Reference at Newman Library

Some sources re: number of sexual reassignment surgeries

I was asked to post this to the blog so that access would be available to more than those on the librarian’s  email list.

A student asked for help at the reference desk  in locating the number of people in the U.S., compared with Europe, who have had sexual reassignment surgery.

While working with the student at the  reference desk, the best we could locate is an estimate of the number of transgendered people in the U.S.  (The Williams Institute, at UCLA, estimates about 700,000, according to a report issued last year, http://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/research/census-lgbt-demographics-studies/how-many-people-are-lesbian-gay-bisexual-and-transgender/.) .  (The Williams Institute is among many organizations providing information and research.)

Realizing that this estimate didn’t address the student’s question,  I took the student’s contact information and told the student I would look into the question further.  After consulting with Mike Waldman for some suggested sources; checking on a number of possible sources, and reading a number of articles, and  websites, I have concluded that there’s no source to answer the student’s question.    (I failed to inquire if the student was interested in a specific age range as I have realized that some sexual reassignment surgeries are done shortly after birth.)  I also learned, through reading, that worldwide many people travel outside their home country for these surgeries, and Thailand is often chosen because of the lower cost.  (The Williams Institute is among many organizations providing information and research.)

The Standards of Care for the Health of Transsexual, Transgender, and Gender Nonconforming People, 7th version., by The World Professional Association for Transgender Health, http://www.wpath.org/documents/Standards%20of%20Care_FullBook_1g-1.pdf,  recognizes that health is dependent upon not only good clinical care but also social and political climates through public policies and legal reforms that promote tolerance and equity for gender and sexual diversity and that eliminate prejudice, discrimination and stigma.   Page 5 of the standards notes, “ Some people experience gender dysphoria at such a level that the distress meets criteria for a formal diagnosis that might be classified as a mental disorder.  Such a diagnosis is not a license for stigmatization or for the deprivation of civil and human rights.”    It’s understandable that anyone could be reluctant to share any type of health or medical information, but especially when, as the standards point out, “in most countries, crossing normative gender boundaries generates moral censure rather than compassion.”

On pages 5-6, of the standards, it is noted that no formal epidemiologic studies on transsexualism specifically or transgender identities have been done.   On page 7, citations to  studies undertaken of those who came for gender-transition-related care at specialist gender clinics in Sweden, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Germany, Belgium and Singapore, ranging from 1968 to 2007 are given.  A citation is also provided that De Cuypere and colleagues reviewed these studies and conducted their own, in 2007, and  this review can be found in Principles of Transgender Medicine and Surgery, edited by Randy Ettner.  (Not available within CUNY, but found in WorldCat, the catalog of library catalogs.)

The Standards of Care notes that direct comparisons of these studies are impossible because each used different data collection methods and differed in criteria for documenting a person as transsexual (for example, whether or not a person had undergone genital reconstruction, versus initiating hormone therapy, or seeking medically-supervised transition services.)

I also learned that there are many issues surrounding private pay and Medicaid/Medicare insurance coverage of sexual reassignment surgeries, hormone treatment and other care.

There’s a system of diagnostic codes for procedures, and I learned  ICD-9-CM Code 64.5 “operations for sexual transformation, not elsewhere classified,” is on the list of “never covered” procedures for Medicare. (Source: http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/downloads//cms1428f_i.pdf)

While some states permit Medicaid to pay for sexual reassignment surgery, New York State does not permit this. There are efforts to have this changed by the state legislature. (Source:   http://www.prideagenda.org/Issues-Explained/Transgender-Equality-and-Justice/Medicaid-Coverage-of-Transgender-Healthcare.aspx)

Today, a New Jersey woman, who is transgender, was able to get Aetna Insurance to reverse its earlier decision to deny a claim for a mammogram that was done at a doctor’s recommendation: http://www.glaad.org/blog/tldef-secures-policy-change-aetna-health-care-coverage-transgender-people.  Aetna has announced some changes in coverage for others it insures.

I also think perhaps in the future that the Internal Revenue Service might be a possible source of information on totals of people seeking medical expense deductions for sexual reassignment surgery because of an important 2010 decision  in Rhiannon G. O’Donnabhain v. Commissioner, 134 TC 34.   O’Donnabhain underwent sex reassignment surgery, including breast augmentation surgery, in 2001.    The tax court found that the transgendered taxpayer’s gender identity disorder (GID) qualified as a “disease” for the IRS’s definition of medical expenses, and allowed deductions for hormone therapy and sexual reassignment surgery.  But, breast augmentation surgery, was found to be a nondeductible cosmetic surgery in this case.   The 61-page decision in this case makes many references to the World Professional Association for Transgender Health’s standards of case.  (You can find the decision on RIA Checkpoint or CCH Intelliconnect, available through the Newman Library’s databases.  There are many news stories about it.)

