This is a copy of the e-mail that was forwarded to me that gives a summary of some of the major revisions:
You can find the new Standards of Care for transgender people at
http://www.thisishow.org/Files/soc7.pdf====================
Exciting News for Trans Clients!
Also on:
http://www.thecounselinghut.org/SOCv7.shtmlJordan Shin, MS, LPC
On September 25, 2011, World Professional Organization for Transgender
Health (WPATH)
http://wpath.org/ announced the launching of the new
Standards of Care for the Health of Transsexual, Transgender, and Gender
Nonconforming People, 7th edition (SOCv7). The new SOCv7 is a significant
revision of the Standards of Care (SOC) in structure, philosophy, and
language that was four years in the making, with a new emphasis on
provider responsibility that replaces previous emphasis on client
responsibility. If you are a member of the trans and allies community,
please let as many people know as possible about this change. If you are
working with a medical or mental health professional, please let them know
that the new SOC is a significant revision. The document itself will be
available on the WPATH Web site on September 26, 2011.
Here is a summary of changes:
1. Removal of the phrase "Gender Identity Disorder" from the title. This
document is no longer about the treatment of a "disorder", but about the
prevention and treatment of distress experienced by transsexual,
transgender, and gender nonconforming people. SOCv7 emphasizes that gender
nonconformity or variance is not a pathology, but an identity.
2. Emphasis on how to provide holistic healthcare for transsexual,
transgender, and gender nonconforming people. It is no longer "just about
hormones and surgery". It discusses treatments "beyond hormones and
surgery", such as preventive and primary care, post-operative care, mental
health concerns, eTherapy, voice and communication coaching, and
reproductive health. An overview of medical risks of hormone therapies is
included as well.
3. Emphasis on what professionals need to do, not what patients need to
prove or achieve to get gender-related care. SOCv7 makes it clear that
reparative therapy for gender concerns is<i>unethical</i>.
4. Emphasis on harm reduction and informed consent, rather than
"gatekeeping". It emphasizes that the SOC needs to be applied flexibly and
in response to individual needs, and adapted to the needs of different
communities around the world.
5. Simplified, more humanized transitioning process:
--No more "triadic sequence".
--No more distinction between "eligibility" and "readiness".
--No mention of "real life experience", although living "continuously for
at least 12 months in the gender role that is congruent with their gender
identity" still is recommended before genital surgery.
--Allowance for medical gender specialists, rather than just mental health
professionals, to recommend hormone therapy.
--No more distinction between master's level and doctoral level mental
health professionals for surgery recommendation.
Perhaps most importantly, unlike the previous SOCs, SOCv7 is fully
"evidence based", and scientific data supporting its recommendations are
included in the new references section and a review of literature.
The revision was an unprecedentedly multidisciplinary process involving
medical, mental health, and legal professionals, as well as community
members and activists, and panels of advisors from across the world. While
it does not, and could not, meet the needs of everyone across the globe,
it provides a foundation that can be readily adapted to different
cultural, social, and national contexts.
Please do not hesitate to contact Jordan Shin
at
info@thecounselinghut.org if you
have any questions.