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Vaginoplasty basics – what every gynecologist needs to know

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Thu, 05/27/2021 - 10:00

Feminizing gender affirmation surgery is a complex genital surgery that most commonly involves removal of natal male genitalia (testes, penile urethra, a majority of the glans penis, penile shaft) and construction of the vulva and/or neovagina utilizing scrotal and penile shaft tissue. Other surgical procedures can also involve using a peritoneal flap or a portion of the small bowel or sigmoid colon to create the neovaginal canal. As with any major surgical procedure, complications do occur, and these can range from minor to major; intraoperative to postoperative. For the purposes of this article, the focus shall be on postoperative complications. Most postoperative complications occur within the first 4 months of the surgery and include vaginal stenosis, genitourinary fistula formation, urinary stream abnormalities, and sexual dysfunction.1 Minor complications that can be managed in the office include granulation tissue treatment, vaginitis, and hair growth in the neovagina. It is important to note that, if any complication occurs, it is essential to refer to the patient’s original surgeon or to a surgeon with expertise in vaginoplasty techniques and postoperative management.2

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

For patients who undergo vaginoplasty, or a creation of a neovaginal canal, postoperative dilation is necessary to maintain patency. The frequency and duration of dilation are often determined by each individual surgeon or surgical practice as there is no universal, evidence-based standard to guide recommendations on dilation. Failure to maintain a dilation schedule can result in neovaginal stenosis and inability to engage in penetrative vaginal intercourse (if patients desire). Dilation can be difficult.

Challenges with dilation can occur for a variety of reasons: pain, history of trauma, pelvic floor dysfunction, lack of privacy or a supportive environment, or change in personal goals.3 If the underlying cause is related to pelvic floor dysfunction, postoperative pelvic floor therapy has demonstrated improvement in dilation.4 Additionally, routine douching is required for vaginal hygiene. Unlike natal vaginas, neovaginas do not usually contain mucosa, with the exception of a colonic interposition vaginoplasty, and routine douching with soapy water can help prevent a buildup of lubricant and debris.

If a patient reports abnormal discharge, an exam of the vulva and neovagina is warranted. Many patients are able to tolerate a speculum examination. If a patient has undergone a penile inversion vaginoplasty, the microbiome of the neovagina is quite different than that of a natal vagina and most common causes of abnormal discharge often include retained lubricant, keratin debris, sebum, or semen.5 During a speculum exam, the provider may notice granulation tissue, which is often another cause of persistent vaginal discharge, vaginal bleeding, or pain during dilation. Depending on the patient’s symptoms and quantity of granulation tissue present, it can often resolve spontaneously. Persistent granulation tissue can be treated with silver nitrate. An alternative to silver nitrate is using medical grade honey or a course of a mild-strength topical steroid cream or ointment.5 In some cases, abnormal discharge may be the result of a fistula. If a fistula is noted the patient should be immediately referred back to the original surgeon or to a urogynecologist and/or colorectal surgeon for evaluation and management.

While this surgery often falls outside of the scope of practice of the general obstetrician-gynecologist, most patients will seek the care of a general obstetrician-gynecologist in the postoperative period. It is therefore imperative that obstetrician-gynecologists have a basic understanding of the surgical procedure and the aftercare involved.

Dr. Brandt is an ob.gyn. and fellowship-trained gender-affirming surgeon in West Reading, Pa. Email her at [email protected].

References

1. Gaither TW et al. J Urol. 2018;199(3):760-5.

2. Ferrando CA and Bowers ML. In: Ferrando CA, ed. “Comprehensive care of the transgender patient” Philadelphia: Elsevier, 2020, p. 82-92.

3. Chi AC et al. Complications of vaginoplasty. In: Niklavsky D and Blakely SA, eds. “Urological care for the transgender patient: A comprehensive guide” Switzerland: Springer Nature, 2021 p. 83-97.

4. Jiang D et al. Obstet Gynecol. 2019;133(5):1003-11.

5. Obedin-Maliver J and Haan GD. Gynecologic care for transgender patients. In: Ferrando CA, ed. “Comprehensive care of the transgender patient” Philadelphia: Elsevier, 2020, p. 131-51.

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Feminizing gender affirmation surgery is a complex genital surgery that most commonly involves removal of natal male genitalia (testes, penile urethra, a majority of the glans penis, penile shaft) and construction of the vulva and/or neovagina utilizing scrotal and penile shaft tissue. Other surgical procedures can also involve using a peritoneal flap or a portion of the small bowel or sigmoid colon to create the neovaginal canal. As with any major surgical procedure, complications do occur, and these can range from minor to major; intraoperative to postoperative. For the purposes of this article, the focus shall be on postoperative complications. Most postoperative complications occur within the first 4 months of the surgery and include vaginal stenosis, genitourinary fistula formation, urinary stream abnormalities, and sexual dysfunction.1 Minor complications that can be managed in the office include granulation tissue treatment, vaginitis, and hair growth in the neovagina. It is important to note that, if any complication occurs, it is essential to refer to the patient’s original surgeon or to a surgeon with expertise in vaginoplasty techniques and postoperative management.2

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

For patients who undergo vaginoplasty, or a creation of a neovaginal canal, postoperative dilation is necessary to maintain patency. The frequency and duration of dilation are often determined by each individual surgeon or surgical practice as there is no universal, evidence-based standard to guide recommendations on dilation. Failure to maintain a dilation schedule can result in neovaginal stenosis and inability to engage in penetrative vaginal intercourse (if patients desire). Dilation can be difficult.

Challenges with dilation can occur for a variety of reasons: pain, history of trauma, pelvic floor dysfunction, lack of privacy or a supportive environment, or change in personal goals.3 If the underlying cause is related to pelvic floor dysfunction, postoperative pelvic floor therapy has demonstrated improvement in dilation.4 Additionally, routine douching is required for vaginal hygiene. Unlike natal vaginas, neovaginas do not usually contain mucosa, with the exception of a colonic interposition vaginoplasty, and routine douching with soapy water can help prevent a buildup of lubricant and debris.

If a patient reports abnormal discharge, an exam of the vulva and neovagina is warranted. Many patients are able to tolerate a speculum examination. If a patient has undergone a penile inversion vaginoplasty, the microbiome of the neovagina is quite different than that of a natal vagina and most common causes of abnormal discharge often include retained lubricant, keratin debris, sebum, or semen.5 During a speculum exam, the provider may notice granulation tissue, which is often another cause of persistent vaginal discharge, vaginal bleeding, or pain during dilation. Depending on the patient’s symptoms and quantity of granulation tissue present, it can often resolve spontaneously. Persistent granulation tissue can be treated with silver nitrate. An alternative to silver nitrate is using medical grade honey or a course of a mild-strength topical steroid cream or ointment.5 In some cases, abnormal discharge may be the result of a fistula. If a fistula is noted the patient should be immediately referred back to the original surgeon or to a urogynecologist and/or colorectal surgeon for evaluation and management.

While this surgery often falls outside of the scope of practice of the general obstetrician-gynecologist, most patients will seek the care of a general obstetrician-gynecologist in the postoperative period. It is therefore imperative that obstetrician-gynecologists have a basic understanding of the surgical procedure and the aftercare involved.

Dr. Brandt is an ob.gyn. and fellowship-trained gender-affirming surgeon in West Reading, Pa. Email her at [email protected].

References

1. Gaither TW et al. J Urol. 2018;199(3):760-5.

2. Ferrando CA and Bowers ML. In: Ferrando CA, ed. “Comprehensive care of the transgender patient” Philadelphia: Elsevier, 2020, p. 82-92.

3. Chi AC et al. Complications of vaginoplasty. In: Niklavsky D and Blakely SA, eds. “Urological care for the transgender patient: A comprehensive guide” Switzerland: Springer Nature, 2021 p. 83-97.

4. Jiang D et al. Obstet Gynecol. 2019;133(5):1003-11.

5. Obedin-Maliver J and Haan GD. Gynecologic care for transgender patients. In: Ferrando CA, ed. “Comprehensive care of the transgender patient” Philadelphia: Elsevier, 2020, p. 131-51.

Feminizing gender affirmation surgery is a complex genital surgery that most commonly involves removal of natal male genitalia (testes, penile urethra, a majority of the glans penis, penile shaft) and construction of the vulva and/or neovagina utilizing scrotal and penile shaft tissue. Other surgical procedures can also involve using a peritoneal flap or a portion of the small bowel or sigmoid colon to create the neovaginal canal. As with any major surgical procedure, complications do occur, and these can range from minor to major; intraoperative to postoperative. For the purposes of this article, the focus shall be on postoperative complications. Most postoperative complications occur within the first 4 months of the surgery and include vaginal stenosis, genitourinary fistula formation, urinary stream abnormalities, and sexual dysfunction.1 Minor complications that can be managed in the office include granulation tissue treatment, vaginitis, and hair growth in the neovagina. It is important to note that, if any complication occurs, it is essential to refer to the patient’s original surgeon or to a surgeon with expertise in vaginoplasty techniques and postoperative management.2

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

For patients who undergo vaginoplasty, or a creation of a neovaginal canal, postoperative dilation is necessary to maintain patency. The frequency and duration of dilation are often determined by each individual surgeon or surgical practice as there is no universal, evidence-based standard to guide recommendations on dilation. Failure to maintain a dilation schedule can result in neovaginal stenosis and inability to engage in penetrative vaginal intercourse (if patients desire). Dilation can be difficult.

Challenges with dilation can occur for a variety of reasons: pain, history of trauma, pelvic floor dysfunction, lack of privacy or a supportive environment, or change in personal goals.3 If the underlying cause is related to pelvic floor dysfunction, postoperative pelvic floor therapy has demonstrated improvement in dilation.4 Additionally, routine douching is required for vaginal hygiene. Unlike natal vaginas, neovaginas do not usually contain mucosa, with the exception of a colonic interposition vaginoplasty, and routine douching with soapy water can help prevent a buildup of lubricant and debris.

If a patient reports abnormal discharge, an exam of the vulva and neovagina is warranted. Many patients are able to tolerate a speculum examination. If a patient has undergone a penile inversion vaginoplasty, the microbiome of the neovagina is quite different than that of a natal vagina and most common causes of abnormal discharge often include retained lubricant, keratin debris, sebum, or semen.5 During a speculum exam, the provider may notice granulation tissue, which is often another cause of persistent vaginal discharge, vaginal bleeding, or pain during dilation. Depending on the patient’s symptoms and quantity of granulation tissue present, it can often resolve spontaneously. Persistent granulation tissue can be treated with silver nitrate. An alternative to silver nitrate is using medical grade honey or a course of a mild-strength topical steroid cream or ointment.5 In some cases, abnormal discharge may be the result of a fistula. If a fistula is noted the patient should be immediately referred back to the original surgeon or to a urogynecologist and/or colorectal surgeon for evaluation and management.

While this surgery often falls outside of the scope of practice of the general obstetrician-gynecologist, most patients will seek the care of a general obstetrician-gynecologist in the postoperative period. It is therefore imperative that obstetrician-gynecologists have a basic understanding of the surgical procedure and the aftercare involved.

Dr. Brandt is an ob.gyn. and fellowship-trained gender-affirming surgeon in West Reading, Pa. Email her at [email protected].

References

1. Gaither TW et al. J Urol. 2018;199(3):760-5.

2. Ferrando CA and Bowers ML. In: Ferrando CA, ed. “Comprehensive care of the transgender patient” Philadelphia: Elsevier, 2020, p. 82-92.

3. Chi AC et al. Complications of vaginoplasty. In: Niklavsky D and Blakely SA, eds. “Urological care for the transgender patient: A comprehensive guide” Switzerland: Springer Nature, 2021 p. 83-97.

4. Jiang D et al. Obstet Gynecol. 2019;133(5):1003-11.

5. Obedin-Maliver J and Haan GD. Gynecologic care for transgender patients. In: Ferrando CA, ed. “Comprehensive care of the transgender patient” Philadelphia: Elsevier, 2020, p. 131-51.

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Addressing mental health for transgender patients during the pandemic

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Fri, 03/19/2021 - 11:23

Obstetrician/gynecologists are often first-line providers in addressing mental health concerns for our patients. Routine screening for intimate partner violence, obtaining a history of sexual assault, and assessing patients for postpartum depression are among the many tools that we use to ascertain the psychological well-being of cisgender women. As transgender patients continue to seek care from ob.gyns., it is vital that we not only screen transgender patients for depression and intimate partner violence, but also assess factors relating to social support.

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

Mental health disorders disproportionately affect the transgender population. A large online survey showed that 41% of transgender patients had experienced suicidality, with rates among transgender youth even higher.1 While the rates of sexual violence are higher among LGBTQ patients compared with cisgender counterparts, the rate of sexual assault is as high as 47% in the transgender population.2,3 Additional surveys and studies have demonstrated that more than 70% of transgender individuals report discrimination in school (K-12), 27% have lost their jobs because of their gender identity; and 30% have experienced homelessness at some point.3 Tragically, these rates are further affected by race and ethnicity with American Indian (65%), multiracial (59%), Middle Eastern (58%), and Black (53%) respondents in the survey stating they were assaulted at some point.3

In a prepandemic world, mental health for transgender patients was influenced by several factors, such as stigmatization, health care disparities, limited access to health care, prolonged exposure to discrimination, lack of a supportive environment, and history of trauma or violence. During the pandemic, these factors have been magnified. Furthermore, many of the supportive services such as group meetings at LGBTQ centers, networking events/conferences, LGBTQ pride events, and social gatherings at bars or restaurants have been postponed, reduced to accommodate social distancing measures, or moved to virtual platforms.