Although there are many possible resources, I found two recent articles on SSRN that provide some information:

LGBT Taxpayers: A Collision of ‘Others’, Anthony C. Infanti, University of Pittsburgh-School of Law Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law, Forthcoming, University of Pittsburgh Legal Studies Research Paper, No. 2011-11.  This comments on the O’Donnabhain v. Commissioner decision.

Removing the Constraints to Coverage of Gender-Confirming Healthcare by State Medicaid Programs
Iowa Law Review, Vol. 97, No. 4, 2012
Nicole Marie True
Iowa Law Review

The True article provides the states, including New York State, that do not allow Medicaid to cover sexual reassignment surgery for transgendered and makes references to the previous mentioned Dutch and Belgium studies providing an estimate of people in The Netherlands and in Belgium who have undergone sexual reassignment surgery.

I’ll show my age but more than 30 years ago, when I was an undergraduate at the University of Iowa, the first “sex change” operation done at the University of Iowa Hospital was headline news.  I thought of this when I thought of how easily the student approached me with the reference question seeking comparative data.  I thought it would be available, but for all kinds of reasons, from personal to policy,  it isn’t.

While much progress has been made, much remains to be made in providing health care for all.  I hope this information is helpful.

 

Trial to Statista

We have a short trial (until May 3rd) to Statista. It is available on-campus only for the trial.

Statista is a statistical portal that integrates over 60,000 topics from over 10,000 sources onto a single platform. It has been reviewed favorably by Library Journal in their January 1, 2012 issue and by the Center for Research Libraries.

Please take a look and let me know what you think of the interface, search capabilities and its usefulness to supporting the curriculum at Baruch.

 

 

 

Connecting Users to Online Resources via QR Codes

This spring, you may begin to notice signs up in the stacks and in other locations (such as the graduate student carrels) that feature QR codes. For users that have phones or other mobile devices (such as a tablet) with a QR code app on them, the codes on these signs can be scanned with a phone, which then opens up the browser on the phone to a specific URL that the code is linked to. Linda, Mike, and I have begun identifying online resources and services that students in the library might want to be alerted about.

In the reference stacks, for example, you’ll now see a small 3″x5″ sign attached to the shelves where the print edition of the Oxford English Dictionary is located:

The sign alerts users that there is an online edition of the OED availabe and gives them a scannable QR code that they can use to get to it. The sign also features a short URL for those who just want to type in the address into a browser. Another QR code sign can be found on the 4th floor at HD30.28, where there many books on writing business plans; the sign at this location connects users to the Business Plans Handbook series in Gale Virtual Reference Library.

We hope to have more such signs in the stacks in the coming weeks. We don’t, though, intend to clutter up the stacks with too many signs.

Some sign ideas we’ve had so far include:

  • one in the 5th floor stacks in the computer science collection alerting users to the Books24x7 collection (we might even be able to have a sign in front of the books on, say, programming in PHP, that connects users to that set of books in Books24x7)
  • one by the print edition of the International Directory of Company Histories series that would connect you to the digital version from Gale
  • one by the print edition of the Market Share Reporter series (we have this online, too)
  • one by print resources used for the PUB 1250 assignment that would connect to Aisha’s LibGuide
  • a new “Reference Desk is Closed” sign that connects users to email and chat reference services

More details on the QR codes signs and links to pages where you can view stats on each code can be found on the QR code page in the reference wiki. If you have any ideas for other resources where there we have both a print resource and its online equivalent that merit the effort that goes into making a sign, please contact Mike, Linda, or Stephen, just leave a comment on this post on the blog.

New Database: Counseling and Therapy in Video

This database from Alexander Street Press features more than 600 videos for the study of social work, psychotherapy, psychology, and psychiatric counseling. You can narrow searches by type of video:

  • Consultations
  • Counseling session
  • Demonstration
  • Documentary
  • Dramatized scene
  • Interview
  • Lecture/presentation
  • Personal narrative

As videos play, a highlighted transcript scrolls along the right side of the screen.

Records for the videos will be loaded into the catalog shortly.

Ethnographic Video Online

We have a trial from Alexander Street Press’ Ethnographic Video Online until May 8, 2012. Access is on campus only for the trial.

Ethnographic Video Online is a comprehensive resource for the study of human culture and behavior.

Thematic areas include: family and race, material culture, language and culture, kinesthetics, body language, food and foraging, cooking, economic systems, social stratification and status, caste systems and slavery, male and female roles, kinship and families, political organization, conflict and conflict resolution, religion and magic, music and the arts, culture and personality, marriage, gender, and family roles.

All videos offer accompanying written transcripts where the spoken word is highlighted as it is spoken.

Please leave your comments about this database below or email me directly.