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LGBTQ HEALTH: WHO, WHAT, WHERE
AND WHY WE SHOULD CARE
LAURA C. HEIN PHD, RN, FAAN
OBJECTIVES
• Introduce you to LGBTQ terminology
• Discuss historical and contemporary health concerns of
the LGBTQ community
• Discuss facilitators and barriers to health
• Present current legal and regulatory standards related
to LGBTQ health with recommended practice protocols
• Is your facility compliant?
DEFINITIONS
• Gay, Lesbian
• Exclusive physical and emotional attraction to members of one’s
own sex
• Bisexual
• Physical and emotional attraction to members of both sexes
• Transgender (gender identity)
• A person who feels his or her body is not the sex it should be,
regardless of transformational hormone or surgical status
• Cis-Gender
• A person whose gender identity matches their sex at birth
LGBTIQ
• MtF = Male-to-Female (she) transwoman
• Born with male anatomy, female gender
• FtM = Female-to-Male (he) transman
• Born with female anatomy, male gender
LGBTIQ
Transgender
(gender identity)
• Intersex
• The vogue term for hermaphrodite. People born with
the sexual characteristics of both sexes
• Questioning
• People who suspect they might be LGBT, but are not
yet certain
• Queer
• Inclusive term of the LGBTIQ community
• Unique paradigm
Definitions LGBTIQ
PREVALENCE - 9 MILLION LGBT PEOPLE IN THE U.S.
Homosexual (gay/lesbian is preferred term)
• 3.4% self-identify as LGBT (Gates & Newport 2012)
• 1 in 5 - 20.8% of males in the U.S. reported either
homosexual behavior or homosexual attraction
since age 15 (Sell, Wells & Wypij, 1995)
• 17% of women and 6% of men have engaged in same-sex
behavior. However, 7% of women and 4% of men identify
as gay or bisexual (Copen et al. 2016).
Remember there are 320 million people in the U.S.
TRANSGENDER POPULATION SIZE
• ~1.4 million adults self-identify as trans in
the U.S.
• Crissman et al. 2017; Flores et al., 2016; Meerwijk & Sevelius,
2017
GENDER NON-CONFORMITY OR GENDER
DYSPHORIA
GENDER NON-
CONFORMITY
• the extent to which a person’s
gender identity, role, or
expression differs from the
cultural norms prescribed for
people of a particular sex
(IOM, 2011 definition)
GENDER DYSPHORIA
• discomfort or distress that is
caused by a discrepancy
between a person’s gender
identity and that person’s sex
assigned at birth (and the
associated gender role and/or
primary and secondary sex
characteristics) (WPATH, 2011)
TRANSGENDER HEALTH – YOUTH
• Protections under Title VII and Title IX of the Civil
Rights Act. Affirmed by DOJ filing in G.G. v.
Gloucester County School Board (2015). Case on
appeal to SCOTUS. Oral arguments Feb. 2017.
“There is a public interest in ensuring that all
students, including transgender students, have
the opportunity to learn in an environment free
of sex discrimination.” (DOJ)
TRANSGENDER HEALTH –
RESTROOM ACCESS
• April 8, 2015 – EEOC has ruled that an
employers refusal to allow a transgender
employee access to restrooms consistent with
his or her gender is sex discrimination under
Title VII.
• EEOC case: Lusardi v. AMRDEC
WHAT ABOUT SCHOOL? TITLE IX
• Title IX protects students, faculty and
employees from sex discrimination in any
federally funded education program or
activity.
• However… schools are still not safe.
EARLY SOCIAL TRANSITION
• Child lives as gender that matches their identity
• Trial run - name, attire, social roles at school, in community
• Reversible
• Family decision whether to disclose to others or not
• Approx. 25% of children who were assessed for gender
dysphoria grew up to be cis-gender gay vs. transgender.
CHILDREN AND YOUTH
• EARLY medical and mental health
services
• Family support is critical to positive health outcomes
• Puberty experienced congruent with gender (delay
until sure)
• Reduces need for later medical interventions
• Prevents unwanted sex characteristics (i.e.
breasts)
• Decreases stress, anxiety, depression
REPARATIVE THERAPY
• = Efforts to change the sexual orientation or gender
identity
• Condemned by all mainstream professional
organizations as harmful including the APA, AMA, Am
Acad of Pediatrics, AAN, ISPN etc.
• Related to depression, anxiety and suicide
• George Rekers (prof emeritus from USC SOM) –
published case where he conducted reparative
therapy. This is what he did….