While the pandemic has led to increased unemployment rates, concerns over housing and rent payments, and limiting one’s social circle in the general population, these rates are increased among LGBTQ adults. Data are limited on how significantly the pandemic has affected LGBTQ adults, but an analysis conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that 56% of LGBTQ adults reported that they or someone they know lost a job, compared with 44% of non-LGBTQ adults.4 In addition, 75% of LGBTQ adults report that the pandemic has negatively affected their mental health, compared with 49% of the non-LGBTQ population.4 To my dismay, I’ve seen these statistics reflected in my own patient population.

Given this knowledge, it is even more crucial that obstetrician/gynecologists screen for depression, substance use, and intimate partner violence, in addition to assessing the patient’s social determinants for overall well-being. These often include determining a patient’s living situation, employment status, familial support, and social support. In my practice, if concerns are raised in any of these areas, we have a streamlined referral system connecting patients to a variety of therapists, psychologists, and/or social workers, with close follow-up on either a weekly or monthly basis depending on the particular issue the patient is facing. While many patients may be hesitant to go to in-office appointments or where transportation poses a barrier, telemedicine visits are useful adjuncts to assess patient’s overall well-being.

While the pandemic has been extraordinarily difficult for us all, it is important for us to be even stronger advocates for communities that have experienced further challenges as a result of this global tragedy.
 

Dr. Brandt is an ob.gyn. and fellowship-trained gender-affirming surgeon in West Reading, Pa.

References

1. Karasic D. Mental health care for the adult transgender patient. In: Ferrando CA, ed. Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2020:8-11.

2. Black MC et al. The National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NISVS): 2010 Summary Report. Atlanta: National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; 2011.

3. James SE et al. The Report of the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey. Washington, DC: National Center for Transgender Equality; 2016.

4. Dawson L et al. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on LGBT people. KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor. Kaiser Family Foundation. March 11, 2021.

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Obstetrician/gynecologists are often first-line providers in addressing mental health concerns for our patients. Routine screening for intimate partner violence, obtaining a history of sexual assault, and assessing patients for postpartum depression are among the many tools that we use to ascertain the psychological well-being of cisgender women. As transgender patients continue to seek care from ob.gyns., it is vital that we not only screen transgender patients for depression and intimate partner violence, but also assess factors relating to social support.

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

Mental health disorders disproportionately affect the transgender population. A large online survey showed that 41% of transgender patients had experienced suicidality, with rates among transgender youth even higher.1 While the rates of sexual violence are higher among LGBTQ patients compared with cisgender counterparts, the rate of sexual assault is as high as 47% in the transgender population.2,3 Additional surveys and studies have demonstrated that more than 70% of transgender individuals report discrimination in school (K-12), 27% have lost their jobs because of their gender identity; and 30% have experienced homelessness at some point.3 Tragically, these rates are further affected by race and ethnicity with American Indian (65%), multiracial (59%), Middle Eastern (58%), and Black (53%) respondents in the survey stating they were assaulted at some point.3

In a prepandemic world, mental health for transgender patients was influenced by several factors, such as stigmatization, health care disparities, limited access to health care, prolonged exposure to discrimination, lack of a supportive environment, and history of trauma or violence. During the pandemic, these factors have been magnified. Furthermore, many of the supportive services such as group meetings at LGBTQ centers, networking events/conferences, LGBTQ pride events, and social gatherings at bars or restaurants have been postponed, reduced to accommodate social distancing measures, or moved to virtual platforms.

While the pandemic has led to increased unemployment rates, concerns over housing and rent payments, and limiting one’s social circle in the general population, these rates are increased among LGBTQ adults. Data are limited on how significantly the pandemic has affected LGBTQ adults, but an analysis conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that 56% of LGBTQ adults reported that they or someone they know lost a job, compared with 44% of non-LGBTQ adults.4 In addition, 75% of LGBTQ adults report that the pandemic has negatively affected their mental health, compared with 49% of the non-LGBTQ population.4 To my dismay, I’ve seen these statistics reflected in my own patient population.

Given this knowledge, it is even more crucial that obstetrician/gynecologists screen for depression, substance use, and intimate partner violence, in addition to assessing the patient’s social determinants for overall well-being. These often include determining a patient’s living situation, employment status, familial support, and social support. In my practice, if concerns are raised in any of these areas, we have a streamlined referral system connecting patients to a variety of therapists, psychologists, and/or social workers, with close follow-up on either a weekly or monthly basis depending on the particular issue the patient is facing. While many patients may be hesitant to go to in-office appointments or where transportation poses a barrier, telemedicine visits are useful adjuncts to assess patient’s overall well-being.

While the pandemic has been extraordinarily difficult for us all, it is important for us to be even stronger advocates for communities that have experienced further challenges as a result of this global tragedy.
 

Dr. Brandt is an ob.gyn. and fellowship-trained gender-affirming surgeon in West Reading, Pa.

References

1. Karasic D. Mental health care for the adult transgender patient. In: Ferrando CA, ed. Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2020:8-11.

2. Black MC et al. The National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NISVS): 2010 Summary Report. Atlanta: National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; 2011.

3. James SE et al. The Report of the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey. Washington, DC: National Center for Transgender Equality; 2016.

4. Dawson L et al. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on LGBT people. KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor. Kaiser Family Foundation. March 11, 2021.

Obstetrician/gynecologists are often first-line providers in addressing mental health concerns for our patients. Routine screening for intimate partner violence, obtaining a history of sexual assault, and assessing patients for postpartum depression are among the many tools that we use to ascertain the psychological well-being of cisgender women. As transgender patients continue to seek care from ob.gyns., it is vital that we not only screen transgender patients for depression and intimate partner violence, but also assess factors relating to social support.

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

Mental health disorders disproportionately affect the transgender population. A large online survey showed that 41% of transgender patients had experienced suicidality, with rates among transgender youth even higher.1 While the rates of sexual violence are higher among LGBTQ patients compared with cisgender counterparts, the rate of sexual assault is as high as 47% in the transgender population.2,3 Additional surveys and studies have demonstrated that more than 70% of transgender individuals report discrimination in school (K-12), 27% have lost their jobs because of their gender identity; and 30% have experienced homelessness at some point.3 Tragically, these rates are further affected by race and ethnicity with American Indian (65%), multiracial (59%), Middle Eastern (58%), and Black (53%) respondents in the survey stating they were assaulted at some point.3

In a prepandemic world, mental health for transgender patients was influenced by several factors, such as stigmatization, health care disparities, limited access to health care, prolonged exposure to discrimination, lack of a supportive environment, and history of trauma or violence. During the pandemic, these factors have been magnified. Furthermore, many of the supportive services such as group meetings at LGBTQ centers, networking events/conferences, LGBTQ pride events, and social gatherings at bars or restaurants have been postponed, reduced to accommodate social distancing measures, or moved to virtual platforms.

While the pandemic has led to increased unemployment rates, concerns over housing and rent payments, and limiting one’s social circle in the general population, these rates are increased among LGBTQ adults. Data are limited on how significantly the pandemic has affected LGBTQ adults, but an analysis conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that 56% of LGBTQ adults reported that they or someone they know lost a job, compared with 44% of non-LGBTQ adults.4 In addition, 75% of LGBTQ adults report that the pandemic has negatively affected their mental health, compared with 49% of the non-LGBTQ population.4 To my dismay, I’ve seen these statistics reflected in my own patient population.

Given this knowledge, it is even more crucial that obstetrician/gynecologists screen for depression, substance use, and intimate partner violence, in addition to assessing the patient’s social determinants for overall well-being. These often include determining a patient’s living situation, employment status, familial support, and social support. In my practice, if concerns are raised in any of these areas, we have a streamlined referral system connecting patients to a variety of therapists, psychologists, and/or social workers, with close follow-up on either a weekly or monthly basis depending on the particular issue the patient is facing. While many patients may be hesitant to go to in-office appointments or where transportation poses a barrier, telemedicine visits are useful adjuncts to assess patient’s overall well-being.

While the pandemic has been extraordinarily difficult for us all, it is important for us to be even stronger advocates for communities that have experienced further challenges as a result of this global tragedy.
 

Dr. Brandt is an ob.gyn. and fellowship-trained gender-affirming surgeon in West Reading, Pa.

References

1. Karasic D. Mental health care for the adult transgender patient. In: Ferrando CA, ed. Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier; 2020:8-11.

2. Black MC et al. The National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NISVS): 2010 Summary Report. Atlanta: National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; 2011.

3. James SE et al. The Report of the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey. Washington, DC: National Center for Transgender Equality; 2016.

4. Dawson L et al. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on LGBT people. KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor. Kaiser Family Foundation. March 11, 2021.

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TRANSforming gynecology: An introduction to hormone therapy for the obstetrician/gynecologist

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Wed, 01/06/2021 - 09:41

Incorporating gender-nonconforming patients into practice can seem like a daunting task at first. However, obstetricians/gynecologists, midwives, and other advanced women’s health care practitioners can provide quality care for both transgender men and women. Basic preventative services such as routine health and cancer screening and testing for sexually transmitted infections does not require specialized training in transgender health. In fact, administration of hormonal therapy and some surgical interventions are well within the scope of practice of the general obstetrician/gynecologist, as long as the provider has undergone appropriate training to achieve expertise. For example, organizations such as the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) not only provides standards of care regarding the treatment of transgender individuals, but they also have training and educational opportunities targeted at providers who wish to become certified in more advanced care of the transgender patient. If an obstetrician/gynecologist is interested in prescribing hormone therapy, seeking further training within the field is a must.

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

It is important to remember that the process by which transgender individuals express their gender is a spectrum. Not all patients who identify as transgender will seek hormone therapy or surgical procedures. However, even if a provider has not undergone more specific training to administer hormone therapy, it is still very important to have a basic understanding of the hormones, routes of administration, and side effects.

While cross-sex hormone therapy does differ in practice, compared with hormone replacement therapy in cisgender counterparts, the principles are relatively similar. Testosterone therapy is the mainstay treatment for transgender men who desire medical transition.1,2 The overall goal of therapy is to achieve testosterone levels within the cisgender male physiologic range (300-1000 ng/dL). While the most common route of administration is subcutaneous or intramuscular injections in weekly, biweekly, or quarterly intervals, other routes may include daily transdermal patches and gels or oral formulations.1 Within the first few months of use, patients will notice signs of masculinization such as increased facial and body hair, increased muscle mass, increased libido, and amenorrhea. Other changes include male-pattern hair loss, clitoromegaly, redistribution of fat, voice deepening, and mood changes.1

Hormone therapy for transgender women is a bit more complicated as estrogen alone will often not achieve feminizing characteristics that are satisfying for patients.3 Estrogen therapy can include oral formulations of 17-beta estradiol or conjugated estrogens, although the latter is typically avoided because of the marked increase in thromboembolic events. Estrogens can also be administered in sublingual, intramuscular, or transdermal forms. Antiandrogens are often required to help decrease endogenous testosterone levels to cisgender female levels (30-100 ng/dL).3 Spironolactone is most commonly prescribed as an adjunct to estrogen therapy. Finasteride and GnRH agonists like leuprolide acetate can also be added if spironolactone is not effective or not tolerated by the patient. Feminizing effects of estrogen can take several months and most commonly include decreased spontaneous erections, decreased libido, breast growth, redistribution of fat to the waist and hips, decreased skin oiliness, and softening of the skin.3

Overall, hormone therapy for both transgender men and women is considered effective, safe, and well tolerated.4 Monitoring is typically performed every 3 months within the first year after initiating hormone therapy, and then continued every 6-12 months thereafter. Routine screening for all organs and tissues present (e.g. prostate, breast) should be undertaken.3 While this simply highlights the therapy and surveillance for patients, it is important to remember that many transgender men and women will see an obstetrician/gynecologist at some interval during their transition. Ultimately, it is paramount that we as obstetricians/gynecologists have a basic understanding of the treatments available so we can provide our patients with competent and compassionate care.
 

Dr. Brandt is an obstetrician/gynecologist and a plastic surgeon at Reading Hospital/Tower Health System in West Reading, Pa., where she has developed a gender-affirming medical and surgical clinic for ob.gyn. residents and plastic surgeon fellows.

References

1. World Professional Association for Transgender Health. Standards of care for the health of transsexual, transgender, and gender nonconforming people. 7th version. Accessed 10/15/20.

2. Joint meeting of the International Society of Endocrinology and the Endocrine Society 2014; ICE/ENDO 2014, Paper 14354. Accessed 01/08/16.

3. Qian R, Safer JD. Hormone treatment for the adult transgender patient, in “Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient,” 1st ed. Philadelphia: Elsevier, 2020, pp. 34-6.

4. Weinand JD and Safer JD. Hormone therapy in transgender adults is safe with provider supervision: A review of hormone therapy sequelae for transgender individuals. J Clin Transl Endocrinol. 2015;2(2):55-60.
 

