Difference between revisions of "transgender/surgery/MtF/lower"

from HTYP, the free directory anyone can edit if they can prove to me that they're not a spambot
< transgender‎ | surgery‎ | MtF
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(→‎Surgeons: retired; regrets)
(→‎Regrets: one more type)
Line 20: Line 20:
 
* The patient is coerced into surgery as a condition for receiving other services or supplies necessary for transitioning (e.g. hormones)
 
* The patient is coerced into surgery as a condition for receiving other services or supplies necessary for transitioning (e.g. hormones)
 
* The patient has mistaken ideas about the benefits or risks of surgery, and is allowed to proceed without first being fully informed (this is why the "informed" part of [[informed consent]] is crucial)
 
* The patient has mistaken ideas about the benefits or risks of surgery, and is allowed to proceed without first being fully informed (this is why the "informed" part of [[informed consent]] is crucial)
* The surgery goes badly (seems to be very rare).
+
* The surgery goes badly (seems to be very rare),
 +
* The surgery results in reduced genital sensation, which sometimes leads to regret.
  
 
===links===
 
===links===

Revision as of 19:39, 5 September 2016

About

"Bottom" surgery for male-to-female (MtF) transition can refer to vaginoplasty, orchiectomy, penectomy, and/or labiaplasty. (Yes, there needs to be more explanation of these...)

Surgeons

retired

  • Stanley Biber (Wikipedia) (d.2006) - Trinidad, CO; mentor to Marci Bowers

Regrets

Much is made about post-surgical regret, but as far as I can tell this happens only for one of the following reasons:

  • The patient is coerced into surgery as a condition for receiving other services or supplies necessary for transitioning (e.g. hormones)
  • The patient has mistaken ideas about the benefits or risks of surgery, and is allowed to proceed without first being fully informed (this is why the "informed" part of informed consent is crucial)
  • The surgery goes badly (seems to be very rare),
  • The surgery results in reduced genital sensation, which sometimes leads to regret.

links

  • A WARNING FOR THOSE CONSIDERING MtF SRS: transitioning for the wrong reasons (by Lynn Conway, a successful post-op transwoman): discusses Renée Richards, Dani Bunten Berry, Sandra MacDougall, Samantha Kane
  • There was also a ~2010 post by a transwoman whose surgery, though genuinely wanted and for the right reasons, had gone poorly (her lower intestine was nicked by a surgical retractor) and she was stuck wearing a colostomy bag, and without a properly-shaped neovagina. I had the link in a tab somewhere but can't find it at the moment. --Woozle (talk) 15:37, 5 September 2016 (EDT)

Directories

More Info

Questions to Ask

(Where possible, get answers from web site first; perhaps confirm with surgeon.)

  • Do you have a fixed price for the procedure? If not, can you estimate the likely cost?
  • How long is your wait-list, at present, for a surgery appointment?
  • How soon could I get an appointment for an initial consultation?
  • When did you first start doing vaginoplasty?
  • Approximately how many vaginoplasties have you performed?
  • Have any of your vaginoplasty patients reported unexpected issues?
  • Do you prefer to do vaginoplasty in a single operation, or labia and clitoral hood separately?