Dialogue Volume 12 Issue 1 2016 | Page 18

Council award tioner to reach beyond the medical model to which they are accustomed. Adolescence is second only to infancy in terms of the degree of change undergone through this period of their lives. Our medical input is just one of the many competing domains that preoccupy them. Hence, they may not necessarily be ready to accept our advice, leaving providers potentially frustrated and even angry. My experience is quite the opposite. When working with youth, I feel that I am auditioning as I attempt to establish a safe space within which they can divulge their most worrisome concerns and within which we can work collaboratively to help them achieve their dreams. Q: You also work with transgender teens. What are some of the unique health issues that confront these patients? A: Their primary health risk derives from the intense dysphoria they experience – the intense dismay at seeing their bodies develop and function in a way that they know is intrinsically a mistake. This may provoke an internalized sense of shame and self-criticism which is associated with depression, anxiety, self-injury, or suicidal behaviour. Happily, through the commitment to working with families and advocacy within the community, particularly in schools, many of these threats can be substantially mitigated. Q: What are some of the research gaps around transgender adolescent health that you’re hoping your research will fill? A: Research intended to better understand and to serve trans youth is still in its early stages. Research done in the past has not always benefitted or at times respected the studied population. How many young people are struggling with this issue? How do we best support children and families in fostering a positive sense of self, however they wish their gender to be expressed? We need data to help 18 Dialogue Issue 1, 2016 us better guide young people and their families regarding optimizing outcomes through timely interventions. Q: What are some of the commonalities between eating disorders in adolescents and transgender health issues? Do you see a lot of crossover in these two areas of your work? A: There is a significant over-representation of eating disorder diagnosis and behaviour among the gender dysphoric population. Youth with gender dysphoria are highly dissatisfied with their outward appearance because it does not match what they feel inside. Youth with eating disorders have significant body dissatisfaction because their distorted perception makes them feel that their bodies are too large and hence that they, too, fail to live up to societal expectation. The treatment strategies, while different, both seek to empower the family and to help the young person feel comfortable in their own skin. Q: Good communication is paramount to the clinical work you do with adolescents. What advice would you give to physicians for whom good communication skills don’t come easily? A: Effective communication with our patients makes our work so much more satisfying. As providers we need to move from a hierarchical to a collaborative relationship. We must be prepared to not know all the answers and to learn from our patients. In listening to their narrative, we can put ourselves in their shoes. The youth bring to the table their strengths, their optimism and their dreams. We bring our experience, our judgment and our more developed cognitive skills. This potential synergy ensures that the youth will no longer have to feel isolated and alone. This interview has been edited and condensed. As told to Mark Sampson.