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Incorporating gender-nonconforming patients into practice can seem like a daunting task at first. However, obstetricians/gynecologists, midwives, and other advanced women’s health care practitioners can provide quality care for both transgender men and women. Basic preventative services such as routine health and cancer screening and testing for sexually transmitted infections does not require specialized training in transgender health. In fact, administration of hormonal therapy and some surgical interventions are well within the scope of practice of the general obstetrician/gynecologist, as long as the provider has undergone appropriate training to achieve expertise. For example, organizations such as the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) not only provides standards of care regarding the treatment of transgender individuals, but they also have training and educational opportunities targeted at providers who wish to become certified in more advanced care of the transgender patient. If an obstetrician/gynecologist is interested in prescribing hormone therapy, seeking further training within the field is a must.

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

It is important to remember that the process by which transgender individuals express their gender is a spectrum. Not all patients who identify as transgender will seek hormone therapy or surgical procedures. However, even if a provider has not undergone more specific training to administer hormone therapy, it is still very important to have a basic understanding of the hormones, routes of administration, and side effects.

While cross-sex hormone therapy does differ in practice, compared with hormone replacement therapy in cisgender counterparts, the principles are relatively similar. Testosterone therapy is the mainstay treatment for transgender men who desire medical transition.1,2 The overall goal of therapy is to achieve testosterone levels within the cisgender male physiologic range (300-1000 ng/dL). While the most common route of administration is subcutaneous or intramuscular injections in weekly, biweekly, or quarterly intervals, other routes may include daily transdermal patches and gels or oral formulations.1 Within the first few months of use, patients will notice signs of masculinization such as increased facial and body hair, increased muscle mass, increased libido, and amenorrhea. Other changes include male-pattern hair loss, clitoromegaly, redistribution of fat, voice deepening, and mood changes.1

Hormone therapy for transgender women is a bit more complicated as estrogen alone will often not achieve feminizing characteristics that are satisfying for patients.3 Estrogen therapy can include oral formulations of 17-beta estradiol or conjugated estrogens, although the latter is typically avoided because of the marked increase in thromboembolic events. Estrogens can also be administered in sublingual, intramuscular, or transdermal forms. Antiandrogens are often required to help decrease endogenous testosterone levels to cisgender female levels (30-100 ng/dL).3 Spironolactone is most commonly prescribed as an adjunct to estrogen therapy. Finasteride and GnRH agonists like leuprolide acetate can also be added if spironolactone is not effective or not tolerated by the patient. Feminizing effects of estrogen can take several months and most commonly include decreased spontaneous erections, decreased libido, breast growth, redistribution of fat to the waist and hips, decreased skin oiliness, and softening of the skin.3

Overall, hormone therapy for both transgender men and women is considered effective, safe, and well tolerated.4 Monitoring is typically performed every 3 months within the first year after initiating hormone therapy, and then continued every 6-12 months thereafter. Routine screening for all organs and tissues present (e.g. prostate, breast) should be undertaken.3 While this simply highlights the therapy and surveillance for patients, it is important to remember that many transgender men and women will see an obstetrician/gynecologist at some interval during their transition. Ultimately, it is paramount that we as obstetricians/gynecologists have a basic understanding of the treatments available so we can provide our patients with competent and compassionate care.
 

Dr. Brandt is an obstetrician/gynecologist and a plastic surgeon at Reading Hospital/Tower Health System in West Reading, Pa., where she has developed a gender-affirming medical and surgical clinic for ob.gyn. residents and plastic surgeon fellows.

References

1. World Professional Association for Transgender Health. Standards of care for the health of transsexual, transgender, and gender nonconforming people. 7th version. Accessed 10/15/20.

2. Joint meeting of the International Society of Endocrinology and the Endocrine Society 2014; ICE/ENDO 2014, Paper 14354. Accessed 01/08/16.

3. Qian R, Safer JD. Hormone treatment for the adult transgender patient, in “Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient,” 1st ed. Philadelphia: Elsevier, 2020, pp. 34-6.

4. Weinand JD and Safer JD. Hormone therapy in transgender adults is safe with provider supervision: A review of hormone therapy sequelae for transgender individuals. J Clin Transl Endocrinol. 2015;2(2):55-60.
 

Incorporating gender-nonconforming patients into practice can seem like a daunting task at first. However, obstetricians/gynecologists, midwives, and other advanced women’s health care practitioners can provide quality care for both transgender men and women. Basic preventative services such as routine health and cancer screening and testing for sexually transmitted infections does not require specialized training in transgender health. In fact, administration of hormonal therapy and some surgical interventions are well within the scope of practice of the general obstetrician/gynecologist, as long as the provider has undergone appropriate training to achieve expertise. For example, organizations such as the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) not only provides standards of care regarding the treatment of transgender individuals, but they also have training and educational opportunities targeted at providers who wish to become certified in more advanced care of the transgender patient. If an obstetrician/gynecologist is interested in prescribing hormone therapy, seeking further training within the field is a must.

Dr. K. Ashley Brandt

It is important to remember that the process by which transgender individuals express their gender is a spectrum. Not all patients who identify as transgender will seek hormone therapy or surgical procedures. However, even if a provider has not undergone more specific training to administer hormone therapy, it is still very important to have a basic understanding of the hormones, routes of administration, and side effects.

While cross-sex hormone therapy does differ in practice, compared with hormone replacement therapy in cisgender counterparts, the principles are relatively similar. Testosterone therapy is the mainstay treatment for transgender men who desire medical transition.1,2 The overall goal of therapy is to achieve testosterone levels within the cisgender male physiologic range (300-1000 ng/dL). While the most common route of administration is subcutaneous or intramuscular injections in weekly, biweekly, or quarterly intervals, other routes may include daily transdermal patches and gels or oral formulations.1 Within the first few months of use, patients will notice signs of masculinization such as increased facial and body hair, increased muscle mass, increased libido, and amenorrhea. Other changes include male-pattern hair loss, clitoromegaly, redistribution of fat, voice deepening, and mood changes.1

Hormone therapy for transgender women is a bit more complicated as estrogen alone will often not achieve feminizing characteristics that are satisfying for patients.3 Estrogen therapy can include oral formulations of 17-beta estradiol or conjugated estrogens, although the latter is typically avoided because of the marked increase in thromboembolic events. Estrogens can also be administered in sublingual, intramuscular, or transdermal forms. Antiandrogens are often required to help decrease endogenous testosterone levels to cisgender female levels (30-100 ng/dL).3 Spironolactone is most commonly prescribed as an adjunct to estrogen therapy. Finasteride and GnRH agonists like leuprolide acetate can also be added if spironolactone is not effective or not tolerated by the patient. Feminizing effects of estrogen can take several months and most commonly include decreased spontaneous erections, decreased libido, breast growth, redistribution of fat to the waist and hips, decreased skin oiliness, and softening of the skin.3

Overall, hormone therapy for both transgender men and women is considered effective, safe, and well tolerated.4 Monitoring is typically performed every 3 months within the first year after initiating hormone therapy, and then continued every 6-12 months thereafter. Routine screening for all organs and tissues present (e.g. prostate, breast) should be undertaken.3 While this simply highlights the therapy and surveillance for patients, it is important to remember that many transgender men and women will see an obstetrician/gynecologist at some interval during their transition. Ultimately, it is paramount that we as obstetricians/gynecologists have a basic understanding of the treatments available so we can provide our patients with competent and compassionate care.
 

Dr. Brandt is an obstetrician/gynecologist and a plastic surgeon at Reading Hospital/Tower Health System in West Reading, Pa., where she has developed a gender-affirming medical and surgical clinic for ob.gyn. residents and plastic surgeon fellows.

References

1. World Professional Association for Transgender Health. Standards of care for the health of transsexual, transgender, and gender nonconforming people. 7th version. Accessed 10/15/20.

2. Joint meeting of the International Society of Endocrinology and the Endocrine Society 2014; ICE/ENDO 2014, Paper 14354. Accessed 01/08/16.

3. Qian R, Safer JD. Hormone treatment for the adult transgender patient, in “Comprehensive Care of the Transgender Patient,” 1st ed. Philadelphia: Elsevier, 2020, pp. 34-6.

4. Weinand JD and Safer JD. Hormone therapy in transgender adults is safe with provider supervision: A review of hormone therapy sequelae for transgender individuals. J Clin Transl Endocrinol. 2015;2(2):55-60.
 

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Performing gender-reaffirming surgery: Guidelines for the general ob.gyn.

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Wed, 01/29/2020 - 16:11

According to the DSM-V, gender dysphoria in adolescents and adults “involves a difference between one’s experienced/expressed gender and assigned gender, and significant distress or problems functioning. It lasts at least 6 months,” and several other criteria must be met.1 Many patients with gender dysphoria also identify as transgender. A “transition” or “transitioning” is a process by which individuals come to inhabit their gender identity.2 A gender transition may take many forms, and only some people will choose to include medical assistance in their transition process. Although the scope of this article will not address these concerns, it should be noted that many people in the transgender and gender nonconforming community would object to the concepts of gender dysphoria and gender transition because they rely on a binary model of gender that may exclude individuals that see themselves as something other than “man or woman.”

sturti/Getty Images

There are both medical and surgical options for medical assistance in a gender transition. This article will focus on the surgical care of patients assigned female at birth who are seeking masculinizing surgical therapy. Many writers will discuss “gender-affirming” surgery, but we will use the term “gender-reaffirming” surgery because transgender patients have already affirmed their own genders and do not require surgery to inhabit this affirmation. Surgical options might include bilateral mastectomy, hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (BSO), metoidioplasty (surgical formation of a neophallus with existing genital tissue), or phalloplasty. There currently is no single surgical subspecialty that encompasses training in all forms of gender-reaffirming surgical therapies. In some areas of the country, centers of excellence have given rise to multidisciplinary teams that combine the skill sets of surgical subspecialists to provide a streamlined approach to gender-reaffirming surgery. Because of the scarcity of these integrated centers, most patients seeking gender-reaffirming surgeries will need to find individual subspecialists whose surgical training focuses on one area of the body. For example, patients seeking all possible surgical options may need a breast surgeon to perform their mastectomy, an ob.gyn. to perform their hysterectomy and BSO, a urologist to perform their metoidioplasty, and a plastic surgeon to perform their phalloplasty. In these scenarios, a general ob.gyn. may be consulted to perform a gender-reaffirming hysterectomy with BSO.

There are many reasons why transgender men might desire hysterectomy/BSO as part of their transition. Removal of the uterus and cervix eliminates concerns surrounding menstruation, pregnancy, and cervical cancer screening, all of which may add to their experience of gender dysphoria. Furthermore, removal of the ovaries may simplify long-term hormonal therapy with testosterone by eliminating the need for estrogen suppression. Lastly, a hysterectomy/BSO is a lower-risk and more cost-effective masculinizing surgery, compared with metoidioplasty or phalloplasty.

While the technical aspect of performing a hysterectomy/BSO certainly is within the scope of training for a general ob.gyn., there are several nuances of which providers should be aware when planning gender-reaffirming surgery for a transgender man. During the preoperative planning phase, it is of utmost importance to provide an environment of safety so that the focus of the preop visit is not clouded by communication mishaps between office staff and the patient. These barriers can be avoided by implementing office intake forms that give patients the opportunity to inform the health care team of their chosen name and personal pronouns upon registration for the visit.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

A pelvic exam is commonly performed by ob.gyns. to determine surgical approach for a hysterectomy/BSO. When approaching transgender male patients for preoperative pelvic exams, it is important to be mindful of the fact that this type of exam may trigger gender dysphoria. While pelvic exams should be handled in sensitive fashion regardless of a patient’s gender identity, a patient who is a transgender man may benefit from some added steps in discussing the pelvic exam. One approach is to acknowledge that these exams/discussions may be especially triggering of gender dysphoria, and ask if the patient would prefer certain words to be used or not used in reference to their anatomy. As with any patient, the provider should explain the purpose of the examination and offer opportunities for the patient to have some control in the exam such as by assisting with insertion of the speculum or designating a “safe word” that would signal the provider to stop or pause the exam. In some cases, patients may not be able to tolerate the pelvic exam while awake because of the degree of gender dysphoria that the exam would induce. Providers might consider noninvasive imaging studies to help with surgical planning if they find they need more information before scheduling the operation, or they may offer a staged procedure with exam under anesthesia prior to the definitive surgery.

In conclusion, performing a gender-reaffirming hysterectomy/BSO requires thoughtful preparation to ensure a safe surgical environment for this vulnerable population. Care should be taken to plan the operation with a culturally sensitive approach.

Dr. Joey Bahng

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital, both in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joey Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in Emory University’s gynecology & obstetrics residency program. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner and Dr. Bahng reported no relevant financial disclosures.

