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Sliding doors: should treatment of gender identity disorder and other body modifications be privately funded?
by
Giordano, Simona
in
Bioethics
/ Body Modification, Non-Therapeutic - economics
/ Body Modification, Non-Therapeutic - ethics
/ Education
/ Ethics
/ Female
/ Financing, Government - ethics
/ Financing, Personal - ethics
/ Gender dysphoria
/ Gender Identity
/ Humans
/ Intervention
/ Male
/ Medical Law
/ Medical treatment
/ Mental disorders
/ Philosophy
/ Philosophy of Biology
/ Philosophy of Medicine
/ Scientific Contribution
/ Sex Reassignment Surgery - economics
/ Sex Reassignment Surgery - ethics
/ Surgery
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
2012
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Sliding doors: should treatment of gender identity disorder and other body modifications be privately funded?
by
Giordano, Simona
in
Bioethics
/ Body Modification, Non-Therapeutic - economics
/ Body Modification, Non-Therapeutic - ethics
/ Education
/ Ethics
/ Female
/ Financing, Government - ethics
/ Financing, Personal - ethics
/ Gender dysphoria
/ Gender Identity
/ Humans
/ Intervention
/ Male
/ Medical Law
/ Medical treatment
/ Mental disorders
/ Philosophy
/ Philosophy of Biology
/ Philosophy of Medicine
/ Scientific Contribution
/ Sex Reassignment Surgery - economics
/ Sex Reassignment Surgery - ethics
/ Surgery
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
2012
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Do you wish to request the book?
Sliding doors: should treatment of gender identity disorder and other body modifications be privately funded?
by
Giordano, Simona
in
Bioethics
/ Body Modification, Non-Therapeutic - economics
/ Body Modification, Non-Therapeutic - ethics
/ Education
/ Ethics
/ Female
/ Financing, Government - ethics
/ Financing, Personal - ethics
/ Gender dysphoria
/ Gender Identity
/ Humans
/ Intervention
/ Male
/ Medical Law
/ Medical treatment
/ Mental disorders
/ Philosophy
/ Philosophy of Biology
/ Philosophy of Medicine
/ Scientific Contribution
/ Sex Reassignment Surgery - economics
/ Sex Reassignment Surgery - ethics
/ Surgery
/ Theory of Medicine/Bioethics
2012
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Sliding doors: should treatment of gender identity disorder and other body modifications be privately funded?
Journal Article
Sliding doors: should treatment of gender identity disorder and other body modifications be privately funded?
2012
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Overview
Gender Identity Disorder (GID) is regarded as a mental illness and included in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV). It will also appear in the DSM-V, due to be published in 2013. The classification of GID as a mental illness is contentious. But what would happen to sufferers if it were removed from the diagnostic manuals? Would people lose their entitlement to funded medical care, or to reimbursement under insurance schemes? On what basis should medical treatment for GID be provided? What are the moral arguments for and against funded or reimbursed medical care for GID? This paper starts out with a fiction: GID is removed from the diagnostic manuals. Then the paper splits in two, as in happened in the Howitt’s 1998 film
Sliding Doors
. The two scenarios run parallel. In one, it is argued that GID is on a par with other body modifications, such as cosmetic and racial surgery, and that, for ethical reasons, treatment for GID should be privately negotiated by applicants and professionals and privately paid for. In the other scenario, it is argued that the comparison between GID and other body modifications is misleading. Whether or not medical treatment should be funded or reimbursed is independent of whether GID is on a par with other forms of body dissatisfaction.
Publisher
Springer Netherlands,Springer Nature B.V
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