Are there good studies showing that hormone treatments make prisoners less likelty to re-offend after they are released?
Regards,
Shodan
Are there good studies showing that hormone treatments make prisoners less likelty to re-offend after they are released?
Regards,
Shodan
If you’re looking for studies based on inmates, forget about it. The numbers of transgendered inmates are too small, the barriers to doing studies on inmates too high, to generate meaningful data.
If you want data on how hormone therapy improves lives for those with Gender Dysphoria, there’s a lot of fairly good data that it does.
Hormonal Treatment Reduces Psychobiological Distress in Gender Identity Disorder, Independently of the Attachment Style
Hormone-treated transsexuals report less social distress, anxiety and depression.
I dug up the above on the fly; lacking access to my usual resources at the moment.
I was not referring specifically to transsexuals in that post.
Well, I’d like to see non-prisoners treated better for sure. Let’s not bomb somebody and spend the money helping people go to college instead; let’s tax the rich a little more and fix some roads, put up some solar panels &etc.
I don’t think refusing SRS amounts to treating prisoners badly though. Will we give them liposuction too? How about hair implants? I don’t mean to trivialize their condition, I simply think SRS is an expensive, optional course of action. Hormones, fine.
And there is the concern that a post-op trans will come out of prison and shout, “Prison drove me mad, then they altered me surgically!!! I want $10 million.” Bound to happen eventually.
The simple condition of being in prison impacts a person’s mental well being. Are the transgendered the only class whose well being is an issue?
Then you should know your terms are going to confuse people as to what you mean. “Born a man” and “born a woman” are usually used to express the principle that you’re the physical gender you were born in and you can’t change that - even if you have sexual reassignment surgery. That’s the law in some places - if you’re born a man, you’ll always legally be considered a man, even if you now have a vagina.
No, I didn’t mean inmates specifically.
Thanks, but that isn’t quite what I was looking for. The suggestion seems to be that we as a society ought to provide transsexuals with hormone treatment because gender dysphoria is a life-threatening condition. This is because so many transsexuals attempt suicide. There does not seem to be much good evidence that SRS helps with these high suicide rates. I think that is condeded. So the suggestion was made that hormone treatments are the way to go to treat gender dysphoria. I would like to know if there is good evidence that hormone treatments affect suicide in transsexuals. Because I would think there is a stronger case for providing hormone treatment if it made transsexuals less suicidal than simply if it reduced their psychosocial stress.
Likewise, Miller seemed to be suggesting (although he seems to have backed off from the position) that hormone treatments affect recidivism, in that transsexual inmates do better after release having been hormone-treated while incarcerated. I also would like to see hard evidence that this is the case.
I mention sucide and recidivism because both are objectively measurable outcomes. This would constitute harder evidence that treating transsexuals with hormones actually affects their situation in demonstrable ways.
Also, a follow up question - do prison physicians ever diagnose gender dysphoria and prescribe hormone treatment for inmates who are not already taking hormones before conviction? Or is it that their hormone treatments continue while they are behind bars?
As usual, thank you for your willingness to share your expertise.
Regards,
Shodan
Of course not. We regularly provide health care to prisoners for pretty much all recognized conditions. Why should being transgender be the exception.
Conceded by who? Better information has been posted numerous times in past threads. Better information is also available with a little legwork and spending a little money to get past paywalls.
I’ve done the lion’s share of the legwork on this subject; lack of people posting at your demand doesn’t mean anything.
Even when people tried to misinterpret the results of the NCTE study to show suicide rates increased, and I posted the truth, people on this board keep re-posting their misinterpretations. So I’m pre-emptively re-posting that refutation before it pops up AGAIN.
And since the qualifier of “not good evidence” is a goalpost on wheels…(shrug).
Using solely suicides as a metric seems false and to be blunt, pretty unfair and discriminatory. One should be concerned with quality of life, within reason in a prison setting, not the most extreme and eye-catching metric of suicides. There’s a lot of information on the effects of HRT on mood and quality of life. Go to the library and start searching.