References

1. American Psychiatric Association. What is Gender Dysphoria? https://www.psychiatry.org/patients-families/gender-dysphoria/what-is-gender-dysphoria

2. UCSF Transgender Care. Transition Roadmap. https://transcare.ucsf.edu/transition-roadmap

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According to the DSM-V, gender dysphoria in adolescents and adults “involves a difference between one’s experienced/expressed gender and assigned gender, and significant distress or problems functioning. It lasts at least 6 months,” and several other criteria must be met.1 Many patients with gender dysphoria also identify as transgender. A “transition” or “transitioning” is a process by which individuals come to inhabit their gender identity.2 A gender transition may take many forms, and only some people will choose to include medical assistance in their transition process. Although the scope of this article will not address these concerns, it should be noted that many people in the transgender and gender nonconforming community would object to the concepts of gender dysphoria and gender transition because they rely on a binary model of gender that may exclude individuals that see themselves as something other than “man or woman.”

sturti/Getty Images

There are both medical and surgical options for medical assistance in a gender transition. This article will focus on the surgical care of patients assigned female at birth who are seeking masculinizing surgical therapy. Many writers will discuss “gender-affirming” surgery, but we will use the term “gender-reaffirming” surgery because transgender patients have already affirmed their own genders and do not require surgery to inhabit this affirmation. Surgical options might include bilateral mastectomy, hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (BSO), metoidioplasty (surgical formation of a neophallus with existing genital tissue), or phalloplasty. There currently is no single surgical subspecialty that encompasses training in all forms of gender-reaffirming surgical therapies. In some areas of the country, centers of excellence have given rise to multidisciplinary teams that combine the skill sets of surgical subspecialists to provide a streamlined approach to gender-reaffirming surgery. Because of the scarcity of these integrated centers, most patients seeking gender-reaffirming surgeries will need to find individual subspecialists whose surgical training focuses on one area of the body. For example, patients seeking all possible surgical options may need a breast surgeon to perform their mastectomy, an ob.gyn. to perform their hysterectomy and BSO, a urologist to perform their metoidioplasty, and a plastic surgeon to perform their phalloplasty. In these scenarios, a general ob.gyn. may be consulted to perform a gender-reaffirming hysterectomy with BSO.

There are many reasons why transgender men might desire hysterectomy/BSO as part of their transition. Removal of the uterus and cervix eliminates concerns surrounding menstruation, pregnancy, and cervical cancer screening, all of which may add to their experience of gender dysphoria. Furthermore, removal of the ovaries may simplify long-term hormonal therapy with testosterone by eliminating the need for estrogen suppression. Lastly, a hysterectomy/BSO is a lower-risk and more cost-effective masculinizing surgery, compared with metoidioplasty or phalloplasty.

While the technical aspect of performing a hysterectomy/BSO certainly is within the scope of training for a general ob.gyn., there are several nuances of which providers should be aware when planning gender-reaffirming surgery for a transgender man. During the preoperative planning phase, it is of utmost importance to provide an environment of safety so that the focus of the preop visit is not clouded by communication mishaps between office staff and the patient. These barriers can be avoided by implementing office intake forms that give patients the opportunity to inform the health care team of their chosen name and personal pronouns upon registration for the visit.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

A pelvic exam is commonly performed by ob.gyns. to determine surgical approach for a hysterectomy/BSO. When approaching transgender male patients for preoperative pelvic exams, it is important to be mindful of the fact that this type of exam may trigger gender dysphoria. While pelvic exams should be handled in sensitive fashion regardless of a patient’s gender identity, a patient who is a transgender man may benefit from some added steps in discussing the pelvic exam. One approach is to acknowledge that these exams/discussions may be especially triggering of gender dysphoria, and ask if the patient would prefer certain words to be used or not used in reference to their anatomy. As with any patient, the provider should explain the purpose of the examination and offer opportunities for the patient to have some control in the exam such as by assisting with insertion of the speculum or designating a “safe word” that would signal the provider to stop or pause the exam. In some cases, patients may not be able to tolerate the pelvic exam while awake because of the degree of gender dysphoria that the exam would induce. Providers might consider noninvasive imaging studies to help with surgical planning if they find they need more information before scheduling the operation, or they may offer a staged procedure with exam under anesthesia prior to the definitive surgery.

In conclusion, performing a gender-reaffirming hysterectomy/BSO requires thoughtful preparation to ensure a safe surgical environment for this vulnerable population. Care should be taken to plan the operation with a culturally sensitive approach.

Dr. Joey Bahng

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital, both in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joey Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in Emory University’s gynecology & obstetrics residency program. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner and Dr. Bahng reported no relevant financial disclosures.

References

1. American Psychiatric Association. What is Gender Dysphoria? https://www.psychiatry.org/patients-families/gender-dysphoria/what-is-gender-dysphoria

2. UCSF Transgender Care. Transition Roadmap. https://transcare.ucsf.edu/transition-roadmap

According to the DSM-V, gender dysphoria in adolescents and adults “involves a difference between one’s experienced/expressed gender and assigned gender, and significant distress or problems functioning. It lasts at least 6 months,” and several other criteria must be met.1 Many patients with gender dysphoria also identify as transgender. A “transition” or “transitioning” is a process by which individuals come to inhabit their gender identity.2 A gender transition may take many forms, and only some people will choose to include medical assistance in their transition process. Although the scope of this article will not address these concerns, it should be noted that many people in the transgender and gender nonconforming community would object to the concepts of gender dysphoria and gender transition because they rely on a binary model of gender that may exclude individuals that see themselves as something other than “man or woman.”

sturti/Getty Images

There are both medical and surgical options for medical assistance in a gender transition. This article will focus on the surgical care of patients assigned female at birth who are seeking masculinizing surgical therapy. Many writers will discuss “gender-affirming” surgery, but we will use the term “gender-reaffirming” surgery because transgender patients have already affirmed their own genders and do not require surgery to inhabit this affirmation. Surgical options might include bilateral mastectomy, hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (BSO), metoidioplasty (surgical formation of a neophallus with existing genital tissue), or phalloplasty. There currently is no single surgical subspecialty that encompasses training in all forms of gender-reaffirming surgical therapies. In some areas of the country, centers of excellence have given rise to multidisciplinary teams that combine the skill sets of surgical subspecialists to provide a streamlined approach to gender-reaffirming surgery. Because of the scarcity of these integrated centers, most patients seeking gender-reaffirming surgeries will need to find individual subspecialists whose surgical training focuses on one area of the body. For example, patients seeking all possible surgical options may need a breast surgeon to perform their mastectomy, an ob.gyn. to perform their hysterectomy and BSO, a urologist to perform their metoidioplasty, and a plastic surgeon to perform their phalloplasty. In these scenarios, a general ob.gyn. may be consulted to perform a gender-reaffirming hysterectomy with BSO.

There are many reasons why transgender men might desire hysterectomy/BSO as part of their transition. Removal of the uterus and cervix eliminates concerns surrounding menstruation, pregnancy, and cervical cancer screening, all of which may add to their experience of gender dysphoria. Furthermore, removal of the ovaries may simplify long-term hormonal therapy with testosterone by eliminating the need for estrogen suppression. Lastly, a hysterectomy/BSO is a lower-risk and more cost-effective masculinizing surgery, compared with metoidioplasty or phalloplasty.

While the technical aspect of performing a hysterectomy/BSO certainly is within the scope of training for a general ob.gyn., there are several nuances of which providers should be aware when planning gender-reaffirming surgery for a transgender man. During the preoperative planning phase, it is of utmost importance to provide an environment of safety so that the focus of the preop visit is not clouded by communication mishaps between office staff and the patient. These barriers can be avoided by implementing office intake forms that give patients the opportunity to inform the health care team of their chosen name and personal pronouns upon registration for the visit.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

A pelvic exam is commonly performed by ob.gyns. to determine surgical approach for a hysterectomy/BSO. When approaching transgender male patients for preoperative pelvic exams, it is important to be mindful of the fact that this type of exam may trigger gender dysphoria. While pelvic exams should be handled in sensitive fashion regardless of a patient’s gender identity, a patient who is a transgender man may benefit from some added steps in discussing the pelvic exam. One approach is to acknowledge that these exams/discussions may be especially triggering of gender dysphoria, and ask if the patient would prefer certain words to be used or not used in reference to their anatomy. As with any patient, the provider should explain the purpose of the examination and offer opportunities for the patient to have some control in the exam such as by assisting with insertion of the speculum or designating a “safe word” that would signal the provider to stop or pause the exam. In some cases, patients may not be able to tolerate the pelvic exam while awake because of the degree of gender dysphoria that the exam would induce. Providers might consider noninvasive imaging studies to help with surgical planning if they find they need more information before scheduling the operation, or they may offer a staged procedure with exam under anesthesia prior to the definitive surgery.

In conclusion, performing a gender-reaffirming hysterectomy/BSO requires thoughtful preparation to ensure a safe surgical environment for this vulnerable population. Care should be taken to plan the operation with a culturally sensitive approach.

Dr. Joey Bahng

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital, both in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joey Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in Emory University’s gynecology & obstetrics residency program. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner and Dr. Bahng reported no relevant financial disclosures.

References

1. American Psychiatric Association. What is Gender Dysphoria? https://www.psychiatry.org/patients-families/gender-dysphoria/what-is-gender-dysphoria

2. UCSF Transgender Care. Transition Roadmap. https://transcare.ucsf.edu/transition-roadmap

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Meeting the obstetrical needs of trans and gender nonconforming patients

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Mon, 09/30/2019 - 15:57

 

Like their cisgender counterparts, transgender and gender nonconforming patients (trans patients) may reach a point in their lives where they want to build their own families. This may be achieved through adoption, alternative insemination with donor sperm, or assisted reproductive treatment with donor sperm or egg, cryopreserved sperm or egg, or surrogacy.1There are several unique needs of trans patients that extend into obstetrics and may be addressed as early as the first gender transition visit. Obstetricians can provide more equitable care to trans individuals by acknowledging these needs and providing gender-inclusive counseling and guidance.

Stuart Jenner/Thinkstock

The American Society for Reproductive Medicine recommends that medical providers counsel patients about the potential effects of medical transitioning on their fertility prior to the initiation of hormonal or surgical therapies.2 Patients should be educated about options for fertility preservation and reproduction since exogenous hormones and gonadectomy impact fertility.3 A referral to a fertility specialist should be placed for patients interested in oocyte or sperm cryopreservation, embryo cryopreservation, or ovarian tissue cryopreservation.2

If a trans patient presents to the obstetrician/gynecologist for preconception counseling after undergoing medical gender transition, they should be offered evidence-based guidance based on an organ inventory (surgical history with documentation of natal sex organs still in situ). A biologic pregnancy may be a fertility option for a patient who has a vagina, uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries and is not currently using testosterone. Gender-affirming testosterone therapy suppresses ovulation and causes amenorrhea in most patients, although this is often reversible once the exogenous hormone is discontinued.2 When the patient is ovulating on their own or undergoes ovulation induction, conception may be achieved via the same methods used with cisgender couples: Sperm is obtained from a partner or donor, followed by intercourse if the patient is comfortable with this, intrauterine insemination (IUI), or in vitro fertilization (IVF).

Conversely, a trans patient with a penis and testicles who has already undergone medical gender affirmation with estrogen should be counseled that prior exposure to estrogen may have caused irreversible testicular damage, making assisted reproductive treatment more challenging if sperm had not been cryopreserved prior to starting gender-affirming hormone therapy.2 If spermatogenesis is successful or sperm was previously cryopreserved, the next step in reproductive counseling for these patients centers on finding gestational carriers and egg donors if the patient does not already have a partner who is willing or able to carry the child. At this point in time, uterine transplantation has not been attempted in a trans patient and therefore is not considered a viable fertility option.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

The trans patient who becomes pregnant will encounter physical changes that may trigger underlying gender dysphoria. One study found that transgender men who experience pregnancy exhibited varying degrees of gender dysphoria.4 Obstetrician/gynecologists should have an awareness about the possibility of heightened gender dysphoria and sensitively approach prenatal visits by avoiding triggering language or using inappropriate pronouns. Simply asking a trans patient about preferred pronouns and terminology for body parts can be the difference between a negative and positive pregnancy experience. For example, a transman may prefer a different term for vagina/vulva/cervix. This is especially important at the time of delivery, when exams may become more frequent for the patient. However, inclusive prenatal care starts from the first prenatal visit when the patient checks in and continues all the way through the doctor/patient experience. All office staff should be trained to use preferred names and pronouns and gender-neutral restrooms should be easily accessible. Likewise, waiting rooms should include visible support for the LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer or questioning) patient population.

The anatomy ultrasound and “gender reveal” during the pregnancy and at the time of delivery can understandably also be a sensitive subject for a pregnant trans patient. Previous cultural practice has been to describe the gender of the fetus at the anatomy ultrasound, when in fact, gender can only be self-determined by an individual many years after birth. What the anatomy ultrasound does convey is the appearance of external genitalia to help predict the assigned sex. As obstetrician/gynecologists who practice evidence-based medicine, we are encouraged to challenge the cultural norm of announcing the gender of the baby at time of ultrasound and at time of birth. We should focus instead on conveying what objective information we do know. After the infant is born, we know the sex they are assigned based on the what external reproductive organs are seen.

In the postpartum period, trans patients who successfully carried a pregnancy may choose to feed their infant with their own human milk. For some trans patients, breastfeeding may be referred to as chestfeeding, since this terminology is more gender neutral. Having prior chest masculinization surgery does not exclude a transmasculine patient from lactating, although milk production may vary. Patients should be counseled that there is limited data on the safety of testosterone use while lactating.1 We found only one case report of induced lactation in a nonpuerperal transfeminine patient.5 In addition to addressing infant feeding concerns, obstetrician/gynecologists should counsel postpartum trans patients about contraceptive options and screen for perinatal mood disorders, especially those patients with a history of mood disorders before pregnancy.