PUBERTY BLOCKING – GNRH
AGONISTS
• Ideally begun in Tanner 2 stage (early start of puberty).
• Can begin in Tanner 3-5 – goal is to stop puberty/
prevent secondary gender characteristics i.e. height,
breasts etc.
• GnRH Agonists - Leuprorelin; Triptorelin; Goserelin;
Histrelin implants
• Very expensive. Cost is between $500 and $1500 month.
• Insurance rarely covers this cost
• Effects are totally REVERSIBLE
IRREVERSIBLE HORMONE EFFECTS
• ESTROGEN
• Breast development
• Nipple enlargement
• Loss of erection
• Testicular atrophy
• ? sterility
• TESTOSTERONE
• Uterine atrophy
• Facial and body hair
• Deepened voice
• Clitoral enlargement
• ? sterility
FIRST DO NO HARM….
There is harm related to NOT intervening
• Suicide ~ 44%
• Depression
• Anxiety
• Homelessness
• ETOH, drug use
• Sex work
• HIV
OVERREPRESENTED HEALTH
PROBLEMS
• HIV/ AIDS
• Trauma/ Victimization
• Mental Health Concerns
• Addictions
• Is this because they’re LGBT? –or- because of the
context within which LGBT people must exist?
HIV/ AIDS
• A missing generation of gay men due to AIDS
• HIV+ the norm in some areas
• Homelessness/ poverty – survival sex
• Street hormones (trans)
TRAUMA/ VICTIMIZATION
• Parental abuse
• Increased prevalence of verbal and physical abuse and
heightened suicidal ideation among those who disclosed their
s.o. to their families
• Hate crimes
MENTAL HEALTH –
DEPRESSION & ANXIETY
Additional stress d/t image
management related to s.o./g.i.
• LGBT children often grow up in a
society that says that they should not
exist and/or should not act on their
feelings.
• These societal mores can be internalized =
internalized homophobia
DEPRESSION
• Prevalence of depression 17.2% higher than in U.S.
adult men in general
• Distress & depression associated w/:
• lack of a partner;
• not identifying as gay, queer, or homosexual;
• experiencing multiple episodes of antigay
violence in the previous 5 years; and
• very high levels of community alienation
Mills 2004
LGBT YOUTH VICTIMIZATION
• 25% of gay youth (16% lesbian) have been
threatened or injured with a weapon on school
property.
• 3x higher than hetero rate for boys; 4x higher than
hetero for girls.
• 13% gay (16% lesbian) youth didn’t go to school
because of safety issues (O’Malley, 2014)
• 3x the hetero rate
Sample was of YRBS HS students
MENTAL HEALTH - SUICIDE
• LGB youth = 30%
attempted suicide (double
the hetero rate)
• School bullying increased
the risk of suicide (Bouris et al,
2016)
TRANSGENDER SUICIDE
U.S. TRANS/GQ DATA
• 42% attempted
suicide
• Those who reported
moderate to severe
rejection by their
family were more
likely to attempt
suicide (OR 2.0 to 3.2
ADDICTIONS
• Young LGBT (most prevalent)
• Lesbian/ female Bi – principally ETOH
• Gay/ MtF Transgender –
• Ecstasy (and other Rave drugs)
• Risk = hyperthermia;
• Poppers (amyl nitrate) – enhanced
sexual experience
• Risk = an MI, priapism
Ecstacy: MDMA
CDC RECOMMENDATIONS FOR
SCHOOLS TO SUPPORT LGBTQ HEALTH
1. Identify “safe spaces”
2. Prohibit harassment and bullying
3. Facilitate access to health & psych providers not on school
property who are LGBTQ affirming
4. Encourage professional development on safety for all
students
5. Provide health education curricula with inclusive
terminology
Demisse et al., 2013
CASE 1
• A 15yo questioning female student presents to the school nurse
asking him to sponsor a Gay Straight Alliance (GSA) at their
school. The best school nurse answer:
A. “yes, of course I’ll sponsor a GSA”
B. “I’d like to but I’ll need to talk to the principal first”
C. “I think I’d like to talk to your parents first – we’ll be back in
touch”
D. “You really need to talk to our school psychologist about this”
SC CODE 59-32-30A(5)
LOCAL SCHOOL BOARDS TO IMPLEMENT COMPREHENSIVE
HEALTH EDUCATION PROGRAM; GUIDELINES AND
RESTRICTIONS
• (5) The program of instruction provided for in
this section may not include a discussion of
alternate sexual lifestyles from heterosexual
relationships including, but not limited to,
homosexual relationships except in the context
of instruction concerning sexually transmitted
diseases.
