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The Stories shared by Trans people in Ireland need to be heard, but reading them may be upsetting for Trans folks and their friends and family. Please mind yourself as you read and share this content. You can find help resources here.

Forced through four clinical reviews, waiting for six years, and I am afraid my treatment will be withdrawn.

28/11/2021

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I've been at my clinic for about six years or so. Back then, you only needed a referral from a clinical psychologist or psychiatrist to be taken into the clinic. I saw a clinical psychologist, who diagnosed and referred me there. I remember my first time there, feeling so worried and so scared, because I had heard the things that people had said about them. That wasn't my experience at all. After a year or so in their care, I was told that I could be referred for gender affirmation surgery with the NHS. I was blown away. I remember talking to people in support groups and hearing they had been waiting for years, and I couldn't understand why they had been waiting, and that I was being put forward. They told me to get a second opinion diagnosis from a psychiatrist, and that when I came back with this, I would be put straight on the waiting list. That didn't happen. 

The next time I saw them, I had my two diagnoses, and I had all the other documents they had asked for. In this meeting, after being promised I would be put on the waiting list for surgery, they told me that they were no longer working with the NHS, and that they had no plans to refer to any other clinic in Europe. I felt like the ground disappeared beneath me. I broke down sobbing in the office in front of one of the senior staff and this poor junior consultant who had no idea what to say or do. I just sat there in the room and bawled my eyes out for I don't even know how long. Nothing happened for another two years. 

​After two years, I got a phone call and was told that they were setting up a new waiting list that involved doing their own assessments in-house. I was confused, because I already had two diagnoses at this point, and I had been living full time for years. I asked why this was the case and was told they wanted to make it standardised, and it was actually really streamlined, and would be good in the long run. I was waiting another 18 months before I was contacted again and told I would have to see another psychiatrist and clinical psychologist.
These sessions affected me really badly. Even though I had been treated by them for years, even though they themselves were already providing medical care to me, even though I had been thriving because of my transition, I was required to undergo more assessments. 
trans health care protest sign held up in the sky
I had to sit in a room with someone for almost four hours while they poked and prodded at every detail of my childhood looking for reasons why I might be lying about being trans. Instead of asking me "how has your life improved since you transitioned?", or "what would surgery mean for you?", I was asked about how I masturbate, what kind of porn I watch, how I have sex with my partner, and how I feel when I get an erection.
I remember sitting in that room, crying, feeling such intense shame and pain, barely able to speak, and rather than have them acknowledge that, I was forced to explicitly and verbally describe all of this in detail to them. No matter the amount of pain, agony, and humiliation this caused me, this was the only way they would give me access to the healthcare I need.
Later that year, I had to do a second assessment with another professional. I sat in that room and felt terrified that they would try and pick my words apart. Even though I had been honest in my first session, I was scared they would try to talk me into contradicting myself. It felt like an interrogation. They made me feel as though I had committed a crime by being trans, and that they were the authority in place to stop me. Since then, I no longer trust medical or mental health professionals. This has fundamentally changed how I think about the people there to help and protect us. In these sessions I was not helped or protected. I was needlessly harmed for the sake of ticking boxes that didn't need to be ticked. When this was done, I was finally referred for surgery, and I've been waiting almost two years. 
I'm writing this now because not too long ago, I got a letter from the clinic I was on the waiting list with. They told me they have stopped doing gender affirming surgery, and I'm going to be transferred to another clinic. It's been five years since I was promised I'd be referred, I've had four separate diagnoses, and I've just been added to the back of another waiting list. I've wanted to talk openly about this, but I know what has happened to others that have spoken out. 
If I put my name to this, then I will be denied healthcare, I'll be taken off all waiting lists, and potentially threatened with litigation, as has happened with others in my position. There is such a gross and unjust power imbalance, where services can take our inalienable right to healthcare and hold us hostage to it.
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Content warning for stories that may be upsetting for trans people & their friends & family. A member of our community shares their experience of Trans health care in Ireland https://t.co/EcI2P1RJCW pic.twitter.com/Oi3luGMPG2

— TranScribe Health Coalition (@TranScribe_IRL) December 20, 2021
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My local GP refused to prescribe my HRT, even though I transitioned many decades ago abroad

28/11/2021

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I am an immigrant to Ireland and transitioned many years ago in a foreign country. When I moved to Ireland I had stockpiled about 2 years of medication because I'm used to having to work to find a GP who is at least willing to learn about trans healthcare. I was getting low on medication and went to my local GP. I was shocked at the treatment I received.
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I told her that I had transitioned many decades before and that I needed a post-operative dose of IM estradiol valerate. Instead of giving me a prescription, any prescription, for HRT that any post-menopausal woman would take, she refused and said I would have to go through the National Gender Service.
I told her the medical and mental health risks of me going off estradiol and the waitlists and she said without the NGS, she could and would do nothing. "So, let me get this right? You're willing to risk my health because the NGS hasn't evaluated me over something that happened 25 years ago?"

