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More Transgender Kids Seeking Help, Getting Treatment

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Category : Latest News, Trans Youth

When Aidan Key was a little girl, he didn’t realize he had gender identity issues. He simply knew something was off.

“I didn’t necessarily become aware that I was trapped in the wrong body,” says the 49-year-old Bellingham, Wash., native who had gender reassignment surgery at the age of 33. “I became aware that people didn’t perceive me as I felt myself to be. It was just odd to me to have to wear a dress the first day of kindergarten. It didn’t make sense.”

Today, Key might have received counseling — and perhaps even puberty blocking drugs — at one of a handful of U.S. clinics designed to help adolescents with what’s now called gender identity disorder or GID. The psychological diagnosis is used to describe a male or female who feels a strong identification with the opposite sex and experiences considerable distress because of their actual sex (the word “disorder” refers to the distress the person feels, not the fact that they identify with another gender).

According to reports published Monday in the medical journal Pediatrics, a small but growing number of teens and even younger children who think they were born the wrong sex are now getting support from parents and from doctors who give them treatments that could eventually help them change their sex.

Some estimates say about 1 in 10,000 children may have GID, Dr. Norman Spack, author of one of three reports published Monday and director of one of the nation’s first gender identity medical clinics, at Children’s Hospital Boston told the Associated Press. And that number does appear to be on the rise, experts say.

The number of people treated at Spack’s Gender Management Service clinic, also known as GeMS, which was the focus of a study, increased fourfold between January 1998 and February 2010. The clinic now averages about 19 patients each year, compared with about four per year treated for gender issues at the hospital in the late 1990s.

While many children can take part in nonconforming gender activities without issue — little boys playing princess, for instance — those with GID can experience a host of psychological problems, especially with the onset of puberty.

“It’s devastating to them,” says Dr. Scott Leibowitz, a child and adolescent psychiatrist at GeMS clinic in Boston.

Those who don’t get support in the form of counseling or medical treatment can be at high risk for behavior and emotional problems, the study found. Of the 97 patients younger than 21 years old in the study who met the criteria for GID, 44.3 percent had a history of significant psychiatric problems, including 20.6 percent who reported self-mutilation and 9.3 percent who attempted suicide. The youngest in the study was age 4.

Laura Edwards-Leeper, a psychologist specializing in youth gender issues at Seattle’s Children’s Hospital and co-author of the Pediatrics study, says at her hospital, “more and more people are banging down the doors to get in. I’m guessing in part this is due to media attention and people becoming a bit more accepting about it. Parents are becoming more open to the possibility and willing to get help for their kids.”

Unfortunately, some parents who seek help for their child through traditional channels – such as the family pediatrician – can come away feeling judged.

“I’ve heard many, many stories of adults and families being turned away with a stern lecture about their parenting or their choices,” says Key, director of Gender Diversity, an education, support and training organization committed to increasing awareness about gender variations. “It can often be viewed as a moral issue.”

Support from parents doesn’t always exist either, says Key. ”The response varies so much,” he says. “Some parents will tell the kids ‘No, you’re really a boy. No, those are girl toys. You don’t want that.’ They try to get the child not to engage in these activities because they know it’s not accepted by society, they know the child will be teased. I try to think they have the best intentions.”

Sometimes, the response of parents — or others — can be quite damaging. A related study of childhood abuse in the current issue of Pediatrics found gender nonconformity before age 11 was a risk indicator for physical, sexual, and psychological abuse in childhood as well as probable PTSD.

Chromosomal variations?
Key says there are many theories about why some people have GID but research seems to point to chromosomal variations, i.e., “intersex conditions,” such as a female with XY chromosomes instead of XX chromosomes. Another theory has to do with the way a particular person’s brain is mapped. ”A person may have a brain that is more oriented towards male and their body is female,” he says. “There’s been some preliminary research that supports that. But the verdict is still out. They need to do more research on it.” As for what parents should do if their child starts acting in a gender nonconforming way, Key advises ongoing communication and conversations. ”Ask them, ‘Do you just want to wear dresses or do you feel like you’re a girl?’” he says. “Sometimes a boy who just wants to wear dresses is just a boy who wants to wear dresses.”

When little kids speak up and tell their parents “I have the body of a boy but the heart and mind of a girl,” though, parents should take note and decide how they want to handle it, he says.

At the GeMS clinic in Boston, a team of psychiatrists, psychologists, endocrinologists, and pediatricians provide tools to help adolescents navigate the choppy social and psychological waters of gender identity.

“As non-transgender individuals, we take for granted how easy life is when our mind and our body are congruent with each other,” says Leibowitz. “Clinicians and pediatricians need to understand what gender nonconformity and gender dysphoria mean for a specific individuals and to know there are options out there that will profoundly improve their quality of life.”