CASE 2
• 30yo transman who initiated social gender affirmation 5 years
ago, chest construction at 25yo, testosterone from 25-28yo. He
grew a beard and stopped taking T. Beard growth persisted. No
menstruation for 5 years. He would like the option to become
pregnant in the future because he wants children but has legal
concerns related to adoption. As the NP you first:
A. Conduct an exam and draw labs
B. Conduct an exam, draw labs and refer to endocrinology
C. Conduct an exam, draw labs and refer to GYN
YOUR PATIENT WANTS TO
TRANSITION – NOW WHAT?
1. Google “WPATH
Guidelines”
2. Refer to a Psych NP
or other mental
health provider
3. Start hormone
therapy
www.wpath.org
The pdf is free
RESEARCH ON HORMONES – IS IT
SAFE?
FTM
• No increase in CAD found in
876 FTM pts (Gooren, 200)
MTF
• Increased risk of CAD at
high doses.
• Increased risk of CA at low
doses
• If prior MI – PO estradiol
does not incr. or decr. risk
for further emboli
WPATH Standards of Care
The criteria for hormone therapy are as follows:
• Persistent, well-documented gender dysphoria;
• Capacity to make a fully informed decision and
to consent for treatment;
• Age of majority in a given country (if younger,
follow the Standards of Care outlined in section
VI);
• If significant medical or mental health concerns
are present, they must be reasonably well
controlled
HORMONES FTM - OPTIONS
• Injectable Testosterone
• Testosterone Enanthate or Cypionate 100-200 mg IM q 2 wks (20 -22g x 1 ½”
needles)
• Transdermal Testosterone
• Androderm TTS 2-8mg daily
• Topical testosterone gels in packets and pumps, multiple formulations (Testim,
Androgel) 5 to 10 gm (50 to 100 mg of testosterone) applied topically daily
• Axiron 2% pump gel for axillary application 1 pump to each axilla daily
• Testosterone Pellet
• Testopel- implant 6-10 pellets q 3 to 6 months
• Buccal Testosterone
• Striant 30 mg buccal system q 12 hours
Rx information taken from
Cavanaugh 2016
TESTOSTERONE
RISKS
•  HDL 
triglycerites
•  insulin resistance
•  sleep apnea
• Infertility
• Mental health
changes
MONITORING
• Baseline CBC, CMP, lipids,
renal panel, fasting
glucose
• 3 month, then Q 6-12 mo
• CBC, liver enzymes,
serum testosterone
• Q 6-12 mo
• Lipid profile, HbA1c
HORMONES MTF OPTIONS
• Oral Estrogen
• Estradiol (estrace) 2-6mg PO or SL daily(can be divided into BID dosing)
• Premarin (conjugated estrogens) 1.25-10mg PO daily (can be divided into BID dosing)
• Transdermal estrogen (preferred for 40yo)
• Estradiol patch 0.1-0.4mg twice weekly
• Injectable Estrogens [NOTE – shortage right now]
• Estradiol valerate5-20mg IM q2 weeks
• Estradiol cypionate2-10mg IM weekly
• Antiandrogens
• Spironolactone (aldactone) 50-400mg PO daily (can be divided into BID dosing)
• Finasteride (Proscar) 2.5-5mg PO daily
• Progestins – increase breast development, but CV risk, weight gain &
depression
MTF – ESTROGEN
RISKS
• CAD weight triglycerides
• libido glucose tolerance
• Gallbladder ds
• Infertility
• Mental health changes
• Spronolactone carries risks of
hypotension, hyperkalemia
and renal insufficiency
MONITORING
• Baseline – CBC, CMP, lipids,
renal, fasting glucose,
testosterone, prolactin
• 6mo. – serum testosterone &
estradiol
• If on spironolactone
• 1 mo. then 3mo. – lipids, lytes,
creatinine, glucose
MTF SURGICAL OPTIONS (~30%)
• Removal of scrotum & penis
• Creation of vagina, labia, clitoris
& mons
• Breast augmentation
• Tracheal shave
• Facial feminization
• Brow
• nose
Taken from Schechter 2017 p.37
FTM SURGICAL OPTIONS (~30%)
• Phalloplasty with
urethral reconstruction
& creation of scrotum
(uncommon)
• Chest reconstruction
STAGED SURGERIES
• Genital FtM
• Tissue removal from
donor site
• Urethral reconstruction
• Implant prosthesis
• Chest Contouring FtM
• Mastectomy
• Revision of prior surgery
to decrease scarring and
remove arm flaps
YOU’RE AN ORG LEADER/ MANAGER
WHAT CAN YOU DO?
