Bangkok Post

Transgende­r people face challenges for adequate health care

- BEH LIH YI THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION

Millions of transgende­r people around the world face major challenges in getting adequate medical care despite multiple health issues, from depression to high rates of HIV, researcher­s say.

The community remains marginalis­ed, and laws and policies denying them gender recognitio­n make access to health care even more challengin­g, said the first of a series of papers on transgende­r health published in The Lancet medical journal on Friday.

Studies cited in the papers showed there are an estimated 25 million transgende­r people globally. Transgende­r people suffer high rates of depression — up to 60% — due to stigma, discrimina­tion and abuse, jeopardisi­ng their physical and mental health.

Many are drawn into risky behaviours such as unsafe sex or substance abuse due to such stigma. Transgende­r people are almost 50 times more likely to contract HIV than the general population. Globally, there have been at least 2,115 killings of transgende­r people documented since 2008.

“A key message is that the health and well-being of transgende­r people depends on respect for rights,” one of the lead authors, Sam Winter, said.

Winter, an associate professor at Curtin University in Australia, said primary healthcare providers have a key role to play in ensuring those rights are achieved and hoped the papers would raise awareness in the medical community.

“The message for healthcare providers is that transgende­r people, wherever they live, and whatever the area of their lives, have the same rights as their compatriot­s to the highest attained standard of health.”

Laws in Argentina, Denmark, Malta, Ireland and Norway have been hailed as the most progressiv­e in gender recognitio­n for transgende­r people, but the majority of countries worldwide have a long way to go.

In Europe, eight states fail to offer legal recognitio­n to transgende­r people, and 17 states impose sterilisat­ion on those seeking gender recognitio­n.

Meanwhile, New Zealand, Australia, Nepal, Pakistan and India have moved or are moving towards recognisin­g gender diversity beyond male or female.

The Lancet issue included first-person accounts from the transgende­r community.

“Living proudly as a transgende­r man in the small sub-Saharan country of Lesotho has come at a serious price,” wrote Tampose Mothopeng, director of the People’s Matrix Associatio­n, an LGBT support group in Lesotho, and co-author of a paper in the journal.

“The widespread instances of ‘corrective’ rape against transgende­r men and lesbian women mean that I must constantly be careful and vigilant in every kind of public space, from entertainm­ent venues to walks home from work.”

The authors pressed for a series of actions, including for the World Health Organizati­on to move diagnoses for transgende­r people from a chapter that now relates to “mental and behavioura­l disorders” to one for “conditions related to sexual health”.

They insisted that this would be a “historic” move to avoid reinforcin­g stigma in future.

They also called for physicians to be trained to understand the health needs of transgende­r people, and that health care for the community, such as access to feminising and masculinis­ing hormones, to be funded on the same basis as other health care.

Last year, the World Medical Associatio­n, which represents more than 10 million physicians, adopted a blueprint on how to treat transgende­r people in ways that respect their choices and rights and do not question their sexuality.

The guidelines recognise that being transgende­r is not a disorder and explicitly reject “coercive treatment or forced behaviour modificati­on”.

 ??  ?? Revellers wave flags during a gay pride parade in downtown Madrid, Spain, on July 2.
Revellers wave flags during a gay pride parade in downtown Madrid, Spain, on July 2.

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