Sudbury transgender activists welcome Ontario surgery announcement - Action News
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Sudbury

Sudbury transgender activists welcome Ontario surgery announcement

Genital-transition surgery will be more accessible to people living in northern Ontario as soon as next year. Last week, Ontario's ministry of health and long term care announced it will provide genital-transition surgery in the province in 2018.

Ontario will be offering gender confirmation surgeries beginning in 2018, Ministry says

Vincent Bolt began his transition when he was 14, and although the costs of the surgeries were covered, the journey to Montreal, and the accommodation costs incurred through recovery, were not. (Casey Stranges CBC)

Genital-transition surgery will be more accessible to people living in northern Ontario as soon as next year.

Last week, Ontario's Ministry of Health and Long Term Care announced it will provide the surgery in the province for the first time in 2018.

It's the second big step in Ontario's approach to gender reassignment surgeries.

In 2015 the province announced changes to itsreferral rules qualified health-care providers anywhere in Ontario could refertransgenderpatients for surgery.

Laura Gallant, a spokesperson with the Ministry, said that over the last three fiscal yearsthey've helpedan average of 206,427 applicants a year access certain medical specialist services through travel grants.

Previously, only the Gender Identity Clinic at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto could refer a patient for sex reassignment surgery also known as gender confirmationsurgery which is covered by the Ontario Health Insurance Plan.

Now, after being referred, a patient will be able to have surgery here in the province.

Sudbury transgender activists are welcoming the announcement, but say the province still has more work to do.

Vincent Bolt, theManager for TG Innerselves, a transgendersupport site for people in northern Ontario, said people who are transitioning already face the extra burdenof travelling out of the city or province for surgery.

"A lot ofthe surgeries have already been covered, just accessing them was a problem," Bolt said. "The Northern Ontariotravel grant doesn'tcover things out of province."

Ontario Health Minister Eric Hoskins announced that the province will offer transition-related surgeries beginning in 2018. (Christopher Katsarov/Canadian Press)

50 per cent of transgenderpeople live in poverty, activist says

Bolt said the announcementwill especially help those on the lower end of the income scale.

"Fifty per cent of trans people in Ontario earn less than$15,000," Bolt said. "To be reimbursed for travel expenses mean [the surgery] is more accessible."

Bolt knows what it means to bear the financial burden oftravelling for surgery. He began his transition when he was a teenager, and was relying on the wages he earned from a part-time job.

"At the time...they were sending people to Montreal," Bolt said. "Not only are you paying your way there and backfor any of the surgeries, you need someone there with you. So [it's also] having the cost of a family member or friend there."

Sudbury's Rita O'Link says that screening is an important part of the transition process. (Jason Turnbull/CBC)

More access to screening

Patients will also have more access to screening, whichRitaOlink, a Sudburytransgenderactivist, said is an important part of the process.

"[Patients] go through a lot of psychological stuff like how prepared are you, are you living as your desired gender full time? How are you functioning in society?Are you employed, and how is that going?What about issues with your family have you resolved those?"

"No surgeon wants to do somethingwilly-nillyand have someone out there with regrets later on and possibly having a bad life because they were too hasty," Olink said.

Listen to the interview with Vincent Bolt on Morning North.

With files from Samantha Samson