Jessica
Gender: Female
Pronouns: She/ her
Jessica came out as a trans girl to friends in her online community before coming out to her family and other people she knew. Having friends in the online community was a big support for her through her teen years when she was feeling unhappy, and puberty was triggering changes that were making her feel deeply uncomfortable. She came out to her family in a letter.
Jessica presented as a girl as soon as she left school and since then she has found people really accepting and supportive.
One of the most important aspects for Jessica is when people don’t treat her any differently for being trans. People’s ambivalence towards her gender helped her to feel that she wasn’t different and just a regular teenager who could do things like everyone else.
Jessica decided to start medically transitioning by taking hormones. The waiting time was very long for NHS trans healthcare, so she felt she had to take a quicker route via the private gender identity clinic pathway which has been a positive experience for her. She has felt well informed and never felt that the process was going too fast.
She has remained on the waiting list for the NHS pathway as she is hoping to switch over her care in several years; time when she reaches the top of the waiting list.
Jessica was unable to have a Shared Care Agreement with her GP and he referred her to CAMHS as the first step in the pathway to GIDS. She feels referral through CAHMS is wrong for her as she doesn’t have any mental health problems and it has substantially increased the waiting time for her to be seen by GIDS.
it’s been frustrating for Jessica dealing with the legal barriers around name changes which means her birth name is often used in administration processes.
She would like NHS trans healthcare services to be less bureaucratic with less paperwork and more human focused.