PCOM Hosts Trans Health Advocate
October 30, 2017
When Anne Koch, DMD, underwent gender confirmation surgery at age 63, she said that
for her, the physical part was fairly easy. It was the emotional toll that was much,
much harder.
“My only support system at the time was this little stuffed moose,” she told students
in a standing-room-only Ginsburg Auditorium on October 26, during the inaugural lecture
of an annual series at PCOM that will highlight LGBT History Month. “These were people
I had known for 40 years, and all of a sudden they were gone. I had to live as a widow,
and the loneliness was the roughest part, for me.”
Dr. Koch is a Penn-trained endodontist who, since her transition from male to female,
has become an advocate for trans health issues, stressing the need for competent,
caring and educated health practitioners who can effectively serve the needs of this
still-largely underserved population.
During the lecture, which was hosted by the Office of Diversity and Community Relations and the PCOM LGBTQIA Council, Dr. Koch shared her personal narrative to illustrate
the importance of a strong support system for those undergoing gender confirmation
surgery—and, if there is no support system, how behavioral health practitioners can
be of help to those patients.
“The most intimate thing you can do—other than die—is to have this surgery,” she said.
“If there’s anything that requires some handholding, it’s this. The surgery is only
the beginning.” She said that care for transgender patients was a “720-degree” process—that
it has to be all encompassing, with complete continuity of care for each patient.
Dr. Koch also discussed treatment options for both male-to-female and female-to-male
patients, and creating an open and welcoming clinical environment for LGBTQIA patients.
She called on the medical and psychology students in the audience to be active and
aware of the needs of that patient population.
“There’s a perceived illegitimacy that’s starting to overwhelm things,” she said.
“The comorbidities within these patients are stunning, and it’s up to the medical
community to sort it out. No one is disposable. You’re the vanguard; you’re the generation
that will need to address this.”
Marcine Pickron-Davis, PhD, chief diversity and community relations officer, said the College’s goal in starting the lecture series is to show students that
diversity in their future practices isn’t just about gender or race. “We want to graduate
culturally competent healthcare providers, and that means hearing voices from all
facets of the community,” she said. “Learning how to create a dialogue, how to ask
questions, and not harbor assumptions that their patient is straight, or identifies
as female or male, is incredibly important.”
Anne Koch, DMD, is the author of the forthcoming book, It Never Goes Away: Gender Transition at a Mature Age.
You May Also Like:
About Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine
For the past 125 years, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine (PCOM) has trained
thousands of highly competent, caring physicians, health practitioners and behavioral
scientists who practice a “whole person” approach to care—treating people, not just
symptoms. PCOM, a private, not-for-profit accredited institution of higher education,
operates three campuses (PCOM, PCOM Georgia and PCOM South Georgia) and offers doctoral degrees in clinical psychology, educational psychology, osteopathic
medicine, pharmacy, physical therapy, and school psychology. The college also offers
graduate degrees in applied behavior analysis, applied positive psychology, biomedical
sciences, forensic medicine, medical laboratory science, mental health counseling,
physician assistant studies, and school psychology. PCOM students learn the importance
of health promotion, research, education and service to the community. Through its
community-based Healthcare Centers, PCOM provides care to medically underserved populations.
For more information, visit pcom.edu or call 215-871-6100.
Contact Us
Brandon Lausch
Executive Director, Strategic Communications
Email: brandonla@pcom.edu
Office: 215-871-6312 | Cell:
717-371-0609
Connect with PCOM