Survey shows need for training to ensure patients are listened to

When Ellen Mellor’s doctor said that her severe headaches were caused by the stress of being transgender, it did not sit right. “My life was at the calmest point it had been in a long time,” she said. A year and a half previously she had undergone surgery that reduced her gender dysphoria to “negligible” levels, and her work was going well.

Mellor, who is now being tested for coeliac disease, put down the phone feeling “very angry and quite upset”. “He didn’t take my issue seriously and just fobbed me off with, ‘it’s because you’re transgender’,” she said. She was “too bloody minded” to be put off going back to her GP altogether, but said the experience made her more wary.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

The New European bought by consortium including ex-BBC boss

Investors in anti-Brexit weekly include Mark Thompson and former Financial Times editor…

170,000 jobs in UK’s live music sector ‘will be lost by Christmas’

Industry faces 80% decline in revenues this year amid Covid shutdown, research…

Eddie Jones to stick with England’s Smith-Farrell axis for Australia rematch

Coach will stand by 10-12 partnership despite first Test defeat Tom Curry…

Multiple people shot during Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl victory parade

Police take two armed people into custody after shooting near Union Station…