Citations:transpatient

Noun: "alternative form of trans patient"

 * 2005, R. Nick Gorton, Jamie Buth, & Dean Spade, Medical Therapy and Health Maintenance for Transgender Men: A Guide For Health Care Providers, page 76:
 * If transpatients experience sub-standard, insensitive, or frankly discriminatory care in an emergency department, providers should address this deficiency directly with the department or hospital administration.
 * 2012, Kate A. Richmond, Theodore Burnes, & Kate Carroll, "Lost in Trans-Lation: Interpreting Systems of Trauma for Transgender Clients", Traumatology, Volume 18, Issue 2, page 49:
 * Hong (2002) criticized insurers for inappropriately applying sex reassignment surgery (SRS) exclusion clauses to deny coverage to transpatients for care not related to transitioning.
 * 2014, Cécile A. Unger, "Care of the transgender patient: the role of the gynecologist", American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, January 2014, page 23:
 * Metabolic diseases also need to be considered in transpatients. Androgen suppression and estrogen substitution in male-to-female patients can lead to increases in visceral fat, which is associated with increases in triglyceride levels, insulin resistance, hepatic dysfunction, and elevated blood pressure.
 * 2016, Khadija Mitu, "Transgender Reproductive Choice and Fertility Preservation", AMA Journal of Ethics, Volume 18, Number 11, November 2016, page 1122:
 * For example, if clinicians believe that transpeople are unfit for parenting and should not be allowed to reproduce, this might prevent transpatients’ access to relevant information about fertility preservation.
 * 2017, Jodie M. Dewey & Melissa M. Gesbeck, "(Dys) Functional Diagnosing: Mental Health Diagnosis, Medicalization, and the Making of Transgender Patients", Humanity & Society, Volume 41, Issue 1:
 * A sample was compiled from the member list of WPATH, the only organization that identifies providers who specifically treat transpatients.
 * 2018, Atalia Israeli-Nevi, "Taking (my) Time: Temporality in transition, queer delays, and being (in the) present", in Current Critical Debates in the Field of Transsexual Studies: In Transition (ed. Oren Gozlan), unnumbered page:
 * The quickest way to thwart analytic work with transpatients is to use legally assigned, as opposed to chosen, names and pronouns.
 * 2018, Tiziana Jäggi et al., "Gender Minority Stress and Depressive Symptoms in Transitioned Swiss Transpersons", Hindawi: BioMed Research Journal, Volume 2018 (open-access journal link):
 * Without knowledge of these relationships and interactions, there is hardly enough preoperative counselling and education on transpatients, which in turn is likely to afect [sic] the degree of satisfaction with the completed surgery.
 * 2019, Hilary Mabel, Murat Altinay, & Cecile A. Ferrando, "The Role of the Ethicist in an Interdisciplinary Transgender Health Care Team", Transgender Health, Volume 4, Issue 1, page 136:
 * It should be noted that academic bioethicists and clinical ethicists alike continue to make important contributions to advancing queer bioethics, challenging notions of optimal care for transpatients, and uncovering the biases health care professionals may bring to the care of LGBT people.
 * 2020, Michael Hughes, Dmitriy Nikolavsky, & Natasha Ginzburg, "Transgender Surgery and Outcomes: Focused for the FPMRS Provider", Female Pelvic Medicine & Reconstructive Surgery, Volume 26, Issue 4, April 2020:
 * As the body of literature surrounding surgical treatments for transpatients grows, the FPMRS surgeon will likely become a vital part of the care team.
 * 2020, Viji Sundaram & Evelyn Mok-Lin, "Fertility Preservation for the Transgender Individual", Current Obstetrics and Gynecology Reports, Volume 9, Issue 3, September 2020, page 132:
 * When further subanalyses were performed between transpatients with prior T use and cisfemales, the number of oocytes retrieved trended insignificantly higher in the trans cohort.
 * 2021, Stefan Mohr, Linda N. Gygax, Sara Imboden, Michael D. Mueller, & Annette Kuhn, "Screening for HPV and dysplasia in transgender patients: Do we need it?", European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, Volume 260, May 2021, page 181:
 * While their risk factors do not differ from the general population for most diseases, transpatients face many barriers when it comes to basic health needs [2,8].
 * While their risk factors do not differ from the general population for most diseases, transpatients face many barriers when it comes to basic health needs [2,8].