Dr. Katie Riddle

Ultimately, trans patients seeking fertility options and obstetrical care have a right to obtain reliable information and access gender-inclusive treatment from their obstetrician/gynecologists. Each family makeup is unique and should be respected by all health care professionals taking care of the patient. As obstetrician/gynecologists, it is our duty to coordinate and advocate for the equitable care of our trans patients who want to grow their families.

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Katie Riddle is an ob.gyn. in Connecticut who is passionate about LGBTQ health care. She recently completed her residency in Ann Arbor, Mich. Dr. Riddle identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner and Dr. Riddle said they had no financial disclosures. Email them at [email protected].

References

1. Viloria RP. “Reproductive Health and Obstetric Care in Transgender Patients.” Fenway Health.

2. Amato P. “Fertility options for transgender persons.” University of California, San Francisco Transgender Care and Treatment Guidelines. 2016 Jun 17.

3. Fertil Steril. 2015 Nov. doi: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2015.08.021.

4. Obstet Gynecol. 2014. doi: 10.1097/AOG.0000000000000540.

5. Transgend Health. 2018 Jan 1. doi: 10.1089/trgh.2017.0044.

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Like their cisgender counterparts, transgender and gender nonconforming patients (trans patients) may reach a point in their lives where they want to build their own families. This may be achieved through adoption, alternative insemination with donor sperm, or assisted reproductive treatment with donor sperm or egg, cryopreserved sperm or egg, or surrogacy.1There are several unique needs of trans patients that extend into obstetrics and may be addressed as early as the first gender transition visit. Obstetricians can provide more equitable care to trans individuals by acknowledging these needs and providing gender-inclusive counseling and guidance.

Stuart Jenner/Thinkstock

The American Society for Reproductive Medicine recommends that medical providers counsel patients about the potential effects of medical transitioning on their fertility prior to the initiation of hormonal or surgical therapies.2 Patients should be educated about options for fertility preservation and reproduction since exogenous hormones and gonadectomy impact fertility.3 A referral to a fertility specialist should be placed for patients interested in oocyte or sperm cryopreservation, embryo cryopreservation, or ovarian tissue cryopreservation.2

If a trans patient presents to the obstetrician/gynecologist for preconception counseling after undergoing medical gender transition, they should be offered evidence-based guidance based on an organ inventory (surgical history with documentation of natal sex organs still in situ). A biologic pregnancy may be a fertility option for a patient who has a vagina, uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries and is not currently using testosterone. Gender-affirming testosterone therapy suppresses ovulation and causes amenorrhea in most patients, although this is often reversible once the exogenous hormone is discontinued.2 When the patient is ovulating on their own or undergoes ovulation induction, conception may be achieved via the same methods used with cisgender couples: Sperm is obtained from a partner or donor, followed by intercourse if the patient is comfortable with this, intrauterine insemination (IUI), or in vitro fertilization (IVF).

Conversely, a trans patient with a penis and testicles who has already undergone medical gender affirmation with estrogen should be counseled that prior exposure to estrogen may have caused irreversible testicular damage, making assisted reproductive treatment more challenging if sperm had not been cryopreserved prior to starting gender-affirming hormone therapy.2 If spermatogenesis is successful or sperm was previously cryopreserved, the next step in reproductive counseling for these patients centers on finding gestational carriers and egg donors if the patient does not already have a partner who is willing or able to carry the child. At this point in time, uterine transplantation has not been attempted in a trans patient and therefore is not considered a viable fertility option.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

The trans patient who becomes pregnant will encounter physical changes that may trigger underlying gender dysphoria. One study found that transgender men who experience pregnancy exhibited varying degrees of gender dysphoria.4 Obstetrician/gynecologists should have an awareness about the possibility of heightened gender dysphoria and sensitively approach prenatal visits by avoiding triggering language or using inappropriate pronouns. Simply asking a trans patient about preferred pronouns and terminology for body parts can be the difference between a negative and positive pregnancy experience. For example, a transman may prefer a different term for vagina/vulva/cervix. This is especially important at the time of delivery, when exams may become more frequent for the patient. However, inclusive prenatal care starts from the first prenatal visit when the patient checks in and continues all the way through the doctor/patient experience. All office staff should be trained to use preferred names and pronouns and gender-neutral restrooms should be easily accessible. Likewise, waiting rooms should include visible support for the LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer or questioning) patient population.

The anatomy ultrasound and “gender reveal” during the pregnancy and at the time of delivery can understandably also be a sensitive subject for a pregnant trans patient. Previous cultural practice has been to describe the gender of the fetus at the anatomy ultrasound, when in fact, gender can only be self-determined by an individual many years after birth. What the anatomy ultrasound does convey is the appearance of external genitalia to help predict the assigned sex. As obstetrician/gynecologists who practice evidence-based medicine, we are encouraged to challenge the cultural norm of announcing the gender of the baby at time of ultrasound and at time of birth. We should focus instead on conveying what objective information we do know. After the infant is born, we know the sex they are assigned based on the what external reproductive organs are seen.

In the postpartum period, trans patients who successfully carried a pregnancy may choose to feed their infant with their own human milk. For some trans patients, breastfeeding may be referred to as chestfeeding, since this terminology is more gender neutral. Having prior chest masculinization surgery does not exclude a transmasculine patient from lactating, although milk production may vary. Patients should be counseled that there is limited data on the safety of testosterone use while lactating.1 We found only one case report of induced lactation in a nonpuerperal transfeminine patient.5 In addition to addressing infant feeding concerns, obstetrician/gynecologists should counsel postpartum trans patients about contraceptive options and screen for perinatal mood disorders, especially those patients with a history of mood disorders before pregnancy.

Dr. Katie Riddle

Ultimately, trans patients seeking fertility options and obstetrical care have a right to obtain reliable information and access gender-inclusive treatment from their obstetrician/gynecologists. Each family makeup is unique and should be respected by all health care professionals taking care of the patient. As obstetrician/gynecologists, it is our duty to coordinate and advocate for the equitable care of our trans patients who want to grow their families.

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Katie Riddle is an ob.gyn. in Connecticut who is passionate about LGBTQ health care. She recently completed her residency in Ann Arbor, Mich. Dr. Riddle identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner and Dr. Riddle said they had no financial disclosures. Email them at [email protected].

References

1. Viloria RP. “Reproductive Health and Obstetric Care in Transgender Patients.” Fenway Health.

2. Amato P. “Fertility options for transgender persons.” University of California, San Francisco Transgender Care and Treatment Guidelines. 2016 Jun 17.

3. Fertil Steril. 2015 Nov. doi: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2015.08.021.

4. Obstet Gynecol. 2014. doi: 10.1097/AOG.0000000000000540.

5. Transgend Health. 2018 Jan 1. doi: 10.1089/trgh.2017.0044.

 

Like their cisgender counterparts, transgender and gender nonconforming patients (trans patients) may reach a point in their lives where they want to build their own families. This may be achieved through adoption, alternative insemination with donor sperm, or assisted reproductive treatment with donor sperm or egg, cryopreserved sperm or egg, or surrogacy.1There are several unique needs of trans patients that extend into obstetrics and may be addressed as early as the first gender transition visit. Obstetricians can provide more equitable care to trans individuals by acknowledging these needs and providing gender-inclusive counseling and guidance.

Stuart Jenner/Thinkstock

The American Society for Reproductive Medicine recommends that medical providers counsel patients about the potential effects of medical transitioning on their fertility prior to the initiation of hormonal or surgical therapies.2 Patients should be educated about options for fertility preservation and reproduction since exogenous hormones and gonadectomy impact fertility.3 A referral to a fertility specialist should be placed for patients interested in oocyte or sperm cryopreservation, embryo cryopreservation, or ovarian tissue cryopreservation.2

If a trans patient presents to the obstetrician/gynecologist for preconception counseling after undergoing medical gender transition, they should be offered evidence-based guidance based on an organ inventory (surgical history with documentation of natal sex organs still in situ). A biologic pregnancy may be a fertility option for a patient who has a vagina, uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries and is not currently using testosterone. Gender-affirming testosterone therapy suppresses ovulation and causes amenorrhea in most patients, although this is often reversible once the exogenous hormone is discontinued.2 When the patient is ovulating on their own or undergoes ovulation induction, conception may be achieved via the same methods used with cisgender couples: Sperm is obtained from a partner or donor, followed by intercourse if the patient is comfortable with this, intrauterine insemination (IUI), or in vitro fertilization (IVF).

Conversely, a trans patient with a penis and testicles who has already undergone medical gender affirmation with estrogen should be counseled that prior exposure to estrogen may have caused irreversible testicular damage, making assisted reproductive treatment more challenging if sperm had not been cryopreserved prior to starting gender-affirming hormone therapy.2 If spermatogenesis is successful or sperm was previously cryopreserved, the next step in reproductive counseling for these patients centers on finding gestational carriers and egg donors if the patient does not already have a partner who is willing or able to carry the child. At this point in time, uterine transplantation has not been attempted in a trans patient and therefore is not considered a viable fertility option.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

The trans patient who becomes pregnant will encounter physical changes that may trigger underlying gender dysphoria. One study found that transgender men who experience pregnancy exhibited varying degrees of gender dysphoria.4 Obstetrician/gynecologists should have an awareness about the possibility of heightened gender dysphoria and sensitively approach prenatal visits by avoiding triggering language or using inappropriate pronouns. Simply asking a trans patient about preferred pronouns and terminology for body parts can be the difference between a negative and positive pregnancy experience. For example, a transman may prefer a different term for vagina/vulva/cervix. This is especially important at the time of delivery, when exams may become more frequent for the patient. However, inclusive prenatal care starts from the first prenatal visit when the patient checks in and continues all the way through the doctor/patient experience. All office staff should be trained to use preferred names and pronouns and gender-neutral restrooms should be easily accessible. Likewise, waiting rooms should include visible support for the LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer or questioning) patient population.

The anatomy ultrasound and “gender reveal” during the pregnancy and at the time of delivery can understandably also be a sensitive subject for a pregnant trans patient. Previous cultural practice has been to describe the gender of the fetus at the anatomy ultrasound, when in fact, gender can only be self-determined by an individual many years after birth. What the anatomy ultrasound does convey is the appearance of external genitalia to help predict the assigned sex. As obstetrician/gynecologists who practice evidence-based medicine, we are encouraged to challenge the cultural norm of announcing the gender of the baby at time of ultrasound and at time of birth. We should focus instead on conveying what objective information we do know. After the infant is born, we know the sex they are assigned based on the what external reproductive organs are seen.

In the postpartum period, trans patients who successfully carried a pregnancy may choose to feed their infant with their own human milk. For some trans patients, breastfeeding may be referred to as chestfeeding, since this terminology is more gender neutral. Having prior chest masculinization surgery does not exclude a transmasculine patient from lactating, although milk production may vary. Patients should be counseled that there is limited data on the safety of testosterone use while lactating.1 We found only one case report of induced lactation in a nonpuerperal transfeminine patient.5 In addition to addressing infant feeding concerns, obstetrician/gynecologists should counsel postpartum trans patients about contraceptive options and screen for perinatal mood disorders, especially those patients with a history of mood disorders before pregnancy.

Dr. Katie Riddle

Ultimately, trans patients seeking fertility options and obstetrical care have a right to obtain reliable information and access gender-inclusive treatment from their obstetrician/gynecologists. Each family makeup is unique and should be respected by all health care professionals taking care of the patient. As obstetrician/gynecologists, it is our duty to coordinate and advocate for the equitable care of our trans patients who want to grow their families.

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Katie Riddle is an ob.gyn. in Connecticut who is passionate about LGBTQ health care. She recently completed her residency in Ann Arbor, Mich. Dr. Riddle identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner and Dr. Riddle said they had no financial disclosures. Email them at [email protected].

References

1. Viloria RP. “Reproductive Health and Obstetric Care in Transgender Patients.” Fenway Health.

2. Amato P. “Fertility options for transgender persons.” University of California, San Francisco Transgender Care and Treatment Guidelines. 2016 Jun 17.

3. Fertil Steril. 2015 Nov. doi: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2015.08.021.

4. Obstet Gynecol. 2014. doi: 10.1097/AOG.0000000000000540.

5. Transgend Health. 2018 Jan 1. doi: 10.1089/trgh.2017.0044.

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Addressing the sexual and reproductive health needs of trans and gender nonconforming patients

Article Type
Changed
Wed, 08/28/2019 - 13:45

Separating gender identity from sexual identity to allow for more comprehensive history-taking

 

Grouping the term “transgender” in the abbreviation LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) has historically been empowering for trans and gender nonconforming (GNC) persons. However, it also has contributed to the misunderstanding that gender identity is interchangeable with sexual identity. This common misconception can be a barrier to trans and GNC patients seeking care from ob.gyns. for their reproductive health needs.

Rawpixel/Thinkstock

By definition, gender identity refers to an internal experience of one’s gender, of one’s self.1 While gender identity has social implications, it ultimately is something that a person experiences independently of interactions with others. By contrast, sexual orientation has an explicitly relational underpinning because sexual orientation involves attraction to others. The distinction between gender identity and sexual orientation is similar to an internal-versus-external, or a self-versus-other dichotomy. A further nuance to add is that sexual behavior does not always reflect sexual orientation, and sexual behavior can vary along a wide spectrum when gender identity is added to the equation.

