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|    alt.culture.alaska    |    People's weird obsession with Alaska    |    51,804 messages    |
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|    Message 50,529 of 51,804    |
|    Slate Queers to All    |
|    If I Get Sick With COVID-19, Don't Tell     |
|    18 Mar 21 20:41:24    |
      XPost: alt.gossip.celebrities, alt.politics.democrats.d, sac.general       XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh       From: queers@alate.com              This post is part of Outward, Slate’s home for coverage of LGBTQ       life, thought, and culture. Read more here.              If you were hospitalized for a severe illness, would you trust       the ICU doctors with access to your complete medical history? In       theory, of course, all of us should feel able to answer yes.       Doctors need complete, accurate information about a patient’s       history to make the best possible decisions about that patient’s       care. But what if stigmatizing info in some charts led them to       deprioritize the patient because they do not value some aspect       of that person’s identity? For transgender patients, as well as       patients with other stigmatizing information in their medical       pasts, there’s reason to fear that an accurate medical history       could lead to worse treatment, not better. In fact, just this       week, the Trump administration’s health department is apparently       moving to finalize a rule that would roll back Obama-era       protections on LGBTQ discrimination in health care settings. In       the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, this has me thinking dark       thoughts about what I would, and would not, want a doctor       treating me for COVID-19 to know.              As a trans person, I’ve experienced medical discrimination       firsthand. After a recent move, I struggled to find a doctor       willing to prescribe the hormone treatments I’d already been on,       by then, for more than two years. For the first six months, I       drove three hours to a Planned Parenthood clinic to find a       doctor who’d prescribe my meds. Eventually I found a doctor       closer to home, but it’s not ideal: He regularly asks me       prurient, nonmedical questions about my transition, including,       in one instance, asking what my “cup size” was. There are far       worse horror stories than mine. In fact, I’ve found doctor’s       appointments go easier if I avoid disclosing my transition       history whenever possible. I get quicker, more professional care       if we skip the apparent distraction my transition presents.              For the most part, my experience has been one of inconvenience       rather than danger. But what if I was in a crowded ER filled       with dying patients and an overworked, traumatized staff? In an       emergency, you want to feel as though your medical team will do       everything they can to save your life. I don’t have that       confidence, because I’ve experienced doctors not treating me       equally when my life wasn’t at stake. I know there may be       nagging doubts and biases about my gender identity in the back       of my doctor’s head. These might mean they spend less of their       limited time on my case, or waste time being distracted by       irrelevancies about my transition history. At the extreme end,       they might send me home out of antipathy or prioritize a more       appealing cisgender patient for extraordinary measures such as a       ventilator. That’s why, if I fall ill with COVID-19, I won’t       volunteer the information that I’m trans. Why risk even a slight       possibility that someone might see me as less valuable than the       patient in the next bed?              Sharing health information isn’t necessarily a patient’s choice.       A rare point of concurrence between former Presidents George W.       Bush and Barack Obama was the desire for efficient, transferable       electronic health records throughout the U.S. Obama even put $27       billion into incentives for providers to adopt EHRs as part of       Obamacare; he’s said that the difficulties in achieving this was       one of his greatest disappointments with the law. Perhaps       because of this bipartisan support, EHRs have never been       controversial in theory, even though their implementation has       continually come up short. Criticisms have focused on lack of       transferability between competing systems and complexity sucking       up doctors’ precious time.              The concept of patient privacy, both in the system we have now       and in the supposedly ideal system of easily transferable EHRs,       has always been concerned with protecting a patient from       information leaking out from medical settings into personal       settings where it may cause embarrassment or harm. However, this       assumes that medical histories are always treated neutrally by       doctors. Doctors are human beings with human prejudices, whether       unconscious or otherwise. According to a 2017 NPR poll, 1 in 10       transgender Americans report having been discriminated against       in a medical setting, and a further 22 percent say they’ve       avoided seeking medical care out of fear they will be       discriminated against. Transgender people are now facing the       unsettling possibility that, if we contract COVID-19, the same       medical discrimination we’ve been facing all along could result       in other patients’ lives being considered more worth saving than       our own.              For a while, the situation for trans patients looked to be       improving under Obamacare, which forbade discrimination against       trans patients outright. However, these protections were       successfully delayed by the Trump administration, which is       seeking to go even further and enshrine a right to discriminate       against transgender patients in the law. We know that       discrimination does happen, there are no laws preventing it from       happening, and the current administration wants to go further in       ensuring it can happen without consequence. In such a climate,       the only refuge for a patient like me is secrecy. Keeping my       transition history secret might expose me to more risk, if       something about my hormone therapy or anatomy turns out to be       relevant to my case, but I believe that should be a risk I am       allowed to take. My trans status may turn out to be hard or       impossible to conceal, but I won’t volunteer it. Doctors have no       right to force me to share information they can, and do, proceed       to use against me in a discriminatory fashion.              Although gender identity has been singled out by the Trump       administration, it’s not solely trans people who have reason to       worry about doctors’ biases. A gay man on a daily HIV prevention       medication such as Truvada for PrEP might face discrimination,       as might a person with a history of mental illness treatment       (particularly severe mental illness or hospitalization) or a       person who overcame a struggle with alcoholism or addiction in       their past. (Of course, there are also groups who face       discrimination without any ability to hide—black Americans in       particular and also other people of color and people who are       overweight.) Ultimately, I believe the only solution is to give       individuals the opportunity to keep irrelevant parts of their       medical history private, even from the doctors and nurses       treating them.              If we agreed patients should have this right, it could be       achieved in different ways. We could simply enshrine the right       of patients to refuse to share whatever aspect of their medical       history they wished and be done—if the patient’s actions       ultimately hurt the patient, they hurt the patient, and that’s       OK. However, it is true that patients may not be the best judges       of whether it’s safe to exclude certain information. An              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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