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Friday, October 25, 2013

Transgender Americans Face Complicated Medical Problems, Issues Accessing Care

When it comes to clinics for women’s health, who counts as a woman? When it comes to breast cancer screenings funded by the CDC, there’s a requirement that advocates for transgender Americans find discriminatory and problematic: patients must be “born as women,” excluding women who were born as men but who need services like mammograms. Routine health care can become very complicated, and accessing public health services is too.

ProPublica presents to us the case of a 62-year-old Colorado woman who had a common enough problem for women in late middle age: A fast-growing lump in her chest and no health insurance. She qualified for a state-run women’s health services program that funds mammograms for low-income people. Great! Except funding for the program comes from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and 1990′s Breast and Cervical Cancer Mortality Prevention Act restricts these funds to people who were identified as female at birth.

To state the obvious, women who are transgender can get breast cancer. All humans can get breast cancer, actually, and should be aware of unusual changes in their chest tissue.


6 comments:

Anonymous said...

F them like the straight people.

Anonymous said...

Freaks!

Anonymous said...

They ruined their body now I don't need to pay for their medical problems.

Anonymous said...

Since they have enough money to change sexes, they have enough to cover the maintenance. If they don't, well, their "experiment" failed. Goodbye!

Anonymous said...

No sympathy.

Anonymous said...

So what happens when a straight man has a lump? Do they do a mammogram on him? The doctor has to investigate it somehow. If so, the transgender person should just be considered a male (which is what he was born). A breast lump is a breast lump no matter who has it.