• Know the law and standards related to LGBTQ
patients
• Train your staff – receptionist to CNO
• Work on the culture of your organization to
make it safe.
• The patient-centered communication standards
for Hospitals (CAMH).
• Elements of performance 28 and 29 under
RI.01.01.01, require access to a support person
and non-discrimination of care.
The Joint Commission: Advancing Effective Communication, Cultural Competence, and Patient- and FamilyCentered Care
for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Community: A Field Guide. Oak Brook, IL, Oct. 2011.
LGBTFieldGuide.pdf.
Joint Commission Standards (2011)
RI.01.01.01 ELEMENT 29
“No longer considered to be simply a patient’s
right, effective communication is now accepted
as an essential component of quality care and
patient safety.”
HOSPITAL VISITATION
• January 2010 Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS) regulation required
hospitals to permit patients to designate
visitors & prohibits discrimination in
visitation based on so/gi. 42 C.F.R. §
482.13
• Compliance with requirements for Medicare Conditions
of Participation (CoPs)
HOSPITAL VISITATION
• July 2011 Joint Commission standard – prohibition
on discrimination based on orientation or gender
identity.
• “Prohibit discrimination based on age, race,
ethnicity, religion, culture, language, physical or
mental disability, socioeconomic status, sex,
sexual orientation, and gender identity or
expression.” RI.01.01.01 EP29 (p.48 of Joint
Commission LGBT doc).
CMS – EQUAL COVERAGE TO CARE IN
THE SAME NURSING HOME AS A
SPOUSE
• Aug. 29, 2013 - CMS announced the guarantee
of Medicare coverage applies to ALL spouses
regardless of sexual orientation.
• Prior to this same-sex spouses with Medicare Advantage plans
were not eligible to live in the same nursing home as their
spouse.
FMLA
• All spouses are now covered under FMLA if the employer is FMLA
covered. (3/15 injunction against same sex spouses dissolved by
SCOTUS Obergefell ruling)
FMLA may be used for
• The birth of a child, adoption or foster parent;
• To care for a spouse, son, daughter, or parent who has a serious
health condition;
• For a serious health condition that makes the employee unable to
perform the essential functions of his or her job; or
• For any qualifying exigency arising out of the fact that a spouse, son,
daughter, or parent is a military member on covered active duty or
call to covered active duty status.
http://www.dol.gov/whd/regs/compliance/whdfs28.pdf
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
• Section 1557 – Civil Rights provisions
of the Act.
• Applies civil rights protections to the Health
Insurance Marketplace created by the ACA –
and includes LGBT people
ACA & PREVENTIVE CARE
May 2015 DOL Guidance on the ACA
confirms
• Plans cannot limit sex-specific preventive
services by gender identity. If a provider
orders the service it is considered
appropriate.
http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq-aca26.html
THE LAW
SC ANTI- TRANSGENDER BILL
• S.1203 defeated May 4, 2016
TITLE IX - EDUCATION
• Grimm v. Glouchester
(2015)
• Appealed to SCOTUS
• Administrative
guidance
TITLE VII - EEOC
• Macy v. Holder (EEOC, 2012) –
gender non-conformity = gender.
HOW DO I FIND AN
AFFIRMING PROVIDER?
GLMA.org
• Then click on: Resources – For Patients – Find a
Provider
• A searchable provider directory (location, specialty,
transition care etc.).
Provider Directory at the Harriet Hancock LGBT
Center
RESOURCES
Locally
• Harriet Hancock LGBT Center
• IRIS = LGBT group on campus
Nationally
• The Trevor Project – suicide hotline for LGBT youth www.thetrevorproject.org 1-
866-488-7386
• Trans Lifeline http://www.translifeline.org 1-877-565-8860
Providers GLMA.org
https://glmaimpak.networkats.com/members_online_new/members/dir_provider.
asp
HOW CAN AN LGBT PERSON KNOW IF
SOMEONE IS SAFE TO TALK TO?
• Go with your instincts
• If you get a bad vibe from someone – trust your instincts and get
out of there.
