ago
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Mickey all health care decisions are a provincial jurisdiction
over a year ago
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Rick That's what I thought. I wonder for provinces that don't fund any GRS what-so-ever, does this conflict with the health act at all. If so, in what form are provinces "said" to be held accountable.
over a year ago
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Mercedes If Provinces fail to meet the standards of the Canada Health Act, the Federal Government can withhold transfer payments. Understandably, the Federal Government tends to be reluctant to do this in cases of smaller disputes.
I'm not saying it's not worth thinking about, just that we are up against some limitations on what can be accomplished this way. Having a Federal affirmation that GRS is necessary and therefore mandated by the CHA would be more than a gesture, but less than a guarantee, and would likely require mobilizing across the country.
over a year ago
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Rick Hey peeps....I am writing an advocacy piece for full funding provided for both MTF and FTM in BC. The piece is for a class, but I would also like to send it to the minister of health for the province of BC.
I was wondering if anyone had knew of any resources I could look up or any pdf's they could send me that speaks to the need funding of BOTH types of GRS's.
Anything would be a great help. You can post a reply here or send one to my facebook page.
All the best!
Rick
about 11 months ago
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Kate After some thirty years... there is now change in Manitoba.
Manitoba now covers mtf surgery 100% for genital. There is no longer any need to go to Toronto for assessments. Contact Klinic in Winnipeg for details.
This is as a result of an appeal, not resulting from any change in the government of Manitoba's position.
about 2 weeks ago