» Articles » PMID: 30762488

'Bye-bye Boobies': Normativity, Deservingness and Medicalisation in Transgender Medical Crowdfunding

Overview
Journal Cult Health Sex
Publisher Informa Healthcare
Specialty Social Sciences
Date 2019 Feb 15
PMID 30762488
Citations 6
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Transgender individuals experience multiple barriers to accessing care related to medical transition, including a shortage of providers as well as health insurance programmes that categorically exclude the provision of gender-affirming hormones and surgery. Like people seeking financial support for health care related to illness or injury, many transgender people utilise web-based crowdfunding to help pay for medical transition costs. Although a growing body of research finds that medical crowdfunding individualises the effects of health inequalities, little of this research has focused specifically on trans crowdfunding. A dataset of 410 crowdfunding campaigns for medical transition was created. The majority of online campaigns were used to fund chest surgeries among young, white, binary-identified trans men in the USA. On average, campaigns raise only about 25% of their fundraising goal. Using thematic narrative analysis, I find that campaign narratives exhibit several main themes: trans 101, biological essentialism, insurance access, deservingness, normative transition and notions of progress. These themes illustrate how transgender medical crowdfunding is a response to inequalities but also has the effect of reproducing them.

Citing Articles

A Content Analysis of Transgender Health and Wellness Themes Shared Through Social Media.

Stoody V, Glick H, Murphey A, Sturza J, Selkie E Clin Pediatr (Phila). 2023; 63(10):1352-1363.

PMID: 38135918 PMC: 11778161. DOI: 10.1177/00099228231219499.


Exploring Online Crowdfunding for Cancer-Related Costs Among LGBTQ+ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Plus) Cancer Survivors: Integration of Community-Engaged and Technology-Based Methodologies.

Waters A, Turner C, Easterly C, Tovar I, Mulvaney M, Poquadeck M JMIR Cancer. 2023; 9:e51605.

PMID: 37902829 PMC: 10644187. DOI: 10.2196/51605.


An overview of Fintech applications to solve the puzzle of health care funding: state-of-the-art in medical crowdfunding.

Grassi L, Fantaccini S Financ Innov. 2022; 8(1):84.

PMID: 36158456 PMC: 9483272. DOI: 10.1186/s40854-022-00388-9.


Like a Grinding Stone: How Crowdfunding Platforms Create, Perpetuate, and Value Health Inequities.

Kenworthy N Med Anthropol Q. 2021; 35(3):327-345.

PMID: 33711178 PMC: 8519036. DOI: 10.1111/maq.12639.


A cross-sectional study of social inequities in medical crowdfunding campaigns in the United States.

Kenworthy N, Dong Z, Montgomery A, Fuller E, Berliner L PLoS One. 2020; 15(3):e0229760.

PMID: 32134984 PMC: 7058302. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0229760.