• Look for these symbols
WHAT WE CAN DO AS NURSES
• Be Authentic
• Encourage Authenticity in others
• Share
• Be flexible, scootch over a little, share the bench ≈ share the power
LAURA C. HEIN PHD, RN, FAAN
HEIN@SC.EDU

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LGBTQ

  • 1. LGBTQ HEALTH: WHO, WHAT, WHERE AND WHY WE SHOULD CARE LAURA C. HEIN PHD, RN, FAAN
  • 2. OBJECTIVES • Introduce you to LGBTQ terminology • Discuss historical and contemporary health concerns of the LGBTQ community • Discuss facilitators and barriers to health • Present current legal and regulatory standards related to LGBTQ health with recommended practice protocols • Is your facility compliant?
  • 3. DEFINITIONS • Gay, Lesbian • Exclusive physical and emotional attraction to members of one’s own sex • Bisexual • Physical and emotional attraction to members of both sexes • Transgender (gender identity) • A person who feels his or her body is not the sex it should be, regardless of transformational hormone or surgical status • Cis-Gender • A person whose gender identity matches their sex at birth LGBTIQ
  • 4. • MtF = Male-to-Female (she) transwoman • Born with male anatomy, female gender • FtM = Female-to-Male (he) transman • Born with female anatomy, male gender LGBTIQ Transgender (gender identity)
  • 5. • Intersex • The vogue term for hermaphrodite. People born with the sexual characteristics of both sexes • Questioning • People who suspect they might be LGBT, but are not yet certain • Queer • Inclusive term of the LGBTIQ community • Unique paradigm Definitions LGBTIQ
  • 6.
  • 7. PREVALENCE - 9 MILLION LGBT PEOPLE IN THE U.S. Homosexual (gay/lesbian is preferred term) • 3.4% self-identify as LGBT (Gates & Newport 2012) • 1 in 5 - 20.8% of males in the U.S. reported either homosexual behavior or homosexual attraction since age 15 (Sell, Wells & Wypij, 1995) • 17% of women and 6% of men have engaged in same-sex behavior. However, 7% of women and 4% of men identify as gay or bisexual (Copen et al. 2016). Remember there are 320 million people in the U.S.
  • 8. TRANSGENDER POPULATION SIZE • ~1.4 million adults self-identify as trans in the U.S. • Crissman et al. 2017; Flores et al., 2016; Meerwijk & Sevelius, 2017
  • 9. GENDER NON-CONFORMITY OR GENDER DYSPHORIA GENDER NON- CONFORMITY • the extent to which a person’s gender identity, role, or expression differs from the cultural norms prescribed for people of a particular sex (IOM, 2011 definition) GENDER DYSPHORIA • discomfort or distress that is caused by a discrepancy between a person’s gender identity and that person’s sex assigned at birth (and the associated gender role and/or primary and secondary sex characteristics) (WPATH, 2011)
  • 10. TRANSGENDER HEALTH – YOUTH • Protections under Title VII and Title IX of the Civil Rights Act. Affirmed by DOJ filing in G.G. v. Gloucester County School Board (2015). Case on appeal to SCOTUS. Oral arguments Feb. 2017. “There is a public interest in ensuring that all students, including transgender students, have the opportunity to learn in an environment free of sex discrimination.” (DOJ)
  • 11. TRANSGENDER HEALTH – RESTROOM ACCESS • April 8, 2015 – EEOC has ruled that an employers refusal to allow a transgender employee access to restrooms consistent with his or her gender is sex discrimination under Title VII. • EEOC case: Lusardi v. AMRDEC
  • 12. WHAT ABOUT SCHOOL? TITLE IX • Title IX protects students, faculty and employees from sex discrimination in any federally funded education program or activity. • However… schools are still not safe.
  • 13. EARLY SOCIAL TRANSITION • Child lives as gender that matches their identity • Trial run - name, attire, social roles at school, in community • Reversible • Family decision whether to disclose to others or not • Approx. 25% of children who were assessed for gender dysphoria grew up to be cis-gender gay vs. transgender.
  • 14. CHILDREN AND YOUTH • EARLY medical and mental health services • Family support is critical to positive health outcomes • Puberty experienced congruent with gender (delay until sure) • Reduces need for later medical interventions • Prevents unwanted sex characteristics (i.e. breasts) • Decreases stress, anxiety, depression
  • 15. REPARATIVE THERAPY • = Efforts to change the sexual orientation or gender identity • Condemned by all mainstream professional organizations as harmful including the APA, AMA, Am Acad of Pediatrics, AAN, ISPN etc. • Related to depression, anxiety and suicide • George Rekers (prof emeritus from USC SOM) – published case where he conducted reparative therapy. This is what he did….