But even kids who have emotional support can become extremely distressed when puberty hits and their body begins to change into that of a stranger, says Leibowitz.

Learning to fit in
Key says as a child, he had questions that grew sharper as he got older about where he fit in.

“I remember once when I was 9 observing all the families in the lobby at church and realizing that I was supposed to grow up and get married and have a family,” he says. “I remember thinking ‘I don’t mind getting married and having a family, but I don’t want to be the wife. I want to be the husband.”
Key says he received a lot of support from his mother, step-father and identical twin sister, Brenda.

“My family was very encouraging of nontraditional female activities,” he says. “I was aware that society expected something different from me but since my family said ‘We don’t care about that,’ I accepted that and said ‘It’s society’s problem, not my problem.’”

Key says he had a couple of boyfriends in high school but by age 19, realized he was attracted to women and began to identify as a lesbian. Over the years, though, he came to realize that that wasn’t quite right, either.

“It was challenging,” he says. “I was getting all this support to be whatever type of woman I wanted to be, but no one asked what if being a woman wasn’t the right part. That was a fixed situation. There was nothing to be done about it.”
Today, at the GeMS clinic in Boston, young children and their families get psychological counseling and are monitored until the first signs of puberty emerge, usually around age 11 or 12. Then children are given puberty-blocking drugs, in monthly $1,000 injections or implants imbedded in the arm. Being able to temporarily push the pause button on puberty (the drug’s effect are completely reversible) is extremely helpful, says Edwards-Leeper. The idea is to give these children time to mature emotionally and make sure they want to proceed with a permanent sex change.

“By stopping puberty early on, a boy won’t grow as tall, his facial hair won’t come in, his Adam’s apple won’t develop,” she says. “All the things that make it difficult for adult transgender people to pass are eliminated. The quality of life for transgender people who have been fortunate enough to receive puberty blocking medication is so much better.”

Kids will more easily pass as the opposite gender, and require less drastic treatment later, if drug treatment starts early, Spack said. For example, boys switching to girls will develop breasts and girls transitioning to boys will be flat-chested if puberty is blocked and sex-hormones started soon enough, Spack said.

While many of the patients at the GeMS clinic included in the study were too old for puberty blocking medications, two-thirds did go on to receive cross-sex hormone therapy (i.e., testosterone for women and estrogen for men), which can be a precursor to sexual reassignment surgery. Only one of the 97 in the study opted out of permanent treatment, Spack says.

Not all adolescents with GID opt for the surgery when they reach the age of consent, though, says Leibowitz. “It’s very individualized and it’s really a private issue. It also isn’t covered by insurance and can cost $20,000,” he says. “For some people, that might not be a necessary thing.”

Key, now married, says his surgery was not only necessary, but a “no brainer.”
“Once I had a conscious acknowledgment that I was transgender, it was simply a matter of logistics,” he says. “I started saving money. One of the most amazing feelings I ever had was being on a beach without my shirt on and being male and feeling like ‘Finally, this is what I’m supposed to feel like.’ Normal, natural and right. And about time.”

By Diane Mapes

Rajee on Dr. Phil: Silicone Disaster

Category : Transgender

Rajee was recently interviewed by Dr. Phil on “Cosmetic Surgery Disasters” regarding illegal and toxic silicone injections. She has come forth speaking out as a victim and has decided to share her story with the intention of helping others.


In The Life: Beauty on the Black Market

Category : Transgender

How far would you go to enhance your feminine appearance? In The Life: Beauty on the Black Market explains the risks.


Meet Jazz: A Recent Guest on The Rosie Show

Category : Latest News, Trans Youth

Meet Jazz
OWN viewers will meet a little girl whose courage will blow you away. Born a boy, Jazz says she always knew she was meant to be a girl. Get to know Jazz and her mom, Jeanette, and learn more about their inspiring journey of acceptance and what it really means to live your truth.

For more info, visit transkidspurplerainbow.org

USF to offer trans students to room with either sex!

Category : Latest News, Trans Youth

USF to offer transgender students option to room with either sex

By Kim Wilmath, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Thursday, July 7, 2011

TAMPA — A transgender student made University of South Florida officials stop and think.

Frustrated by a hostile housing experience, Taylor McCue wanted USF to join the growing number of colleges across the country — like Rutgers and Harvard — now offering students the option to live with anyone of any gender.

Couldn’t USF do the same?

Yes, it turns out, and it is. Today the university goes beyond what other universities in Florida typically do with transgender students, by actively offering them the chance to live alone or with a friend of any gender. They can also live with a random roommate without being outed. At other schools, the burden to ask for special treatment is often on the student.

This is just USF’s first step.

In the spring, the school will launch a pilot program offering several gender-neutral dorm rooms, where anybody of any gender can live with anybody else.

