I have been in contact with my therapist this week to arrange a meeting with her on September 4. I have told her of plans to seek Drs. Spector/Kimmel for castration. I have not found a local surgeon and up until her last e-mail on 08/08/02, she has not been able to locate a surgeon either. In her latest e-mail to me, she has advised me not to make any surgical decisions until we meet again. She is cautioning me not to use Dr. Spectors group. I hope she has some good news about a surgeon for me when I see her next time.
On another note, I have been looking into surgeons that will do GRS. I just got an e-mail about a highly rated gender surgeon in Portland that would be my first choice when I was ready.
Below is a copy of that e-mail for those who are interested.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: DATED August 22, 2002
From: the NATIONAL TRANSGENDER ADVOCACY COALITION (NTAC)
CONTACT PERSON: VANESSA EDWARDS FOSTER; HOUSTON, TEXAS
CONTACT EMAIL:
NTACMEDIA@AOL.COM
MEDIA@NTAC.ORG
CONTACT PHONE: 832-483-9901
WEBSITE:
HTTP://WWW.NTAC.ORG
PORTLAND GENDER REASSIGNMENT SURGEON PLANS TO MOVE
On February 28, 2002, Symphony Healthcare, a for-profit hospital company in Nashville, Tennessee, bought its first hospitals -- in Portland, Oregon. Symphony, founded in November 2001, purchased Woodland Park Hospital and Eastmoreland Hospital from another Tennessee hospital company, HealthMont, for an undisclosed amount.
In July 2002, Dr. Toby Meltzer, whose gender reassignment and other plastic surgery procedures account for more than 50 percent of the surgical workload at Eastmoreland, received a certified letter from the new owners. The letter advised Dr. Meltzer that he would not be allowed to perform gender reassignment surgery (GRS) or related procedures after July 31, 2002. Although that deadline has been extended to December 31, 2002, the hospital's popular VIP program, wherein patients could remain in a reduced care, reduced rate status while convalescing from surgery, has been cancelled. Patients undergoing male-to-female gender reassignment surgery, for example, must leave the hospital after three days and spend another week elsewhere before being allowed to travel home. Dr. Meltzer has made other arrangements for his patients, according to Linda Takata, Meltzer's Office Manager.
According to the Symphony Healthcare letter sent to Dr. Meltzer, the move to end the association of his thriving practice of gender reassignment and related procedures with Eastmoreland Hospital is due to Symphony's desire to change the focus of the hospital and the desire to diversify it's surgical offerings.
In an earlier letter sent to Modern Healthcare's Daily Dose newsletter, Symphony founder and CEO Kenneth Perry announced plans to buy and develop acute-care hospitals and surgery centers across the country in which physicians take an ownership stake. Physicians also are among the original equity partners in Symphony.
Ms. Takata stated that no surgeries have been cancelled or rescheduled as a result of Symphony's decision. Although surgery and immediate post-surgical care currently remain at Eastmoreland, patients can then be moved by members of Dr. Meltzer's staff to the Temporary Living Center at the nearby Meridian Park Hospital in Tualatin, Oregon, a Portland suburb. Patient assistance representatives as well as Dr. Meltzer and his nursing staff make daily rounds at the TLC. The cost of TLC convalescent care is comparable to that of the defunct Eastmoreland VIP convalescent program.
Local officials have written Symphony letters of strong support for Dr. Meltzer and his work. Takata was not at liberty to divulge details of the letters or their authors. She did remark that Portland (Multnomah County) anti-discrimination laws include gender-identity.
If there is no agreement with Symphony regarding his gender reassignment surgery practice, Dr. Meltzer's last surgical day at Eastmoreland will be December 31. However, negotiations are underway with six or more hospitals interested in associating with Meltzer's program. Takata expects to receive proposals from these hospitals by October 1. She was most emphatic in her assessment that the probable shift from Eastmoreland to a different hospital will have no impact on surgery schedules little impact on patients during the transition period.
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NTAC, the National Transgender Advocacy Coalition, is a ยง501(c)(4) civil rights organization working to establish and maintain the right of all transgendered, intersexed, and gender-variant people to live and work without fear of violence or discrimination.