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Preventing transition “regret”: An institutional ethnography of gender-affirming medical care assessment practices in Canada

Author

Listed:
  • MacKinnon, K.R.
  • Ashley, F.
  • Kia, H.
  • Lam, J.S.H.
  • Krakowsky, Y.
  • Ross, L.E.

Abstract

When a person openly “regrets” their gender transition or “detransitions” this bolsters within the medical community an impression that transgender and non-binary (trans) people require close scrutiny when seeking hormonal and surgical interventions. Despite the low prevalence of “regretful” patient experiences, and scant empirical research on “detransition”, these rare transition outcomes profoundly organize the gender-affirming medical care enterprise. Informed by the tenets of institutional ethnography, we examined routine gender-affirming care clinical assessment practices in Canada. Between 2017 and 2018, we interviewed 11 clinicians, 2 administrators, and 9 trans patients (total n = 22), and reviewed 14 healthcare documents pertinent to gender-affirming care in Canada. Through our analysis, we uncovered pervasive regret prevention techniques, including requirements that trans patients undergo extensive psychosocial evaluations prior to transitioning. Clinicians leveraged psychiatric diagnoses as a proxy to predict transition regret, and in some cases delayed or denied medical treatments. We identified cases of patient dissatisfaction with surgical results, and a person who detransitioned. These accounts decouple transition regret and detransition, and no participants endorsed stricter clinical assessments. We traced the clinical work of preventing regret to cisnormativity and transnormativity in medicine which together construct regret as “life-ending”, and in turn drives clinicians to apply strategies to mitigate the perceived risk of malpractice legal action when treating trans people, specifically. Yet, attempts to prevent these outcomes contrast with the material healthcare needs of trans people. We conclude that regret and detransitioning are unpredictable and unavoidable clinical phenomena, rarely appearing in “life-ending” forms. Critical research into the experiences of people who detransition is necessary to bolster comprehensive gender-affirming care that recognizes dynamic transition trajectories, and which can address clinicians’ fears of legal action—cisgender anxieties projected onto trans patients who are seeking medical care.

Suggested Citation

  • MacKinnon, K.R. & Ashley, F. & Kia, H. & Lam, J.S.H. & Krakowsky, Y. & Ross, L.E., 2021. "Preventing transition “regret”: An institutional ethnography of gender-affirming medical care assessment practices in Canada," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 291(C).
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socmed:v:291:y:2021:i:c:s0277953621008091
    DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114477
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Rotondi, N.K. & Bauer, G.R. & Scanlon, K. & Kaay, M. & Travers, R. & Travers, A., 2013. "Nonprescribed hormone use and self-performed surgeries: "do-it-yourself" transitions in transgender communities in Ontario, Canada," American Journal of Public Health, American Public Health Association, vol. 103(10), pages 1830-1836.
    2. Sledge, Piper, 2019. "From decision to incision: Ideologies of gender in surgical cancer care," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 239(C).
    3. Rotondi, N.K. & Bauer, G.R. & Scanlon, K. & Kaay, M. & Travers, R. & Travers, A., 2013. "Erratum: Nonprescribed hormone use and self-performed surgeries: "Do-it-yourself" transitions in transgender communities in Ontario, Canada (American Journal of Public Health (2013) 103:10 (," American Journal of Public Health, American Public Health Association, vol. 103(11), pages 1-11.
    4. Erin Ziegler & Ruta Valaitis & Nancy Carter & Cathy Risdon & Jennifer Yost, 2020. "Primary Care for Transgender Individuals: A Review of the Literature Reflecting a Canadian Perspective," SAGE Open, , vol. 10(3), pages 21582440209, September.
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