Overall, health care providers should be careful not make assumptions about a patient’s sexual orientation based on a patient’s gender identity. When approaching a sexual history with any patient, but especially a transgender or GNC patient, providers should think deeply about what information is medically relevant.2 The purpose of a sexual history is to identify behaviors that contribute to health risk, including pregnancy, sexually transmitted infection, and social problems such as sex-trafficking or intimate partner violence. The health care provider’s job is to ask questions that will uncover these risk factors.

With the advent of a more inclusive attitude toward gay and lesbian partnership, many providers already have learned to collect the sexual history without assuming the gender of a person’s sexual contacts. Still, when a provider is taking the sexual history, gender often is inappropriately used as proxy for the type of sex that a patient may be having. For example, a provider asking a cisgender woman about her sexual activity may ask, “how many sexual partners have you had in the last year?” But then, the provider may follow-up her response of “three sexual partners in the last year” by asking “men, women, or both?” By asking a patient if the patient’s sexual partners are “men, women, or both,” providers fail to accurately elucidate the risk factors that they are actually seeking when taking a sexual history. The cisgender woman from the above scenario may reply that she has been sleeping only with women for the last year, but if the sexual partners are transgender women, aka a woman who was assigned male at birth and therefore still may use her penis/testes for sexual purposes, then the patient actually may be at risk for pregnancy and may also have a different risk factor profile for sexually transmitted infections than if the patient were sexually active with cisgender women.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

A different approach to using gender in taking the sexual history is to speak plainly about which sex organs come into contact during sexual activity. When patients identify as transgender or GNC, a provider first should start by asking them what language they would like providers to use when discussing sex organs.3 One example is that many trans men, both those who have undergone mastectomy as well as those who have not, may not use the word “breasts” to describe their “chests.” This distinction may make the difference between gaining and losing the trust of a trans/GNC patient in your clinic. After identifying how a patient would like to refer to sex organs, a provider can continue by asking which of the patient’s sex partners’ organs come into contact with the patient’s organs during sexual activity. Alternatively, starting with an even more broad line of questioning may be best for some patients, such as “how do you like to have sex?”

Dr. Joey Bahng

Carefully identifying the type of sex and what sex organs are involved has concrete medical implications. Patients assigned female at birth who are on hormone therapy with testosterone may need supportive care if they continue to use their vaginas in sexual encounters because testosterone can lead to a relatively hypoestrogenic state. Patients assigned male at birth who have undergone vaginoplasty procedures may need counseling about how to use and support their neovaginas as well as adjusted testing for dysplasia. Patients assigned female at birth who want to avoid pregnancy may need a nuanced consultation regarding contraception. These are just a few examples of how obstetrician-gynecologists can better support the sexual health of their trans/GNC patients by having an accurate understanding of how a trans/GNC person has sex.
 

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joey Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in Emory University’s gynecology & obstetrics residency program. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Bahng and Dr. Joyner reported no relevant financial disclosures

References

1. Sexual orientation and gender identity definitions. Human Rights Campaign.

2. Taking a sexual history from transgender people. Transforming Health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

3. Sexual health history: Talking sex with gender non-conforming and trans patients. National LGBT Health Education Center at The Fenway Institute.

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Separating gender identity from sexual identity to allow for more comprehensive history-taking

Separating gender identity from sexual identity to allow for more comprehensive history-taking

 

Grouping the term “transgender” in the abbreviation LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) has historically been empowering for trans and gender nonconforming (GNC) persons. However, it also has contributed to the misunderstanding that gender identity is interchangeable with sexual identity. This common misconception can be a barrier to trans and GNC patients seeking care from ob.gyns. for their reproductive health needs.

Rawpixel/Thinkstock

By definition, gender identity refers to an internal experience of one’s gender, of one’s self.1 While gender identity has social implications, it ultimately is something that a person experiences independently of interactions with others. By contrast, sexual orientation has an explicitly relational underpinning because sexual orientation involves attraction to others. The distinction between gender identity and sexual orientation is similar to an internal-versus-external, or a self-versus-other dichotomy. A further nuance to add is that sexual behavior does not always reflect sexual orientation, and sexual behavior can vary along a wide spectrum when gender identity is added to the equation.

Overall, health care providers should be careful not make assumptions about a patient’s sexual orientation based on a patient’s gender identity. When approaching a sexual history with any patient, but especially a transgender or GNC patient, providers should think deeply about what information is medically relevant.2 The purpose of a sexual history is to identify behaviors that contribute to health risk, including pregnancy, sexually transmitted infection, and social problems such as sex-trafficking or intimate partner violence. The health care provider’s job is to ask questions that will uncover these risk factors.

With the advent of a more inclusive attitude toward gay and lesbian partnership, many providers already have learned to collect the sexual history without assuming the gender of a person’s sexual contacts. Still, when a provider is taking the sexual history, gender often is inappropriately used as proxy for the type of sex that a patient may be having. For example, a provider asking a cisgender woman about her sexual activity may ask, “how many sexual partners have you had in the last year?” But then, the provider may follow-up her response of “three sexual partners in the last year” by asking “men, women, or both?” By asking a patient if the patient’s sexual partners are “men, women, or both,” providers fail to accurately elucidate the risk factors that they are actually seeking when taking a sexual history. The cisgender woman from the above scenario may reply that she has been sleeping only with women for the last year, but if the sexual partners are transgender women, aka a woman who was assigned male at birth and therefore still may use her penis/testes for sexual purposes, then the patient actually may be at risk for pregnancy and may also have a different risk factor profile for sexually transmitted infections than if the patient were sexually active with cisgender women.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

A different approach to using gender in taking the sexual history is to speak plainly about which sex organs come into contact during sexual activity. When patients identify as transgender or GNC, a provider first should start by asking them what language they would like providers to use when discussing sex organs.3 One example is that many trans men, both those who have undergone mastectomy as well as those who have not, may not use the word “breasts” to describe their “chests.” This distinction may make the difference between gaining and losing the trust of a trans/GNC patient in your clinic. After identifying how a patient would like to refer to sex organs, a provider can continue by asking which of the patient’s sex partners’ organs come into contact with the patient’s organs during sexual activity. Alternatively, starting with an even more broad line of questioning may be best for some patients, such as “how do you like to have sex?”

Dr. Joey Bahng

Carefully identifying the type of sex and what sex organs are involved has concrete medical implications. Patients assigned female at birth who are on hormone therapy with testosterone may need supportive care if they continue to use their vaginas in sexual encounters because testosterone can lead to a relatively hypoestrogenic state. Patients assigned male at birth who have undergone vaginoplasty procedures may need counseling about how to use and support their neovaginas as well as adjusted testing for dysplasia. Patients assigned female at birth who want to avoid pregnancy may need a nuanced consultation regarding contraception. These are just a few examples of how obstetrician-gynecologists can better support the sexual health of their trans/GNC patients by having an accurate understanding of how a trans/GNC person has sex.
 

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joey Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in Emory University’s gynecology & obstetrics residency program. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Bahng and Dr. Joyner reported no relevant financial disclosures

References

1. Sexual orientation and gender identity definitions. Human Rights Campaign.

2. Taking a sexual history from transgender people. Transforming Health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

3. Sexual health history: Talking sex with gender non-conforming and trans patients. National LGBT Health Education Center at The Fenway Institute.

 

Grouping the term “transgender” in the abbreviation LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) has historically been empowering for trans and gender nonconforming (GNC) persons. However, it also has contributed to the misunderstanding that gender identity is interchangeable with sexual identity. This common misconception can be a barrier to trans and GNC patients seeking care from ob.gyns. for their reproductive health needs.

Rawpixel/Thinkstock

By definition, gender identity refers to an internal experience of one’s gender, of one’s self.1 While gender identity has social implications, it ultimately is something that a person experiences independently of interactions with others. By contrast, sexual orientation has an explicitly relational underpinning because sexual orientation involves attraction to others. The distinction between gender identity and sexual orientation is similar to an internal-versus-external, or a self-versus-other dichotomy. A further nuance to add is that sexual behavior does not always reflect sexual orientation, and sexual behavior can vary along a wide spectrum when gender identity is added to the equation.

Overall, health care providers should be careful not make assumptions about a patient’s sexual orientation based on a patient’s gender identity. When approaching a sexual history with any patient, but especially a transgender or GNC patient, providers should think deeply about what information is medically relevant.2 The purpose of a sexual history is to identify behaviors that contribute to health risk, including pregnancy, sexually transmitted infection, and social problems such as sex-trafficking or intimate partner violence. The health care provider’s job is to ask questions that will uncover these risk factors.

With the advent of a more inclusive attitude toward gay and lesbian partnership, many providers already have learned to collect the sexual history without assuming the gender of a person’s sexual contacts. Still, when a provider is taking the sexual history, gender often is inappropriately used as proxy for the type of sex that a patient may be having. For example, a provider asking a cisgender woman about her sexual activity may ask, “how many sexual partners have you had in the last year?” But then, the provider may follow-up her response of “three sexual partners in the last year” by asking “men, women, or both?” By asking a patient if the patient’s sexual partners are “men, women, or both,” providers fail to accurately elucidate the risk factors that they are actually seeking when taking a sexual history. The cisgender woman from the above scenario may reply that she has been sleeping only with women for the last year, but if the sexual partners are transgender women, aka a woman who was assigned male at birth and therefore still may use her penis/testes for sexual purposes, then the patient actually may be at risk for pregnancy and may also have a different risk factor profile for sexually transmitted infections than if the patient were sexually active with cisgender women.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

A different approach to using gender in taking the sexual history is to speak plainly about which sex organs come into contact during sexual activity. When patients identify as transgender or GNC, a provider first should start by asking them what language they would like providers to use when discussing sex organs.3 One example is that many trans men, both those who have undergone mastectomy as well as those who have not, may not use the word “breasts” to describe their “chests.” This distinction may make the difference between gaining and losing the trust of a trans/GNC patient in your clinic. After identifying how a patient would like to refer to sex organs, a provider can continue by asking which of the patient’s sex partners’ organs come into contact with the patient’s organs during sexual activity. Alternatively, starting with an even more broad line of questioning may be best for some patients, such as “how do you like to have sex?”

Dr. Joey Bahng

Carefully identifying the type of sex and what sex organs are involved has concrete medical implications. Patients assigned female at birth who are on hormone therapy with testosterone may need supportive care if they continue to use their vaginas in sexual encounters because testosterone can lead to a relatively hypoestrogenic state. Patients assigned male at birth who have undergone vaginoplasty procedures may need counseling about how to use and support their neovaginas as well as adjusted testing for dysplasia. Patients assigned female at birth who want to avoid pregnancy may need a nuanced consultation regarding contraception. These are just a few examples of how obstetrician-gynecologists can better support the sexual health of their trans/GNC patients by having an accurate understanding of how a trans/GNC person has sex.
 

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joey Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in Emory University’s gynecology & obstetrics residency program. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Bahng and Dr. Joyner reported no relevant financial disclosures

References

1. Sexual orientation and gender identity definitions. Human Rights Campaign.

2. Taking a sexual history from transgender people. Transforming Health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

3. Sexual health history: Talking sex with gender non-conforming and trans patients. National LGBT Health Education Center at The Fenway Institute.

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Reframing the conversation around the ‘gender-reveal’ ultrasound

Article Type
Changed
Mon, 04/08/2019 - 09:49

How revealing fetal anatomy, not gender, is inclusive

Every ob.gyn. expects that the topic of gender will come up at some point in a patient’s pregnancy. “When will I find out the gender?” asks the 24-year-old at her first prenatal visit. “We want the gender to be a surprise!” exclaims the couple at their anatomy scan for their second in vitro fertilization pregnancy. “Do you know what you’re having?” asks the obstetrician anticipating an imminent delivery.

gorodenkoff/Getty Images

The topic of gender is in fact so ingrained in our practice that we don’t bat an eye when approached with questions about fetal gender. But what exactly are we talking about when we discuss the gender of an unborn baby?

As we established in our previous column, gender identity is an internal experience of gender that one feels to be a part of oneself. Gender identity is distinct from sex assigned at birth because sex assigned at birth is based on an external anatomical structure. So, then, what does an ultrasound actually reveal? Objectively, ultrasound can show the provider the presence or absence of a hyperechoic anatomical structure between the fetal legs that may become a penis, a vagina, or an ambiguous form of genitalia. While ultrasound is an incredible tool for anatomical and other forms of antenatal testing, ultrasound cannot detect identity characteristics because identities are, by definition, socially and internally experienced without respect to anatomy.

Dr. Joey Bahng

The distinction between gender identity and sex assigned at birth in discussions of antenatal ultrasonography is more than just a simple problem of semantics or vocabulary. To describe a fetus as a boy or a girl based on the presence/absence of a projection between the fetal legs seen on ultrasound is to reinforce the idea that gender identity and sex assigned at birth are equivalent. This conflation also erases nonbinary, genderqueer, and many other groups that identify with genders other than “boy” or “girl.” To be clear, unborn fetuses do not have a gender identity. Studies have shown that children begin to self-label their gender as early as 18-24 months of age, and similarly those who grow up to inhabit gender-nonconforming identities usually already are starting to show signs of their nonconformity starting at age 2 years.1 Some of the deepest traumas that trans and gender-nonconforming people experience are rated to the enforcement of unwritten gender laws during early childhood that are applied based on the sex assigned at birth.

