Trauma Mizock 2008
Gender identity and sexual orientation are distinct aspects of identity; they are often confused in the literature relating to trauma in the transgender population.
Transphobia in parents may be more accurately describe as attempts to enforce biological gender on a child or a fear that their child may be gay. Hateful attitudes towards transgender individuals are often part of a homophobic stance. Often this homophobic stance may be the origin of hateful treatment of transgender. (338)
Health Care (344-345)
There may be several obstacles to transgender individuals receiving Health car and treatment for trauma. Many transgenders do not have access to health insurance (344) and particularly in urban areas or in highly transphobic rural areas. Even if health care is available, it might not be culturally sensitive to accommodate and comfort a
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The reference (351) prompted a search for a recent update to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (the DSM) . As such, for individuals to be diagnosed with Gender Dysphoria, they must show solid and continuing symptoms of the opposite to biological gender identification.
Transgender people and their allies have pointed out that distress in gender dysphoria is not an inherent part of being transgender. The trauma that may exist due to gender dysphoria might be created due to an environment that is a result of a culture that denounces people who do not meet society’s gender rules. Society needs to recognize that being transgender may or may not play a role in an individual’s mental state or trauma. In other words, an individual may be a transgender and mentally fit or be a transgender and be mentally