Queer women need paps too
HEALTH / New Toronto program promotes pap tests for lesbians and trans men
Allison Martell / National / Monday, December 21, 2009
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GET IN TOUCH WITH YOUR CERVIX. New campaign urges lesbians and trans men to get pap smears
(Courtesy of Check It Out)
To get my first pap test, I had to pretend I was sleeping with men. Several years ago, I was leaving the country and wanted to make sure I was up to date with routine health care. My GP said that it wasn't within "the guidelines" to give paps to women who sleep exclusively with women.

From my own research, I was pretty sure she was wrong. I also knew that I wouldn't have time to get an appointment somewhere else. So I lied. She told me if I wasn't interested in following her advice, I should get another doctor. After a supremely awkward pelvic exam, I left and never went back. Apparently, I'm not alone.

Pap tests look for abnormal changes in the cervix that could lead to cervical cancer, and they save lives. Two new campaigns are bringing this info to queer folks in Toronto. The first, from the Queer Women's Health Initiative, a partnership between Planned Parenthood Toronto (PPT), the Sherbourne Health Centre, Women's College Hospital and Rainbow Health Ontario, is called Check It Out.

Along with posters and flyers featuring local models, the campaign, launched in November, has a slick online home at check-it-out.ca.

"In the medical community, as well as among women themselves, the message is out there that if you're not having heterosexual sex, then you don't need a pap test," says Sarah Hobbs, executive director of PPT.

But that is way off. The government's Ontario Cervical Screening Program guidelines say clearly that women who sleep with women need regular screening. And while the guidelines are not explicitly trans inclusive, trans men also need pap tests.

That's why on Jan 11, the Sherbourne Health Centre will launch a separate campaign for trans men, Check It Out Guys.

"Anybody who has a cervix, who has been sexually active in their lives, any kind of sex, needs to get regular paps," says Ayden Scheim, coordinator of the trans men's pap campaign. "Guys who've had hysterectomies, if they still have their cervixes, they need paps like anybody else. If people have had their cervixes removed, they sometimes still need to have something similar to a pap [that] tests for cell changes caused by HPV."

Both campaigns will reach out to service providers but also empower queer and trans folk to negotiate their own care.

Check It Out Guys launches Jan 11, 7- 9pm at Buddies in Toronto.

For more information, go to check-it-out.ca. A similar site for trans guys, checkitoutguys.ca, is scheduled to go live on Jan 11.



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Reader Comments


 
Props
Props to this initiative. Glad to see there's a separate campaign coming for trans men too. I remember a woman giving her account on the internet, where her gyno asked her what form of birth control she was using. "None." "And you're sexually active?" "Yes." "OMG are you trying to get pregnant? etc., etc." "I'm a lesbian. I only sleep with women." "...Then why are you having a pap smear?" *headdesk* "Because lesbians get cervical cancer too!"
Ace, Montreal QC
12/21/09 11:06 AM EST
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Wondering
Here you should go to make this test every year. It's not oblygatory, but really recomended. "It is important for all women to have Pap tests, along with pelvic exams, as part of their routine health care. You need a Pap test if you are: * 21 years or older * under 21 years old and have been sexually active for 3 years or more" " * If you are younger than 30 years old, you should get a Pap test every year. * If you are age 30 or older and have had 3 normal Pap tests for 3 years in a row, talk to your doctor about spacing out Pap tests to every 2 or 3 years. * If you are ages 65 to 70 and have had at least 3 normal Pap tests and no abnormal Pap tests in the last 10 years, ask your doctor if you can stop having Pap tests." These tests can realise illness caused by tampons, by gens... I wonder what kind of doctor say a lesbian isn't a woman, so she couldn't be ill. My sexual orientation has never been a question at the doctor. If they ask me, are you sexually active, i simply answer: yes i am, or no i don't but before (e. g.) a month i was. It's my privacy with whom i have sex, isn't it?
Yume, Fot (Hungary) Pest
12/25/09 6:54 AM EST
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P. S.
i forgot to paste, where is the quotes from: http://www.womenshealth.gov/faq/pap-test.cfm
Yume, Fot (Hungary) Pest
12/25/09 6:57 AM EST
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Don't forget trans women
Don't forget the trans ladies! If you're a trans woman and you've had GRS, some doctors recommend getting a pap too. The lining of a trans woman's vagina is epithelial tissue and is susceptible to cancer as well. It doesn't hurt to check, and someone should be looking up there annually, just like our cisgender sisters.
joey, oakland usa
02/26/10 11:52 AM EST
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