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Trans Medicine
Trans Medicine: The Emergence and Practice of Treating Gender | Stef M. Shuster
5 posts | 2 read | 6 to read
"stef shuster traces the development of trans medicine since the 1950s to modern medicine to show how providers create and use scientific and medical evidence to "treat" a gender identity. But, why do medical providers have authority over gender? And, what might the consequences of how providers make decisions in trans medicine teach us about medicine in general? Using historical documents, interviews with physicians and therapists, and observations of health conferences, Trans Medicine offers a rare opportunity to understand how providers make decisions given widespread uncertainty while facing challenges to their expertise. In the process of negotiating these challenges in the "treatment" of gender, providers have acquired authority not only in this medical area, but over gender itself"--
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sebrittainclark
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Pickpick

3/5

This is a really interesting, academic look at the history of trans medicine beginning in the 1950s. It continues to present day to show the ways in which a historical lack of information and data continues to affect the medical care of trans people today.

I read more than half, so I'm not callings this one a DNF, but it ended up being more academic than I was really hoping for.

Sherlockmarie Looks interesting. 4y
40 likes3 stack adds1 comment
blurb
sebrittainclark
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1. Rabbits by Terry Miles, Trans Medicine by stef m. shuster, and Tokyo Ever After by Emiko Jean

2. This Poison Heart by Kalynn Bayron

3. The Guncle by Steven Rowley

#weekendreads @rachelsbrittain

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sebrittainclark
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1. Trans Medicine by Stef M. Shuster, Black Sci-fi Short Stories by Tia Ross, and Tokyo Ever After by Emiko Jean

2. One Last Stop by Casey McQuistin

3. An Atlas of Extinct Countries by Gideon Defoe

#weekendreads @rachelsbrittain

28 likes1 stack add
review
TiminCalifornia
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Pickpick

A look at how doctors, historically and today, understand their trans patients, their role in providing care, their obligations to their professional standards, oaths, and statutory laws, and how they coalesce all this into a specific decision regarding care of a trans patient/client. Shuster is an academic but the writing was accessible for a layperson such as myself, infused with just enough academic-style to make me feel smart.

#queer #lgbtq

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TiminCalifornia
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“..many of these providers became sensitive to the needs of their trans patients and gained a growing awareness of how deeply flawed the structure of trans medicine is for not only their trans patients but also medical providers.”

Really enjoying this well researched, sensitively written overview of the current state of gender affirming medicine in the U.S.

29 likes2 stack adds