Rivermead Gate Medical Centre

Pride In Practice

Rivermead Gate Medical Centre works with LGBT Foundation’s Pride in Practice to ensure we achieve excellence in LGBT healthcare and successfully meet the needs of our LGBT patients.

Rivermead Gate Medical Centre and our Patient Participation Group is open to all and are dedicated to protecting diversity and equality. We are here to listen to suggestions and feedback from our LGBT patients on their experiences with us. What are we doing well? How can we continue to develop? We are hoping that by listening we can better improve and move towards a more equal healthcare provision.

If you have something you want to share or feel would help us in this process, please let us know.

Pride in Practice logo

NHS Screening Programmes

Trans patients may not be invited to routine screenings and can miss out on important health checks.
Please ask a nurse to see if you’re due a screening and book an appointment to discuss how we can make your screening comfortable for you.

For information on screening programmes for trans and non-binary people please click the link below
PHE Information for trans people – NHS Screening Programmes

All patients with a cervix should have a cervical screening

Misinformation has suggested sexual orientation affected the need for regular screening. This is not true. All patients with a cervix should attend these appointments. Trans and non-binary patients who may not receive national screening reminders are offered assistance by the practice in keeping track of when they should receive checks.

If you have not yet received this information please contact the surgery and speak with one of our LGBT Champions who will be able to set this up for you.

Gender Recognition Act 2004

The 2004 Gender Recognition Act (GRA) makes it a criminal offence to disclose an individual’s transgender history to a third party without their written consent if that individual holds a Gender Recognition Certificate (GRC). Patients do not need to show a GRC or birth certificate in order for the GRA 2004 to be in effect, so it is best practice to act as though every trans patient has one. This means always obtaining a trans patient’s written consent before sharing details about their social or medical transition, sometimes also called gender reassignment, with other services or individuals. This includes information such as whether a patient is currently taking hormones or whether they have had any genital surgery, as well as information about previous names or the gender they were given at birth. Consent should always be obtained before information relating to the patient being trans is shared in referrals and this information should only be shared where it is clinically relevant, e.g. it would be appropriate when referring a trans man for a pelvic ultrasound but not when referring him to ENT.

LGBT Support Services

LGBT Foundation
https://lgbt.foundation/
0345 3 30 30 30
The Proud Trust (Support for young trans people)
www.theproudtrust.org
Galop (LGBT Domestic Abuse Helpline)
0800 999 5428
Stonewall (General advice)
www.stonewall.co.uk
Mermaids (Support for trans patients inc. families) –
www.mermaidsuk.org.uk
Terrence Higgins Trust (Support and information regarding HIV) –
www.tht.org.uk
For more support services please click the link below:
LGBT Support Services

 

Date published: 27th September, 2021
Date last updated: 27th September, 2021