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Artikel

Queering Reproductive Loss : Exploring Grief and Memorialization  / Christa Craven and Elizabeth Peel.

bron:
samenvatting: Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) communities have a long history of memorializing loss - The NAMES Project or AIDS memorial quilt, the Transgender Day of Remembrance, and art and fiction memorializing the Stonewall riots. Yet queer losses are frequently hard to identify or mourn since many aspects of historical gay culture are associated with the pain and shame of the closet. The subject of reproductive loss - the personal, and sometimes communal, experiences of miscarriage, infant death, and failed adoptions - has often been a silent burden for LGBTQ parents, one frequently intensified by fears of homophobia and heterosexism. Queer losses are also overlooked (or perhaps avoided) in most academic and popular books on LGBTQ reproduction, and queer experiences remain absent from most self-help books on recovering from reproductive loss. We have collected the stories of queer people - primarily lesbian and bisexual women, but also several gay men and trans people - as they have experienced reproductive loss. These stories are drawn from an online survey of sixty non-heterosexual women from the UK, USA, Canada, and Australia (Peel), and interviews with fifty-two LGBTQ people who had experienced loss in the USA, Canada, and a handful of other countries, including Belgium, Italy, Jamaica, New Zealand, and Scotland. Elsewhere, we have argued that for LGBTQ people, challenges in achieving conception and adoption amplify experiences of loss and the severely under-researched experiences of non-gestational parents offer important insights into the range of experience with reproductive loss . We reengage that conversation here: first, in the existing literature on reproductive loss in queer communities; second, in the (lack of) support literature currently available; and finally, in the memorial strategies of queer parents in our studies.
onderwerpen:

signatuur: dgb artikelen (crave/pee)

Queering Reproductive Loss : Exploring Grief and Memorialization
dgb artikelen (crave/pee)
Christa Craven and Elizabeth Peel.
In: Interrogating Pregnancy Loss: Feminist writings on abortion, miscarriage and stillbirth / E. R. M. Lind & A. Deveau (Eds). - Bradford : Demeter, 2017. - p. 225-245.
N302842
Grijs

Information Sheet: LGBT pregnancy loss.

[Melbourne]: Australian Psychological Society (APS), [2016] - 3 p.
uitgave: [Melbourne] : Australian Psychological Society (APS), [2016] - 3 p.
onderwerpen:
thema:
  1. gezondheid
  2. lhbti
samenvatting: This information sheet has been prepared for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people who experience pregnancy loss, and the mental health professionals who work with them. For the purposes of this information sheet, pregnancy loss refers to miscarriage and stillbirth. This information sheet covers the following questions: What might pregnancy loss mean for LGBT people? What do mental health professionals need to know about LGBT pregnancy loss to ensure best practice provision and inclusion? How might mental health professionals assist LGBT people who have experienced pregnancy loss? What are some useful further resources?

signatuur: cat. (infor/she)

dgb grijs

toegang:
Information Sheet: LGBT pregnancy loss.
cat. (infor/she)dgb grijs
N305208
Artikel

Pregnancy intentions and outcomes among transgender, nonbinary, and gender-expansive people assigned female or intersex at birth in the United States: Results from a national, quantitative survey  / Heidi Moseson ...[et al.].

International Journal of Transgender Health, 22 (2021) 1-2 (jan-jun), p. 30-41
bron: International Journal of Transgender Health jaargang: 22 (2021) 1-2 (jan-jun), p. 30-41
samenvatting: Transgender, nonbinary, and gender-expansive (TGE) people experience pregnancy. Quantitative data about pregnancy intentions and outcomes of TGE people are needed to identify patterns in pregnancy intentions and outcomes and to inform clinicians how best to provide gender-affirming and competent pregnancy care. We sought to collect data on pregnancy intentions and outcomes among TGE people assigned female or intersex at birth in the United States. Collaboratively with a study-specific community advisory team, we designed a customizable, online survey to measure sexual and reproductive health experiences among TGE people. Eligible participants included survey respondents who identified as a man or within the umbrella of transgender, nonbinary, or gender-expansive identities; were 18 years or older; able to complete an electronic survey in English; lived in the United States; and were assigned female or intersex at birth. Participants were recruited through The PRIDE Study - a national, online, longitudinal cohort study of sexual and gender minority people - and externally via online social media postings, TGE community e-mail distribution lists, in-person TGE community events, and academic and community conferences. We conducted descriptive analyses of pregnancy-related outcomes and report frequencies overall and by racial and ethnic identity, pregnancy intention, or testosterone use. Out of 1,694 eligible TGE respondents who provided reproductive history data, 210 (12%) had been pregnant. Of these, 115 (55%) had one prior pregnancy, 47 (22%) had two prior pregnancies, and 48 (23%) had three or more prior pregnancies. Of the 433 pregnancies, 169 (39%) resulted in live birth, 142 (33%) miscarried, 92 (21%) ended in abortion, two (0.5%) ended in stillbirth, two (0.5%) had an ectopic pregnancy, and seven (2%) were still pregnant; nineteen pregnancies (4%) had an unknown outcome. Among live births, 39 (23%) were delivered via cesarean section. Across all pregnancies, 233 (54%) were unintended. Fifteen pregnancies occurred after initiation of testosterone, and four pregnancies occurred while taking testosterone. Among all participants, 186 (11%) wanted a future pregnancy, and 275 (16%) were unsure; 182 (11%) felt 'at risk' for an unintended pregnancy. Discussion: TGE people in the United States plan for pregnancy, experience pregnancy (intended and unintended) and all pregnancy outcomes, and are engaged in family building. Sexual and reproductive health clinicians and counselors should avoid assumptions about pregnancy capacity or intentions based on a patient's presumed or stated gender or engagement with gender-affirming hormone therapy.
onderwerpen:

signatuur: ts.

Pregnancy intentions and outcomes among transgender, nonbinary, and gender-expansive people assigned female or intersex at birth in the United States: Results from a national, quantitative survey
ts.
Heidi Moseson ...[et al.].
International Journal of Transgender Health
22
(2021)
1-2
(jan-jun)
30-41
N309265

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( DE:"miskramen" )

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