Obstetricians can help to break the cycle of inappropriate gender assignment by correctly using the terms “gender” and “sex assigned at birth.” One opportunity for addressing patients’ questions about fetal gender might be to avoid the term “gender” altogether when discussing fetal sex assigned at birth, emphasizing instead what fetal ultrasound is actually able to do: Give us information about the appearance of external genitalia to help predict what sex will be assigned at birth.2 We have used this strategy when performing anatomy scans, and our experience has been that patients often will make their own assumptions about what it means to see certain external genitalia on ultrasound between the fetal legs. Motivated providers who want to go the extra mile may use a patient’s exclamation about their understanding of the fetus’s gender as an opportunity to educate the patient on the distinction between gender and sex assigned at birth, but even just smiling and moving onto the next part of the scan is an appropriate way of maintaining an atmosphere of inclusion and respect.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

One of the roots of gender-based violence and gender dysphoria later in life is the conflation of gender and sex assigned at birth. While there is an entire social and political framework that enforces and polices gender after birth, the obstetrician can take steps to break the cycle starting before the birth has even occurred. Obstetricians are tasked with the unique challenge of providing care for the mother-fetus dyad, and much of the work is in setting up the fetus for the best possible life. Our scope of inclusion should be sufficiently wide to account for nonanatomical variations that could develop later in life in the infants we deliver.

 

Dr. Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in the gynecology & obstetrics residency program at Emory University, Atlanta. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Bahng and Dr. Joyner reported no financial disclosures.

References

1. Horm Behav. 2013 Jul;64(2):288-97.

2. Obstet Gynecol Surv. 2009 Jan;64(1):50-7.

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How revealing fetal anatomy, not gender, is inclusive

How revealing fetal anatomy, not gender, is inclusive

Every ob.gyn. expects that the topic of gender will come up at some point in a patient’s pregnancy. “When will I find out the gender?” asks the 24-year-old at her first prenatal visit. “We want the gender to be a surprise!” exclaims the couple at their anatomy scan for their second in vitro fertilization pregnancy. “Do you know what you’re having?” asks the obstetrician anticipating an imminent delivery.

gorodenkoff/Getty Images

The topic of gender is in fact so ingrained in our practice that we don’t bat an eye when approached with questions about fetal gender. But what exactly are we talking about when we discuss the gender of an unborn baby?

As we established in our previous column, gender identity is an internal experience of gender that one feels to be a part of oneself. Gender identity is distinct from sex assigned at birth because sex assigned at birth is based on an external anatomical structure. So, then, what does an ultrasound actually reveal? Objectively, ultrasound can show the provider the presence or absence of a hyperechoic anatomical structure between the fetal legs that may become a penis, a vagina, or an ambiguous form of genitalia. While ultrasound is an incredible tool for anatomical and other forms of antenatal testing, ultrasound cannot detect identity characteristics because identities are, by definition, socially and internally experienced without respect to anatomy.

Dr. Joey Bahng

The distinction between gender identity and sex assigned at birth in discussions of antenatal ultrasonography is more than just a simple problem of semantics or vocabulary. To describe a fetus as a boy or a girl based on the presence/absence of a projection between the fetal legs seen on ultrasound is to reinforce the idea that gender identity and sex assigned at birth are equivalent. This conflation also erases nonbinary, genderqueer, and many other groups that identify with genders other than “boy” or “girl.” To be clear, unborn fetuses do not have a gender identity. Studies have shown that children begin to self-label their gender as early as 18-24 months of age, and similarly those who grow up to inhabit gender-nonconforming identities usually already are starting to show signs of their nonconformity starting at age 2 years.1 Some of the deepest traumas that trans and gender-nonconforming people experience are rated to the enforcement of unwritten gender laws during early childhood that are applied based on the sex assigned at birth.

Obstetricians can help to break the cycle of inappropriate gender assignment by correctly using the terms “gender” and “sex assigned at birth.” One opportunity for addressing patients’ questions about fetal gender might be to avoid the term “gender” altogether when discussing fetal sex assigned at birth, emphasizing instead what fetal ultrasound is actually able to do: Give us information about the appearance of external genitalia to help predict what sex will be assigned at birth.2 We have used this strategy when performing anatomy scans, and our experience has been that patients often will make their own assumptions about what it means to see certain external genitalia on ultrasound between the fetal legs. Motivated providers who want to go the extra mile may use a patient’s exclamation about their understanding of the fetus’s gender as an opportunity to educate the patient on the distinction between gender and sex assigned at birth, but even just smiling and moving onto the next part of the scan is an appropriate way of maintaining an atmosphere of inclusion and respect.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

One of the roots of gender-based violence and gender dysphoria later in life is the conflation of gender and sex assigned at birth. While there is an entire social and political framework that enforces and polices gender after birth, the obstetrician can take steps to break the cycle starting before the birth has even occurred. Obstetricians are tasked with the unique challenge of providing care for the mother-fetus dyad, and much of the work is in setting up the fetus for the best possible life. Our scope of inclusion should be sufficiently wide to account for nonanatomical variations that could develop later in life in the infants we deliver.

 

Dr. Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in the gynecology & obstetrics residency program at Emory University, Atlanta. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Bahng and Dr. Joyner reported no financial disclosures.

References

1. Horm Behav. 2013 Jul;64(2):288-97.

2. Obstet Gynecol Surv. 2009 Jan;64(1):50-7.

Every ob.gyn. expects that the topic of gender will come up at some point in a patient’s pregnancy. “When will I find out the gender?” asks the 24-year-old at her first prenatal visit. “We want the gender to be a surprise!” exclaims the couple at their anatomy scan for their second in vitro fertilization pregnancy. “Do you know what you’re having?” asks the obstetrician anticipating an imminent delivery.

gorodenkoff/Getty Images

The topic of gender is in fact so ingrained in our practice that we don’t bat an eye when approached with questions about fetal gender. But what exactly are we talking about when we discuss the gender of an unborn baby?

As we established in our previous column, gender identity is an internal experience of gender that one feels to be a part of oneself. Gender identity is distinct from sex assigned at birth because sex assigned at birth is based on an external anatomical structure. So, then, what does an ultrasound actually reveal? Objectively, ultrasound can show the provider the presence or absence of a hyperechoic anatomical structure between the fetal legs that may become a penis, a vagina, or an ambiguous form of genitalia. While ultrasound is an incredible tool for anatomical and other forms of antenatal testing, ultrasound cannot detect identity characteristics because identities are, by definition, socially and internally experienced without respect to anatomy.

Dr. Joey Bahng

The distinction between gender identity and sex assigned at birth in discussions of antenatal ultrasonography is more than just a simple problem of semantics or vocabulary. To describe a fetus as a boy or a girl based on the presence/absence of a projection between the fetal legs seen on ultrasound is to reinforce the idea that gender identity and sex assigned at birth are equivalent. This conflation also erases nonbinary, genderqueer, and many other groups that identify with genders other than “boy” or “girl.” To be clear, unborn fetuses do not have a gender identity. Studies have shown that children begin to self-label their gender as early as 18-24 months of age, and similarly those who grow up to inhabit gender-nonconforming identities usually already are starting to show signs of their nonconformity starting at age 2 years.1 Some of the deepest traumas that trans and gender-nonconforming people experience are rated to the enforcement of unwritten gender laws during early childhood that are applied based on the sex assigned at birth.

Obstetricians can help to break the cycle of inappropriate gender assignment by correctly using the terms “gender” and “sex assigned at birth.” One opportunity for addressing patients’ questions about fetal gender might be to avoid the term “gender” altogether when discussing fetal sex assigned at birth, emphasizing instead what fetal ultrasound is actually able to do: Give us information about the appearance of external genitalia to help predict what sex will be assigned at birth.2 We have used this strategy when performing anatomy scans, and our experience has been that patients often will make their own assumptions about what it means to see certain external genitalia on ultrasound between the fetal legs. Motivated providers who want to go the extra mile may use a patient’s exclamation about their understanding of the fetus’s gender as an opportunity to educate the patient on the distinction between gender and sex assigned at birth, but even just smiling and moving onto the next part of the scan is an appropriate way of maintaining an atmosphere of inclusion and respect.

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

One of the roots of gender-based violence and gender dysphoria later in life is the conflation of gender and sex assigned at birth. While there is an entire social and political framework that enforces and polices gender after birth, the obstetrician can take steps to break the cycle starting before the birth has even occurred. Obstetricians are tasked with the unique challenge of providing care for the mother-fetus dyad, and much of the work is in setting up the fetus for the best possible life. Our scope of inclusion should be sufficiently wide to account for nonanatomical variations that could develop later in life in the infants we deliver.

 

Dr. Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in the gynecology & obstetrics residency program at Emory University, Atlanta. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Bahng and Dr. Joyner reported no financial disclosures.

References

1. Horm Behav. 2013 Jul;64(2):288-97.

2. Obstet Gynecol Surv. 2009 Jan;64(1):50-7.

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Understanding the terminology of gender identity

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Use vocabulary to reduce barriers

 

TRANSforming Gynecology is a column about the ways in which ob.gyns. can become leaders in addressing the needs of the transgender/gender-nonconforming population. We hope to provide readers with some basic tools to help open the door to this marginalized population. We will lay the groundwork with an article on terminology and the importance of language before moving onto more focused discussions of topics that intersect with medical care of gender-nonconforming individuals. Transgender individuals experience among the worst health care outcomes of any demographic, and we hope that this column can be a starting point for providers to continue affirming the needs of marginalized populations in their everyday practice.

Josve05a/Getty Images

We live in a society in which most people’s gender identities are congruent with the sex they were assigned at birth based on physical characteristics. Transgender and gender-nonconforming people – often referred to as trans people, broadly – feel that their gender identity does not match their sex assigned at birth. This gender nonconformity, or the extent to which someone’s gender identity or expression differs from the cultural norm assigned to people with certain sexual organs, is in fact a matter of diversity, not pathology.

To truly provide sensitive care to trans patients, medical providers must first gain familiarity with the terminology used when discussing gender diversity. Gender identity, for starters, refers to an individual’s own personal and internal experience of themselves as a man, woman, some of both, or neither gender.1 It is only possible to learn a person’s gender identity through direct communication because gender identity is not always signaled by a certain gender expression. Gender expression is an external display usually through clothing, attitudes, or body language, that may or may not fit into socially recognized masculine or feminine categories.1 A separate aspect of the human experience is sexuality, such as gay, straight, bisexual, lesbian, etc. Sexuality should not be confused with sexual practices, which can sometimes deviate from a person’s sexuality. Gender identity is distinct from sexuality and sexual practices because people of any gender identity can hold any sexuality and engage in any sexual practices. Tied up in all of these categories is sex assigned at birth, which is a process by which health care providers categorize babies into two buckets based on the appearance of the external genitalia at the time of birth. It bears mentioning that the assignment of sex based on the appearance of external genitalia at the time of birth is a biologically inconsistent method that can lead to the exclusion of and nonconsensual mutilation of intersex people, who are individuals born with ambiguous genitalia and/or discrepancies between sex chromosome genotype and phenotype (stay tuned for more on people who are intersex in a future article).

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

A simplified way of remembering the distinctions between these concepts is that gender identity is who you go to bed as; gender expression is what you were wearing before you went to bed; sexuality is whom you tell others/yourself you go to bed with; sexual practice is whom you actually go to bed with; and sex assigned at birth is what you have between your legs when you are born (generally in a bed).

 

 


While cisgender persons feel that their experience of gender – their gender identity – agrees with the cultural norms surrounding their sex assigned at birth, transgender/gender-nonconforming (GNC) persons feel that their experience of gender is incongruent with their sex assigned at birth.1 Specifically, a transgender man is a person born with a vagina and therefore assigned female at birth who experiences himself as a man. A transgender woman is a person born with a penis and therefore assigned male at birth who experiences herself as a woman. A gender nonbinary person is someone with any sexual assignment at birth whose gender experience cannot be described using a binary that includes only male and female concepts, and a gender fluid person is someone whose internal experience of gender can oscillate.1 While these examples represent only a few of the many facets of gender diversity, the general terms trans and gender nonconforming (GNC) are widely accepted as inclusive, umbrella terms to describe all persons whose experience of gender is not congruent with their sex assigned at birth.

Dr. Joey Bahng

It is pivotal that medical providers understand that a person’s sex assigned at birth, gender identity, gender expression, sexuality, sexual practice, and romantic attraction can vary widely along a spectrum in each distinct category.2 For example, the current social norm dictates that someone born with a penis and assigned male at birth (AMAB) will feel that he is male, dress in a masculine fashion, and be both sexually and romantically attracted to someone born with a vagina who was assigned female at birth (AFAB), feels that she is female, dresses femininely, and likewise is sexually and romantically attracted to him. One possible alternative reality is a person who was born with a vagina that was therefore AFAB that experiences a masculine gender identity while engaging in a feminine gender expression in order to conform to social norms. In addition, they may be sexually attracted to people whom they perceive to be feminine while engaging in sexual activity with people who were AMAB. Informed medical care for trans persons starts with the basic understanding that an individual’s gender identity may not necessarily align with their gender expression, sex assigned at birth, sexual attraction, or romantic attraction.