  • 16. PUBERTY BLOCKING – GNRH AGONISTS • Ideally begun in Tanner 2 stage (early start of puberty). • Can begin in Tanner 3-5 – goal is to stop puberty/ prevent secondary gender characteristics i.e. height, breasts etc. • GnRH Agonists - Leuprorelin; Triptorelin; Goserelin; Histrelin implants • Very expensive. Cost is between $500 and $1500 month. • Insurance rarely covers this cost • Effects are totally REVERSIBLE
  • 17. IRREVERSIBLE HORMONE EFFECTS • ESTROGEN • Breast development • Nipple enlargement • Loss of erection • Testicular atrophy • ? sterility • TESTOSTERONE • Uterine atrophy • Facial and body hair • Deepened voice • Clitoral enlargement • ? sterility
  • 18. FIRST DO NO HARM…. There is harm related to NOT intervening • Suicide ~ 44% • Depression • Anxiety • Homelessness • ETOH, drug use • Sex work • HIV
  • 19. OVERREPRESENTED HEALTH PROBLEMS • HIV/ AIDS • Trauma/ Victimization • Mental Health Concerns • Addictions • Is this because they’re LGBT? –or- because of the context within which LGBT people must exist?
  • 20. HIV/ AIDS • A missing generation of gay men due to AIDS • HIV+ the norm in some areas • Homelessness/ poverty – survival sex • Street hormones (trans)
  • 21. TRAUMA/ VICTIMIZATION • Parental abuse • Increased prevalence of verbal and physical abuse and heightened suicidal ideation among those who disclosed their s.o. to their families • Hate crimes
  • 22. MENTAL HEALTH – DEPRESSION & ANXIETY Additional stress d/t image management related to s.o./g.i. • LGBT children often grow up in a society that says that they should not exist and/or should not act on their feelings. • These societal mores can be internalized = internalized homophobia
  • 23. DEPRESSION • Prevalence of depression 17.2% higher than in U.S. adult men in general • Distress & depression associated w/: • lack of a partner; • not identifying as gay, queer, or homosexual; • experiencing multiple episodes of antigay violence in the previous 5 years; and • very high levels of community alienation Mills 2004
  • 24. LGBT YOUTH VICTIMIZATION • 25% of gay youth (16% lesbian) have been threatened or injured with a weapon on school property. • 3x higher than hetero rate for boys; 4x higher than hetero for girls. • 13% gay (16% lesbian) youth didn’t go to school because of safety issues (O’Malley, 2014) • 3x the hetero rate Sample was of YRBS HS students
  • 25. MENTAL HEALTH - SUICIDE • LGB youth = 30% attempted suicide (double the hetero rate) • School bullying increased the risk of suicide (Bouris et al, 2016)
  • 26. TRANSGENDER SUICIDE U.S. TRANS/GQ DATA • 42% attempted suicide • Those who reported moderate to severe rejection by their family were more likely to attempt suicide (OR 2.0 to 3.2
  • 27. ADDICTIONS • Young LGBT (most prevalent) • Lesbian/ female Bi – principally ETOH • Gay/ MtF Transgender – • Ecstasy (and other Rave drugs) • Risk = hyperthermia; • Poppers (amyl nitrate) – enhanced sexual experience • Risk = an MI, priapism Ecstacy: MDMA
  • 28. CDC RECOMMENDATIONS FOR SCHOOLS TO SUPPORT LGBTQ HEALTH 1. Identify “safe spaces” 2. Prohibit harassment and bullying 3. Facilitate access to health & psych providers not on school property who are LGBTQ affirming 4. Encourage professional development on safety for all students 5. Provide health education curricula with inclusive terminology Demisse et al., 2013
  • 29. CASE 1 • A 15yo questioning female student presents to the school nurse asking him to sponsor a Gay Straight Alliance (GSA) at their school. The best school nurse answer: A. “yes, of course I’ll sponsor a GSA” B. “I’d like to but I’ll need to talk to the principal first” C. “I think I’d like to talk to your parents first – we’ll be back in touch” D. “You really need to talk to our school psychologist about this”
  • 30. SC CODE 59-32-30A(5) LOCAL SCHOOL BOARDS TO IMPLEMENT COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH EDUCATION PROGRAM; GUIDELINES AND RESTRICTIONS • (5) The program of instruction provided for in this section may not include a discussion of alternate sexual lifestyles from heterosexual relationships including, but not limited to, homosexual relationships except in the context of instruction concerning sexually transmitted diseases.
