Citations:transmedicalist

uses

 * 2018, C. M. Zhang, Biopolitical and Necropolitical Constructions of the Incarcerated Trans Body, in Colum. J. Gender & L.:
 * Indeed, the very notion of care takes a fundamentally transmedicalist view of altering one's hormonal makeup, secondary sex characteristics, genitalia, etc., which marks them as categorically different from other modes of body modification
 * 2019, D Tanner, The body politic: The changing face of psychotherapy and transgender, in Psychotherapy and Politics International:
 * While “transmedicalists,” [sic] believe that only those who experience GD are transsexual/transgender, and that GD is a medical conditionthat requires corrective surgery, for many trans is an identity.
 * 2020, Ben Vincent, Non-Binary Genders: Navigating Communities, Identities, and Healthcare (ISBN 9781447351924), page 8:
 * positionality, though transmedicalists may emphasise the centrality of embodied dysphoria. That is, a person experiencing social dysphoria alone (discomfort with being positioned as a particular gendered subject, but ambivalence or happiness about the body) would not satisfy a transmedicalist understanding of trans, which ...
 * 2020, T. Augustaitis, Online Transgender Health Information Seeking: Facilitators, Barriers, and Future Directions, page 10:
 * Social media also gives transmedicalists (ie transmeds) a platform to spread hate speech and misinformation. Transmedicalists believe that trans people who do not have surgeries or go on hormones are not trans
 * 2020, S. L. Cavar, Enacting Transbutch: Queer Narratives Beyond Essentialism:
 * when they also have diagnosed gender dysphoria. Transmedicalists most often propagate the narrative
 * On the other sit transmedicalists, who advocate biomedical intervention to correct inherently “wrong" bodies in pursuit
 * 2020, E Campano, Online Shaming: Ethical Tools for Human-Computer Interaction Designers:
 * she included a 10 second clip voiced over by transsexual pornographic actor Buck Angel, whom some transgender rights activists criticize as a transmedicalist – that is to say, someone who believes that people who do not experience gender dysphoria, or undergo medical

mentions

 * 2018, Benjamin Vincent, Transgender Health: A Practitioner's Guide to Binary and Non-Binary Trans Patient Care, Jessica Kingsley Publishers (ISBN 9781784504755), page 126:
 * Some trans people claim that one is only trans if experiencing the need for a medical transition, because of gender dysphoria. These individuals and communities are sometimes known as transmedicalists, or truscum (Schmitt 2013).
 * 2019, Eris Young, They/Them/Their: A Guide to Nonbinary and Genderqueer Identities, Jessica Kingsley Publishers (ISBN 9781784508722), page 163:
 * There are some members of the binary trans community (commonly called transmedicalists, transfundamentalists or &#39;truscum&#39;), who think that having gender dysphoria is a prerequisite for being trans, and that people who don't experience it ...