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Título
Nuevos modelos de atención sanitaria para las personas transgénero en el Sistema Sanitario Español: demandas, controversias y reflexiones
Otros títulos
[New care models for transgender people in the Spanish Health System: demands, controversies and reflections.].
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Transgénero
Transexualidad
Disforia de género
Incongruencia de género
Variante de género
Modelo sanitario
Unidades de Identidad de Género
Sistema Nacional de Salud español
Transgender
Transsexualism
Gender dysphoria
Gender incongruence
Gender variant
Health care model
Gender units
Spanish National Health Service
Fecha de publicación
2020-11-16
Editor
https://www.sanidad.gob.es/biblioPublic/publicaciones/recursos_propios/resp/revista_cdrom/VOL94/C_ESPECIALES/RS94C_202011123.pdf
Citación
Gómez-Gil E, Esteva de Antonio I, Fernán- dez Rodríguez M, Almaraz Almaraz MC, Hurtado Murillo F, Gómez Balaguer M, Asenjo Araque N, Mora Porta M, Halperin Rabinovich I, Fernández García R, Montejo González Al, Grupo GIDSEEN. Nuevos modelos de atención sanitaria para las per- sonas transgénero en el Sistema Sanitario Español: demandas, controversias y reflexiones. Rev Esp Salud Pública. 2020; 94: 16 de noviembre e202011123
Resumen
[ENG]Health care for transgender people in Spain has been progressively established since 1999 when the first multidisciplinary unit for the treatment of sex reassignment was created in Andalusia. In this document, the social changes, the demands and debates of users and professionals, the new models of health care for trans people, and reflections on the current situation, have been analysed. The social openness in Spain regarding sexual and gender diversity has evolved quite positively. The health demands of the transgender users are not uniform and do not always match with the criteria of the professionals. In some Spanish regions, health care is distancing itself from the internationally recommended multidisciplinary model. The new healthcare models have been established under the aegis of primary care and/or endocrinologist in the area, without a required psychological assessment. The main contributing factors for this change of model have been the pressure from some associations with demands for "depathologization" and "decentralization". The professionals of gender units, while recognizing the need for a broader vision of trans reality, warn of the risk of treating trans people without the involvement of mental health specialists or by professionals in proximity with little experience. Moreover, the decentralization would not allow acting on large cohorts, which hinders the advance of knowledge and contrasted evaluations with neighbouring countries. In summary, the new health models, although intended to facilitate care through proximity, do not guarantee improvements in quality and difficult to make a comparative evaluation of the results.
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