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Experiences of people from, and working with, transgender communities within the NHS : summary of findings, 2013/14.

by NHS England.
Publisher: NHS England, London : 2015.Description: [16]p.Summary: This paper summarises what was heard during listening exercises conducted in 2013/14 about the experiences in the NHS of people within the transgender communities. Communications were opened up both online (through Twitter Clubs) and face-to-face (through one-to-one interviews, telephone interviews and workshops). Additionally, a listening exercise was also conducted with NHS staff. In April 2013 Gender Identity Services became the commissioning responsibility of NHS England, inherited from primary care trusts and specialised commissioning groups. This work began because the services inherited were recognised to be inequitable and fragmented with regards to access. NHS England believed the first steps to improving this situation was to listen to, and engage with, the transgender community..Subject(s): transgender | patient experience | health inequalities | gender identity services | NHS | England
Digital copyAvailability: Online access List(s) this item appears in: Transgender health [November 2023]
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Web publication The King's Fund Library Online resource Web publications and sites Web publications (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan

This paper summarises what was heard during listening exercises conducted in 2013/14 about the experiences in the NHS of people within the transgender communities. Communications were opened up both online (through Twitter Clubs) and face-to-face (through one-to-one interviews, telephone interviews and workshops).
Additionally, a listening exercise was also conducted with NHS staff. In April 2013 Gender Identity Services became the commissioning responsibility of NHS England, inherited from primary care trusts and specialised commissioning groups. This work began because the services inherited were recognised to be inequitable and fragmented with regards to access. NHS England believed the first steps to improving this situation was to listen to, and engage with, the transgender community.

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