I don't think health insurance covered sex reassignment surgery, but you do need a "transgender" lawyer to help you with legal issues.
A bilateral orchiectomy is commonly performed as one stage in male-to-female (MTF) gender reassignment surgery.
Patients requesting gender reassignment surgery must undergo a lengthy process of physical and psychological evaluation before receiving approval for surgery.
The success rate of gender reassignment surgery varies depending on the individual and the specific procedure. Overall, research suggests that the majority of individuals who undergo gender reassignment surgery report improved quality of life and satisfaction with their gender identity. However, it is important to note that success can be subjective and may vary from person to person.
If surgical candidates are socially or emotionally unstable before the operation, over the age of 30, or have an unsuitable body build for the new gender, they tend not to fare well after gender reassignment surgery.
I'm not sure if one exists.
When you change gender from woman to man or man to woman. They change your genitals to the other gender by surgery.
As a Male to Female transsexual I am being administered estrogen and an androgen blocker (stops testosterone) before my gender reassignment surgery. After my surgery I will have to continue to take the estrogen for the rest of my life.
They both had gender reassignment surgery, and are hanging out with Chaz Bono in Copenhagen......
Yes - especially in legal issues.
Yes, if they decides to get sex reassignment surgery or use a prosthesis.
I am transgender female and I was born with a penis. Assuming that you understand a trans woman is a male to female transsexual. Before they have Genital Reassignment Surgery trans women have the penis that they are born with. After the surgery the tissue from the penis has been used to create a neovagina that looks and functions just as a natal females vagina. It takes an expert to recognize the difference. Trans women do not have periods and cannot get pregnant, they do not have a uterus.
The morbidity and mortality rates for persons having an orchiectomy as part of gender reassignment surgery are about the same as those for any procedure involving general or epidural anesthesia.