Her reply? "Yes"
At that point, knowing exactly the kind of treatment I'd get at the hands of the NGS, I began searching for some solution. Unable to find any source of the medication I have been on for years, I found someone who compounds the medication at a reasonable price. In her home.
So I began buying my injectables overseas and using the network of feminists who smuggled the abortion pill into Ireland in order to avail myself of a medication I've been on for close to three decades now.

I do this begrudgingly because after decades of transition, I refuse to allow my body to be gatekept by a national gender service more interested in punishing trans people than helping them.
I would like to not have to deal with this at my age. I would like to be able to go into a GP, tell them, I'm trans, here is the dosage I need of X and not have to go through the dehumanising treatment so common in Irish trans health "care". I would like the National Gender Service to actually implement an informed consent model instead of me having to repeatedly risk my health and wellbeing in order to avoid their mistreatment.

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CW for stories that may be upsetting for trans people & their friends & family.

A member of our community shares their experience of Trans health care in Ireland #TranScribeHealth. We know they’re not alone, here they share their story with us. https://t.co/TOl81aWbk7 pic.twitter.com/HSR5Zg3dlC

— TranScribe Health Coalition (@TranScribe_IRL) December 20, 2021
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After the NGS lost my file, and delayed my treatment, I then had to face invasive questions on my fertility.

27/11/2021

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trans flag in the sky.jpeg
I was referred to the NGS in 2017.
I did not hear from them until 2019, two years after referral, when I called to see if my referral was one of the ones lost and it was.

I received a letter in early 2021, nearly a year and a half after that, to give me the appointment for my initial assessment. This lasted 4.5 hours, with a ten-minute break during. It was at 9am and they did not take into account that I live 4.5 hours away from the hospital, and therefore had to drive up at 4:30am, and drive back home again after the appointment ended. It was a 620km round trip. When I called to confirm, I asked if it was possible to do it on video call due to the distance and COVID, and they said it was not.
The appointment was with a social worker and covered my mother's pregnancy with me, early childhood, family relationships, friendships, social life, education, and work. A lot of it was not relevant to my identity.
They did not like when I couldn't remember details, such as names of childhood friends or why we aren't still in contact. I don't think this is fair as no one has a perfect memory of everything that has ever happened to them, and the NGS expects us to remember every little detail. They spent some time talking about my relationship with my partner and family planning, mentioning their own children. They asked that he attend my second appointment.
image of a clock over a calendar
My second appointment took place three months later and lasted approx 30 minutes. I was told it would take 90, but it began approx 40 minutes late and I was on break from work and had to get back on time. They ran through what to expect when starting HRT and clarified a few things from my previous appointment. They gave me a vague estimate of when I would return for my third appointment and that it would basically entail picking up my prescription and a quick chat with them.
I received a letter two months after that stating my third appointment will take place towards the end of this year. This appointment is one week shy of four years since referral.

I received a call from the social worker shortly after this letter asking to arrange a family planning appointment with me and my partner over video call. They said this is something they like to do with couples who are long-term or live together.

During my initial appointment with them, I stated that I was in a long-term relationship and that we are living together. They asked about future children and I stated that we had discussed it, but it wasn't going to be soon, and that we had no solid plans about how to go ahead with this. She asked if I intended to freeze eggs before I start HRT and I said that I did not, that I was not compelled to have biological children, that I would not be carrying any children myself, and that I could not afford this anyway. They wrote this down and said they would support me if I chose to have biological children, which I again said I had no intention to.

In my second appointment, they brought this up and asked me my stance on my relationship and future children. I restated the above, and they said they are supportive of if I wished to have biological children, and informed me to not expect to have children at all any other way, as surrogacy is illegal, foreign adoption for a gay couple is very complicated, and Irish adoption is very difficult. I said that I had no solid plans for children yet as I am still quite young, and we never know what changes may occur by the time I may choose to have any. 

I had the family planning appointment with the social worker and my partner on video call. It lasted approx. 30 minutes and during that time they repeatedly asked me to consider "preserving my fertility", even though I stated I would not be doing this. My partner joined in on this after their third time asking to say that, like I had previously stated several times, this was not something we were considering. They insisted it was important to consider, and we both assured them we had discussed it and it would not be happening. They briefly mentioned the other options for having children, but spoke of them very negatively, and continued to bring the conversation back to the topic of biological children and me carrying a child, for the duration of the appointment. At the end, they asked if I had any questions, but when I asked them, they did not have any answers. Overall, it was thoroughly unhelpful and unnecessary, and I remain unsure as to why they insisted on it in the first place. 
They seemed to think that I was going to regret not "preserving my fertility" or having biological children, and did not listen to me repeat what I stated in my first two appointments, and in this one. 
Regarding COVID, I have had to attend all appointments thus far in person, and have not been permitted to wear a mask during. They said that both of these are because they want to be able to accurately read body language and facial expressions, and the secretary confirmed this on the phone.

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CW for stories that may be upsetting for trans people & their friends & family.

A member of our community shares their experience of Trans health care in Ireland #TranScribeHealth. We know they’re not alone, here they share their story with us.https://t.co/bqfXAk31wP pic.twitter.com/WyBM6LwWls

— TranScribe Health Coalition (@TranScribe_IRL) December 20, 2021
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A post shared by TranScribe Health (@transcribe_irl)

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    TranScribe

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