  • 31. CASE 2 • 30yo transman who initiated social gender affirmation 5 years ago, chest construction at 25yo, testosterone from 25-28yo. He grew a beard and stopped taking T. Beard growth persisted. No menstruation for 5 years. He would like the option to become pregnant in the future because he wants children but has legal concerns related to adoption. As the NP you first: A. Conduct an exam and draw labs B. Conduct an exam, draw labs and refer to endocrinology C. Conduct an exam, draw labs and refer to GYN
  • 32. YOUR PATIENT WANTS TO TRANSITION – NOW WHAT? 1. Google “WPATH Guidelines” 2. Refer to a Psych NP or other mental health provider 3. Start hormone therapy www.wpath.org The pdf is free
  • 33. RESEARCH ON HORMONES – IS IT SAFE? FTM • No increase in CAD found in 876 FTM pts (Gooren, 200) MTF • Increased risk of CAD at high doses. • Increased risk of CA at low doses • If prior MI – PO estradiol does not incr. or decr. risk for further emboli
  • 34. WPATH Standards of Care The criteria for hormone therapy are as follows: • Persistent, well-documented gender dysphoria; • Capacity to make a fully informed decision and to consent for treatment; • Age of majority in a given country (if younger, follow the Standards of Care outlined in section VI); • If significant medical or mental health concerns are present, they must be reasonably well controlled
  • 35. HORMONES FTM - OPTIONS • Injectable Testosterone • Testosterone Enanthate or Cypionate 100-200 mg IM q 2 wks (20 -22g x 1 ½” needles) • Transdermal Testosterone • Androderm TTS 2-8mg daily • Topical testosterone gels in packets and pumps, multiple formulations (Testim, Androgel) 5 to 10 gm (50 to 100 mg of testosterone) applied topically daily • Axiron 2% pump gel for axillary application 1 pump to each axilla daily • Testosterone Pellet • Testopel- implant 6-10 pellets q 3 to 6 months • Buccal Testosterone • Striant 30 mg buccal system q 12 hours Rx information taken from Cavanaugh 2016
  • 36. TESTOSTERONE RISKS •  HDL  triglycerites •  insulin resistance •  sleep apnea • Infertility • Mental health changes MONITORING • Baseline CBC, CMP, lipids, renal panel, fasting glucose • 3 month, then Q 6-12 mo • CBC, liver enzymes, serum testosterone • Q 6-12 mo • Lipid profile, HbA1c
  • 37. HORMONES MTF OPTIONS • Oral Estrogen • Estradiol (estrace) 2-6mg PO or SL daily(can be divided into BID dosing) • Premarin (conjugated estrogens) 1.25-10mg PO daily (can be divided into BID dosing) • Transdermal estrogen (preferred for 40yo) • Estradiol patch 0.1-0.4mg twice weekly • Injectable Estrogens [NOTE – shortage right now] • Estradiol valerate5-20mg IM q2 weeks • Estradiol cypionate2-10mg IM weekly • Antiandrogens • Spironolactone (aldactone) 50-400mg PO daily (can be divided into BID dosing) • Finasteride (Proscar) 2.5-5mg PO daily • Progestins – increase breast development, but CV risk, weight gain & depression
  • 38. MTF – ESTROGEN RISKS • CAD weight triglycerides • libido glucose tolerance • Gallbladder ds • Infertility • Mental health changes • Spronolactone carries risks of hypotension, hyperkalemia and renal insufficiency MONITORING • Baseline – CBC, CMP, lipids, renal, fasting glucose, testosterone, prolactin • 6mo. – serum testosterone & estradiol • If on spironolactone • 1 mo. then 3mo. – lipids, lytes, creatinine, glucose
  • 39. MTF SURGICAL OPTIONS (~30%) • Removal of scrotum & penis • Creation of vagina, labia, clitoris & mons • Breast augmentation • Tracheal shave • Facial feminization • Brow • nose Taken from Schechter 2017 p.37
  • 40. FTM SURGICAL OPTIONS (~30%) • Phalloplasty with urethral reconstruction & creation of scrotum (uncommon) • Chest reconstruction
  • 41. STAGED SURGERIES • Genital FtM • Tissue removal from donor site • Urethral reconstruction • Implant prosthesis • Chest Contouring FtM • Mastectomy • Revision of prior surgery to decrease scarring and remove arm flaps
  • 42. YOU’RE AN ORG LEADER/ MANAGER WHAT CAN YOU DO? • Know the law and standards related to LGBTQ patients • Train your staff – receptionist to CNO • Work on the culture of your organization to make it safe.