USF believes it’s the first in Florida to do that. The test program will offer eight to 10 spots for students who want to live with another student of a different gender.

The students will have to already know their preferred roommates. Rooming with romantic partners will be discouraged. And as far as USF is concerned, parents won’t have a say in the decision, just like they don’t have the right to be notified about students’ grades.

School officials say the campus will still be dominated by traditional dorms. But “we feel passionately about making USF a complete living and learning environment,” said spokesman Michael Hoad.

In the end, officials hope McCue’s ordeal with dorm mates — “They hated me, and I hated them.” — won’t be repeated.

• • •

There are more than 75 college campuses across the country with gender-neutral housing options. That’s up from about 50 last year, according to the Transgender Law and Policy Institute.

“In just about every place that’s created gender-neutral housing, they’ve had no problem filling it,” said Genny Beemyn, director of the Stonewall Center at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and a board member at that institute.

Some schools, like Harvard, provide gender-neutral housing to any students who identify as transgender. Others, including Warren Wilson College in North Carolina, Oberlin College in Ohio and Yale University in Connecticut, exclude first-year students from that option.

The changes, like the one USF is rolling out, will affect more than just housing, Beemyn said.

“It requires a reconsideration of the whole college environment.”

• • •

McCue never intended to be an advocate.

The soft-spoken psychology major from Clearwater wanted to transition quietly, privately. At the time, USF’s housing application only had two gender boxes, male and female. With Mom staring over a shoulder, McCue, who declined to share the first name given by his parents, chose male. It was the sex he was born with, the gender his family recognized.

McCue hoped for the best.

So much for that. “Misogyny and homophobia,” is the way McCue describes the ensuing roommate drama.

McCue hadn’t begun taking female hormones yet, but guys on the floor constantly asked about McCue’s sexuality, cracked jokes and called names. McCue complained to a residence hall adviser.

Nothing changed.

“Why did I have to go through this?” McCue asked USF official after USF official. Finally, someone said, “You know, Dorie Paine likes to ruffle feathers.”

• • •

Paine, USF’s housing director, said her office had already been thinking about exploring gender-neutral options when McCue came to her.

“Taylor helped us see that need in a different way,” Paine said.

Though often lumped together in campus organizations with gays or lesbians, transgender students have much different challenges. Because society — and by extension, college campuses — isn’t generally equipped to deal with anything other than male or female, transgender students often have to choose or be left out. Think: sororities and fraternities, sports teams, bathrooms, even pronouns.

USF doesn’t know how many transgender students are on campus. But Paine said she’s already had one transitioning student this summer request an alternate housing option.

She knows there could be some backlash from those who don’t accept the transgender lifestyle, but that’s not a good enough reason for USF to reconsider what it’s doing.

“It’s about making our students comfortable,” Paine said. “It someone’s not okay with it, that’s unfortunate.”

• • •

 It’s too late for McCue. Now a senior, McCue has five months left on an off-campus apartment.

But in the fall, maybe there will be a kid standing in the housing office with a life-changing secret and, for the first time, a box to check.

Times news researcher John Martin contributed to this report. Reach Kim Wilmath at[email protected] or (813) 226-3337.

http://www.tampabay.com/news/education/college/usf-to-offer-transgender-students-option-to-room-with-either-sex/1179104

Feel Good About Yourself

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Category : Latest News, News Around The Nation


AIDS Issues Update: C2EA: Features:

Trans Actress Goes from AIDS Street Outreach to Indie Darling

Formerly homeless actress Harmony Santana is a transgender activist and one of the stars of the new film “Gun Hill Road.”

Everybody is talking about her.

A year ago, Harmony Santana was 19, living in transitional housing in Harlem, and working as a peer educator at Bronx AIDS Services. She was still living as a boy and thinking about going into the medical field.

Now, she’s starring as Michael/Vanessa in Gun Hill Road, a drama set in the Bronx about an ex-convict who returns from prison to discover his son, Michael, is transitioning into a woman. The film debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in January; created a buzz at Newfest in July; and opened in New York City on Friday.

Directed by Rashaad Ernesto Green, Gun Hill Road provides a rare cinematic glimpse into the complex relationship between a transgender person and her family. What’s even rarer is that one of the lead actors, Santana, is also transitioning in real life and living many of the experiences seen on screen.

For Santana, there’s a connection between her work handing out condoms and giving HIV tests and her new visibility on the red carpet (and in the pages of The New York Times). She’s always been a loud, proud advocate for the underserved: marching with friends against homelessness, in favor of gay marriage, and for programs for transgender youth. Her film debut simply allows her to use her voice to reach a broader audience.

