What to Expect:
Here are some pointers that will help you understand how hormone therapy works at Fenway!
HormoneTherapyfor patients at Fenway
Health
Follow-up to previous visits includes: any additional tests orassessments, discussion of risks and benefits of treatment, signingof informed consent for treatment.
If appropriate, you may be able to initiate hormone treatments atthis visit.
3rd + Appointment(s)
If you brought a copy of your records to your first appointment orhad a physical during that visit, your second appointment will be todiscuss your hormone goals and any follow-up from your exam.
Helpful Hint: Depending on your history and needs, your genderhistory, and other topics, the process may take more than one ortwo appointments.
2nd Appointment
Initial Intake and Appointment Structure-Patients 18 years of age and older
To make an appointment to see a provider, call 617-927-6000
Have you had a physical in the past year? If so, make sure to bring acopy of your records to your appointment or have the documentsreleased and sent to Fenway ahead of your first appointment. Ifneeded, your provider may schedule a physical.
Helpful Hint: You can stop or reschedule part of an exam if you areuncomfortable. What procedures are needed to determine medicalreadiness for hormones is determined by your situation.Initial
Intake
Hormone readiness at Fenway is determined through informed consent. This means you andyour doctor will work together to develop the best program of care and timeline based on yourhealth care needs and transition goals. Whether you are prescribed hormones depends on yourspecific situation. Our criteria for hormone therapy is informed by the WPATH (WorldProfessional Association for Transgender Health) guidelines.
Following are some, but not all, of the criteria for hormone therapy:
- Ability to give informed consent- Age of majority (18+) - Persistent, documented gender dysphoria (this is part of what you will discuss with your provider)- Any other medical or mental health issues are reasonably well controlled
Your provider will discuss the informed consent process, discuss your gender identity history,review positive effects, and possible risk factors for hormone therapy prior to writing aprescription.
Introduction
Once we receive relevant past medical information, a letter of supportfrom your therapist, and your case has been reviewed by the transgenderhealth clinical team, we will ask you to come in with yourparent(s)/guardian(s) to sign the consent forms. At that point, we willwork with you and your parent(s)/guardian(s) to make a care plan for therest of the process.
If appropriate, you may be able to initiate hormone treatments at thisvisit.
Hormone InitiationVisit:
3rd + Appointment(s)
Your provider will continue getting to know you and your parent(s) orguardian(s). You will review the process of transition and what yourexpectations of the experience are.
You may need to have a physical exam and lab work done.
From here your care team will review your information and help youschedule necessary follow-up visits.2nd Appointment
Appointment Structure-Patients Under 18 Years of Age
Your provider will get to know you and your parent(s) or guardian(s). You'll reviewthe hormone therapy process and do Q&A with your provider. You will discuss theimpact of hormone therapy on fertility, get blood tests (if time permits), reviewconsent forms, and gather your medical history
**Behavioral Health Requirement**If you have a therapist, we will ask for your permission to contact them for a letterof support. If you do not have a therapist, we will help connect you to one internally or help you find one elsewhere.
Helpful to bring to Appointment #1: Contact information (name, fax, and phone #)for any outside care providers, copies of last physical and medical records, a list ofquestions you may have about the transition process, and insurance information.
1stAppointment
Trans Health Program Patient Rights and Responsibilities
You have the right to: You have the responsibility to:
be heard and understood by yourprovider and care team
be fairly evaluated for treatment andreferrals
access an equal standard of care as anyother patient
be provided with assistance in managingpsychological and physical health issuesthat might impact your hormone therapy
if appropriate, to be given access togender affirming hormone therapy
accurately convey your symptoms(story and history) of genderdysphoria and gender identity toyour provider
follow your treatment plan and takeyour medications as prescribed
follow up with care as recommended
express your concerns to yourprovider
Helpful Numbers and Links
Schedule an Appointment: Ansin Building: 617-927-6000 (All Ages)The Borum: 617-457-8140 (Patients aged 12-29)
Download informed consent forms for review:- Masculinizing Hormone Therapy- Feminizing Hormone Therapy
FAQ and Common Concerns?
I've been told I need to talk to a therapist before I can start HRT. Why? Ithought informed consent meant I didn't need to see a therapist!
I have a medical condition that my provider says I need to managebefore starting HRT. I came to Fenway for hormones! I want to starthormones and deal with my other health issue later.
This is taking a long time! I thought "informed consent" meant I could justcome in and get hormones!
Informed consent means you are not required to have a letter of support before being seenby a medical provider for HRT. A provider may still request a behavioral health assessmentprior to starting you on treatment. As part of meeting criteria for hormones, mental healthconcerns need to be reasonably well managed, and therapy, evaluation, or treatment maybe the next step along your path to gender affirmation. Needing to see a therapist as part ofyour transition does not disqualify you from pursuing hormone treatment. Some peoplestart seeing a therapist at the same time that they start hormone therapy.
As with any program of health care, our providers need to ensure that a patient’s total health is addressed when deciding whether or not to prescribe hormones. You don’t haveto be in perfect health to start HRT. If a provider thinks that hormones might destabilize aphysical or mental health condition, however, they may work with you on that issue prior toprescribing hormones.
Informed consent does not mean “hormones on demand”. Informed consent means you candemonstrate understanding of both the risks and the benefits of hormone therapy and youand your provider have both decided that this is the appropriate time for your to begintreatment. Under the informed consent model, we respect the individual’s sense of self andagency, and this means taking the time to ensure that we are providing the mostcomprehensive and holistic care possible.
+ Get an appointment
+ Schedule a physical or have your recordstransferred
+ Set your goals with your provider
+ Work to manage other medical andmental health conditions
+ Keep your follow up appointments andcommunicate your concerns to yourprovider
+Move forward with your plan!
REVIEW and STEPS!
Meet WPATH andFenway Criteria and
obtain HRT Prescription
Follow-UpAppointments/
Management of OtherConditions
Initial Appointment/Physical and Intake
Have more Questions? Call the Transgender Health PatientAdvocate, at 857-313-6589; [email protected]
?
Content adapted from "The Medical Care of Transgender Persons", Fall 2015 and from Fenway Health's Transgender Health Program team input
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