These are redacted scans of my testosterone letter from May 2017 (I started T in June 2017), my top surgery letter from September 2017 (I got top surgery in October 2017), and my hysterectomy letter from May 2018 (I’m getting a hysto in July 2018) if anyone is curious about how they can look. Click on the image to make it larger.
The recommended content of the referral letter for feminizing/masculinizing hormone therapy is as follows:
- The client’s general identifying characteristics
- Results of the client’s psychosocial assessment, including any diagnoses
- The duration of the referring health professional’s relationship with the client, including the type of evaluation and therapy or counseling to date
- An explanation that the criteria for hormone therapy have been met, and a brief description of the clinical rationale for supporting the client’s request for hormone therapy
- A statement about the fact that informed consent has been obtained from the patient
- A statement that the referring health professional is available for coordination of care and welcomes a phone call to establish this. For providers working within a multidisciplinary specialty team, a letter may not be necessary, rather, the assessment and recommendation can be documented in the patient’s chart.
The recommended content of the referral letters for surgery is as follows:
- The client’s general identifying characteristics;
- Results of the client’s psychosocial assessment, including any diagnoses;
- The duration of the mental health professional’s relationship with the client, including the type of evaluation and therapy or counseling to date;
- An explanation that the criteria for surgery have been met, and a brief description of the clinical rationale for supporting the patient’s request for surgery;
- A statement about the fact that informed consent has been obtained from the patient;
- A statement that the mental health professional is available for coordination of care and welcomes a phone call to establish this. For providers working within a multidisciplinary specialty team, a letter may not be necessary, rather, the assessment and recommendation can be documented in the patient’s chart.
Tag: trans ref
If you’re trans and you use a packer or breastforms on a day to day basis, do not use them at the airport. The body scanners that the TSA uses look for variations from a “male” or “female” body, so if you have bulges where they ‘shouldn’t’ be, you will get the patdown.
signal boost this, please.
there’s a page on the TSA’s website that has tips and info specifically for trans travelers!! I can’t remember everything it has on it but one of the big things is that if you get flagged for a patdown or other screening you can have it done in private if you so request 🙂 🙂
Here is that page for reference 🙂
https://www.tsa.gov/transgender-passengers
btw the link above is broken so use this one ^