“After I got the part . . . I read the script, and I cried,” she said last week after a discussion about the movie hosted by the LGBT Community Center in Manhattan. “And I was just like, ‘I really want to do this.’ You know, I’m this activist person, and I want to change things, so I accepted the role, because I really wanted to change how people view transgender [people].”

Like many transgender teens, Santana has traveled a rocky road to get where she is today. She became homeless after high school because her mother’s live-in boyfriend wouldn’t accept her as gay. She bounced between friends’ places; lived in a shelter; struggled for money; and finally found a home at Green Chimneys, a transitional housing program for LGBT youth, a place she still lives.

AIDS prevention work became her passion because she found an accepting community at Bronx AIDS Services—and because she realized that so many of her transgender friends were at risk of contracting HIV. “I fell in love with that place,” she said. “I felt like I could be myself there, and I felt like I wanted to give back. I was like, ‘I want to be one of these people.’ And that’s what I was doing until Rashaad found me.”

Based on the reaction to the film so far—from critics, from the 100-plus people who packed the LGBT Community Center last week—Santana has stepped into a role many were hungry to see on the screen. At least half a dozen teens rose during the discussion to thank her for her performance. Some cried. “I forgot to breathe while watching it,” gushed one woman.

So what’s next for Santana? She’s filmed two more movies and has a third lined up.

She’s also pledged to continue fighting from the streets. For years, Housing Works has fought for passage of the Gender Expression Nondiscrimination Act, legislation that would make it illegal to discriminate against transgender people in areas such as housing, employment and education. When Santana learned about GENDA (from the Update blogger), she jumped at the chance to join our effort.

“If I can save a life,” she said. “Then I’ll put my life out there.”

Transgender Youth Specific Statistics

Category : Trans Youth

33% of transgender youth have attempted suicide

55% of transgender youth report being physically attacked

74% of transgender youth reported being sexually harassed at school,

90% of transgender youth reported feeling unsafe at school because of their gender expression

78% reported having been verbally harassed

48% reported having been victims of assault, including assault with a weapon, sexual assault or rape

CDC reports regarding Transgender youth state, that such victimization, in turn, is associated with HIV risk behaviors. Youth who had been threatened or bullied at school were more likely to have been diagnosed with an STD, injected drugs, had more than four sex partners, and not used a condom the last time they had sexual intercourse than those who had not been threatened or bullied at school.

Nine out of ten transgender youth feel unsafe in school because of gender identity or expression. The rate of drop out suicide and homelessness is disproportionately high for our transgender youth.
_____________________________________________________

I’m lonely and I have no friends because they hate me.

Sometimes I want to kill myself because of how cold my heart is. I sometimes dislike school because my friends act like I’m not even with them. Life Sucks!!!!!!!!! I wish everyone would treat me with peace and respect. Peace, oh how I love the way the word flows. I’m closing my eyes and peace is drifting in the vast sky. Children laughing and playing with me and adults working together. I wish that it’s impossible to be horrid. That would be perfect but I try not to get my hopes up because no one is ever going to treat me properly. I try to be nice but no one cares. Life isn’t fair!

SO BE KIND TO ME ( age 9)

Exciting News from Miami-Dade County

Category : Trans Youth

4th Largest School District in the Nation Adds Gender Identity to Anti-Bullying Policy Miami-Dade County Public Schools, the fourth largest school district in the nation with 345,000 students, has added gender identity to its harassment and bullying ordinance. Equality Florida and the members of our Florida Safe Schools Coalition have worked for more than a decade to expand these protections in Miami and across our state.

With this latest victory, 1.55 million students, nearly 60% of Florida’s school population, are now protected from bullying based on sexual orientation and gender identity – ranking Florida 4th in the nation for the number of students with LGBT protections

 

The Broward County School Board just voted to add “gender identity and expression” to the district’s non-discrimination policy.

Category : Trans Youth

UPDATE – Tuesday – March 1, 2011

Great News! The Broward County School Board just voted to add “gender identity and expression” to the district’s non-discrimination policy.
Today’s expansion of the non-discrimination policy means that students, faculty and all school district employees will be protected from any form of gender-based discrimination.

With 256,000 students, Broward is now the largest school district in Florida to add “gender identity and expression” to its non-discrimination protections.

For over a year, Equality Florida has been part of a Broward-based coalition effort, led by Michael Emanuel Rajner, member of the Broward County Schools Diversity Committee, to expand gender identity and expression protections. Broward County School Board member Jennifer Gottlieb provided leadership on the board to shepherd in the new policy.

Broward has a long history of protecting LGBT students and was one of the first schools in the state to add gender identity and expression to its anti-bullying policy. In fact, Broward’s anti-bullying policy served as the sample policy for districts across the state when the anti-bullying law passed in 2008.

http://eqfl.org/browardschools