  • 43. • The patient-centered communication standards for Hospitals (CAMH). • Elements of performance 28 and 29 under RI.01.01.01, require access to a support person and non-discrimination of care. The Joint Commission: Advancing Effective Communication, Cultural Competence, and Patient- and FamilyCentered Care for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Community: A Field Guide. Oak Brook, IL, Oct. 2011. LGBTFieldGuide.pdf. Joint Commission Standards (2011)
  • 44. RI.01.01.01 ELEMENT 29 “No longer considered to be simply a patient’s right, effective communication is now accepted as an essential component of quality care and patient safety.”
  • 45. HOSPITAL VISITATION • January 2010 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) regulation required hospitals to permit patients to designate visitors & prohibits discrimination in visitation based on so/gi. 42 C.F.R. § 482.13 • Compliance with requirements for Medicare Conditions of Participation (CoPs)
  • 46. HOSPITAL VISITATION • July 2011 Joint Commission standard – prohibition on discrimination based on orientation or gender identity. • “Prohibit discrimination based on age, race, ethnicity, religion, culture, language, physical or mental disability, socioeconomic status, sex, sexual orientation, and gender identity or expression.” RI.01.01.01 EP29 (p.48 of Joint Commission LGBT doc).
  • 47. CMS – EQUAL COVERAGE TO CARE IN THE SAME NURSING HOME AS A SPOUSE • Aug. 29, 2013 - CMS announced the guarantee of Medicare coverage applies to ALL spouses regardless of sexual orientation. • Prior to this same-sex spouses with Medicare Advantage plans were not eligible to live in the same nursing home as their spouse.
  • 48. FMLA • All spouses are now covered under FMLA if the employer is FMLA covered. (3/15 injunction against same sex spouses dissolved by SCOTUS Obergefell ruling) FMLA may be used for • The birth of a child, adoption or foster parent; • To care for a spouse, son, daughter, or parent who has a serious health condition; • For a serious health condition that makes the employee unable to perform the essential functions of his or her job; or • For any qualifying exigency arising out of the fact that a spouse, son, daughter, or parent is a military member on covered active duty or call to covered active duty status. http://www.dol.gov/whd/regs/compliance/whdfs28.pdf
  • 49. AFFORDABLE CARE ACT • Section 1557 – Civil Rights provisions of the Act. • Applies civil rights protections to the Health Insurance Marketplace created by the ACA – and includes LGBT people
  • 50. ACA & PREVENTIVE CARE May 2015 DOL Guidance on the ACA confirms • Plans cannot limit sex-specific preventive services by gender identity. If a provider orders the service it is considered appropriate. http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq-aca26.html
  • 51. THE LAW SC ANTI- TRANSGENDER BILL • S.1203 defeated May 4, 2016 TITLE IX - EDUCATION • Grimm v. Glouchester (2015) • Appealed to SCOTUS • Administrative guidance TITLE VII - EEOC • Macy v. Holder (EEOC, 2012) – gender non-conformity = gender.
  • 52. HOW DO I FIND AN AFFIRMING PROVIDER? GLMA.org • Then click on: Resources – For Patients – Find a Provider • A searchable provider directory (location, specialty, transition care etc.). Provider Directory at the Harriet Hancock LGBT Center
  • 53. RESOURCES Locally • Harriet Hancock LGBT Center • IRIS = LGBT group on campus Nationally • The Trevor Project – suicide hotline for LGBT youth www.thetrevorproject.org 1- 866-488-7386 • Trans Lifeline http://www.translifeline.org 1-877-565-8860 Providers GLMA.org https://glmaimpak.networkats.com/members_online_new/members/dir_provider. asp
  • 54. HOW CAN AN LGBT PERSON KNOW IF SOMEONE IS SAFE TO TALK TO? • Go with your instincts • If you get a bad vibe from someone – trust your instincts and get out of there. • Look for these symbols
  • 55. WHAT WE CAN DO AS NURSES • Be Authentic • Encourage Authenticity in others • Share • Be flexible, scootch over a little, share the bench ≈ share the power
  • 56. LAURA C. HEIN PHD, RN, FAAN HEIN@SC.EDU