As obstetrician-gynecologists, we are tasked by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists to provide nondiscriminatory care to all patients, regardless of gender identity.3 We must be careful not to assume that all of our patients are cisgender women who use “she/hers/her” pronouns. By simply asking patients what names or pronouns they would like us to use before initiating care, we become more sensitive to variations in gender identity. Many providers may feel uncertain about how to initiate or respond to this line of questioning. One way that health care practices can begin to respectfully access information around gender identity is to create intake forms that include more than two options for gender or to alter their office visit note templates to include a section that prompts the provider to include a discussion surrounding gender identity. By offering these opportunities for inclusion, we become more welcoming of gender minorities like transgender men seeking cervical cancer screening.

There are a number of reasons that trans persons have limited access to the health care system, but the greatest barrier reported by transgender patients is the paucity of knowledgeable providers.4Learning the common terminology used by the trans population is a logical first step for physicians seeking to provide more affirming care to an already marginalized patient population. Familiarity with this terminology normalizes the idea of gender diversity and subsequently reduces the risk of providers making assumptions about patients that contributes to suboptimal care.

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joey Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in Emory University’s gynecology & obstetrics residency program. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner and Dr. Bahng reported no financial disclosures.



1. Lancet. 2016 Jul 23;388(10042):390-400.

2. www.genderbread.org/resource/genderbread-person-v4-0.

3. Obstet Gynecol. 2011 Dec;118(6):1454-8.

4. Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obes. 2016 Apr 1;23(2):168-71.

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Use vocabulary to reduce barriers

Use vocabulary to reduce barriers

 

TRANSforming Gynecology is a column about the ways in which ob.gyns. can become leaders in addressing the needs of the transgender/gender-nonconforming population. We hope to provide readers with some basic tools to help open the door to this marginalized population. We will lay the groundwork with an article on terminology and the importance of language before moving onto more focused discussions of topics that intersect with medical care of gender-nonconforming individuals. Transgender individuals experience among the worst health care outcomes of any demographic, and we hope that this column can be a starting point for providers to continue affirming the needs of marginalized populations in their everyday practice.

Josve05a/Getty Images

We live in a society in which most people’s gender identities are congruent with the sex they were assigned at birth based on physical characteristics. Transgender and gender-nonconforming people – often referred to as trans people, broadly – feel that their gender identity does not match their sex assigned at birth. This gender nonconformity, or the extent to which someone’s gender identity or expression differs from the cultural norm assigned to people with certain sexual organs, is in fact a matter of diversity, not pathology.

To truly provide sensitive care to trans patients, medical providers must first gain familiarity with the terminology used when discussing gender diversity. Gender identity, for starters, refers to an individual’s own personal and internal experience of themselves as a man, woman, some of both, or neither gender.1 It is only possible to learn a person’s gender identity through direct communication because gender identity is not always signaled by a certain gender expression. Gender expression is an external display usually through clothing, attitudes, or body language, that may or may not fit into socially recognized masculine or feminine categories.1 A separate aspect of the human experience is sexuality, such as gay, straight, bisexual, lesbian, etc. Sexuality should not be confused with sexual practices, which can sometimes deviate from a person’s sexuality. Gender identity is distinct from sexuality and sexual practices because people of any gender identity can hold any sexuality and engage in any sexual practices. Tied up in all of these categories is sex assigned at birth, which is a process by which health care providers categorize babies into two buckets based on the appearance of the external genitalia at the time of birth. It bears mentioning that the assignment of sex based on the appearance of external genitalia at the time of birth is a biologically inconsistent method that can lead to the exclusion of and nonconsensual mutilation of intersex people, who are individuals born with ambiguous genitalia and/or discrepancies between sex chromosome genotype and phenotype (stay tuned for more on people who are intersex in a future article).

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

A simplified way of remembering the distinctions between these concepts is that gender identity is who you go to bed as; gender expression is what you were wearing before you went to bed; sexuality is whom you tell others/yourself you go to bed with; sexual practice is whom you actually go to bed with; and sex assigned at birth is what you have between your legs when you are born (generally in a bed).

 

 


While cisgender persons feel that their experience of gender – their gender identity – agrees with the cultural norms surrounding their sex assigned at birth, transgender/gender-nonconforming (GNC) persons feel that their experience of gender is incongruent with their sex assigned at birth.1 Specifically, a transgender man is a person born with a vagina and therefore assigned female at birth who experiences himself as a man. A transgender woman is a person born with a penis and therefore assigned male at birth who experiences herself as a woman. A gender nonbinary person is someone with any sexual assignment at birth whose gender experience cannot be described using a binary that includes only male and female concepts, and a gender fluid person is someone whose internal experience of gender can oscillate.1 While these examples represent only a few of the many facets of gender diversity, the general terms trans and gender nonconforming (GNC) are widely accepted as inclusive, umbrella terms to describe all persons whose experience of gender is not congruent with their sex assigned at birth.

Dr. Joey Bahng

It is pivotal that medical providers understand that a person’s sex assigned at birth, gender identity, gender expression, sexuality, sexual practice, and romantic attraction can vary widely along a spectrum in each distinct category.2 For example, the current social norm dictates that someone born with a penis and assigned male at birth (AMAB) will feel that he is male, dress in a masculine fashion, and be both sexually and romantically attracted to someone born with a vagina who was assigned female at birth (AFAB), feels that she is female, dresses femininely, and likewise is sexually and romantically attracted to him. One possible alternative reality is a person who was born with a vagina that was therefore AFAB that experiences a masculine gender identity while engaging in a feminine gender expression in order to conform to social norms. In addition, they may be sexually attracted to people whom they perceive to be feminine while engaging in sexual activity with people who were AMAB. Informed medical care for trans persons starts with the basic understanding that an individual’s gender identity may not necessarily align with their gender expression, sex assigned at birth, sexual attraction, or romantic attraction.

As obstetrician-gynecologists, we are tasked by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists to provide nondiscriminatory care to all patients, regardless of gender identity.3 We must be careful not to assume that all of our patients are cisgender women who use “she/hers/her” pronouns. By simply asking patients what names or pronouns they would like us to use before initiating care, we become more sensitive to variations in gender identity. Many providers may feel uncertain about how to initiate or respond to this line of questioning. One way that health care practices can begin to respectfully access information around gender identity is to create intake forms that include more than two options for gender or to alter their office visit note templates to include a section that prompts the provider to include a discussion surrounding gender identity. By offering these opportunities for inclusion, we become more welcoming of gender minorities like transgender men seeking cervical cancer screening.

There are a number of reasons that trans persons have limited access to the health care system, but the greatest barrier reported by transgender patients is the paucity of knowledgeable providers.4Learning the common terminology used by the trans population is a logical first step for physicians seeking to provide more affirming care to an already marginalized patient population. Familiarity with this terminology normalizes the idea of gender diversity and subsequently reduces the risk of providers making assumptions about patients that contributes to suboptimal care.

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joey Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in Emory University’s gynecology & obstetrics residency program. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner and Dr. Bahng reported no financial disclosures.



1. Lancet. 2016 Jul 23;388(10042):390-400.

2. www.genderbread.org/resource/genderbread-person-v4-0.

3. Obstet Gynecol. 2011 Dec;118(6):1454-8.

4. Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obes. 2016 Apr 1;23(2):168-71.

 

TRANSforming Gynecology is a column about the ways in which ob.gyns. can become leaders in addressing the needs of the transgender/gender-nonconforming population. We hope to provide readers with some basic tools to help open the door to this marginalized population. We will lay the groundwork with an article on terminology and the importance of language before moving onto more focused discussions of topics that intersect with medical care of gender-nonconforming individuals. Transgender individuals experience among the worst health care outcomes of any demographic, and we hope that this column can be a starting point for providers to continue affirming the needs of marginalized populations in their everyday practice.

Josve05a/Getty Images

We live in a society in which most people’s gender identities are congruent with the sex they were assigned at birth based on physical characteristics. Transgender and gender-nonconforming people – often referred to as trans people, broadly – feel that their gender identity does not match their sex assigned at birth. This gender nonconformity, or the extent to which someone’s gender identity or expression differs from the cultural norm assigned to people with certain sexual organs, is in fact a matter of diversity, not pathology.

To truly provide sensitive care to trans patients, medical providers must first gain familiarity with the terminology used when discussing gender diversity. Gender identity, for starters, refers to an individual’s own personal and internal experience of themselves as a man, woman, some of both, or neither gender.1 It is only possible to learn a person’s gender identity through direct communication because gender identity is not always signaled by a certain gender expression. Gender expression is an external display usually through clothing, attitudes, or body language, that may or may not fit into socially recognized masculine or feminine categories.1 A separate aspect of the human experience is sexuality, such as gay, straight, bisexual, lesbian, etc. Sexuality should not be confused with sexual practices, which can sometimes deviate from a person’s sexuality. Gender identity is distinct from sexuality and sexual practices because people of any gender identity can hold any sexuality and engage in any sexual practices. Tied up in all of these categories is sex assigned at birth, which is a process by which health care providers categorize babies into two buckets based on the appearance of the external genitalia at the time of birth. It bears mentioning that the assignment of sex based on the appearance of external genitalia at the time of birth is a biologically inconsistent method that can lead to the exclusion of and nonconsensual mutilation of intersex people, who are individuals born with ambiguous genitalia and/or discrepancies between sex chromosome genotype and phenotype (stay tuned for more on people who are intersex in a future article).

Dr. Andrea B. Joyner

A simplified way of remembering the distinctions between these concepts is that gender identity is who you go to bed as; gender expression is what you were wearing before you went to bed; sexuality is whom you tell others/yourself you go to bed with; sexual practice is whom you actually go to bed with; and sex assigned at birth is what you have between your legs when you are born (generally in a bed).

 

 


While cisgender persons feel that their experience of gender – their gender identity – agrees with the cultural norms surrounding their sex assigned at birth, transgender/gender-nonconforming (GNC) persons feel that their experience of gender is incongruent with their sex assigned at birth.1 Specifically, a transgender man is a person born with a vagina and therefore assigned female at birth who experiences himself as a man. A transgender woman is a person born with a penis and therefore assigned male at birth who experiences herself as a woman. A gender nonbinary person is someone with any sexual assignment at birth whose gender experience cannot be described using a binary that includes only male and female concepts, and a gender fluid person is someone whose internal experience of gender can oscillate.1 While these examples represent only a few of the many facets of gender diversity, the general terms trans and gender nonconforming (GNC) are widely accepted as inclusive, umbrella terms to describe all persons whose experience of gender is not congruent with their sex assigned at birth.

Dr. Joey Bahng

It is pivotal that medical providers understand that a person’s sex assigned at birth, gender identity, gender expression, sexuality, sexual practice, and romantic attraction can vary widely along a spectrum in each distinct category.2 For example, the current social norm dictates that someone born with a penis and assigned male at birth (AMAB) will feel that he is male, dress in a masculine fashion, and be both sexually and romantically attracted to someone born with a vagina who was assigned female at birth (AFAB), feels that she is female, dresses femininely, and likewise is sexually and romantically attracted to him. One possible alternative reality is a person who was born with a vagina that was therefore AFAB that experiences a masculine gender identity while engaging in a feminine gender expression in order to conform to social norms. In addition, they may be sexually attracted to people whom they perceive to be feminine while engaging in sexual activity with people who were AMAB. Informed medical care for trans persons starts with the basic understanding that an individual’s gender identity may not necessarily align with their gender expression, sex assigned at birth, sexual attraction, or romantic attraction.

As obstetrician-gynecologists, we are tasked by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists to provide nondiscriminatory care to all patients, regardless of gender identity.3 We must be careful not to assume that all of our patients are cisgender women who use “she/hers/her” pronouns. By simply asking patients what names or pronouns they would like us to use before initiating care, we become more sensitive to variations in gender identity. Many providers may feel uncertain about how to initiate or respond to this line of questioning. One way that health care practices can begin to respectfully access information around gender identity is to create intake forms that include more than two options for gender or to alter their office visit note templates to include a section that prompts the provider to include a discussion surrounding gender identity. By offering these opportunities for inclusion, we become more welcoming of gender minorities like transgender men seeking cervical cancer screening.

There are a number of reasons that trans persons have limited access to the health care system, but the greatest barrier reported by transgender patients is the paucity of knowledgeable providers.4Learning the common terminology used by the trans population is a logical first step for physicians seeking to provide more affirming care to an already marginalized patient population. Familiarity with this terminology normalizes the idea of gender diversity and subsequently reduces the risk of providers making assumptions about patients that contributes to suboptimal care.

Dr. Joyner is an assistant professor at Emory University, Atlanta, and is the director of gynecologic services in the Gender Center at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta. Dr. Joyner identifies as a cisgender female and uses she/hers/her as her personal pronouns. Dr. Joey Bahng is a PGY-1 resident physician in Emory University’s gynecology & obstetrics residency program. Dr. Bahng identifies as nonbinary and uses they/them/their as their personal pronouns. Dr. Joyner and Dr. Bahng reported no financial disclosures.



1. Lancet. 2016 Jul 23;388(10042):390-400.

2. www.genderbread.org/resource/genderbread-person-v4-0.

3. Obstet Gynecol. 2011 Dec;118(6):1454-8.

4. Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obes. 2016 Apr 1;23(2):168-71.

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