A hospital in central Oregon has made a small change that represented a huge difference for its transgender patients: It removed the gender designation from patient identification bracelets.

The Bulletin newspaper in Bend reports the St. Charles Health System adopted the change last month. The ID bracelet is designed to provide caregivers an easy way to identify patients based on two distinct identifiers.

"It was something that everybody felt had to be on there because it was always on there," said Rebecca Scrafford, a psychologist at St. Charles who was involved in recommending the change. "It's providing no benefit, but it's causing harm."

The ID bracelet is designed to provide caregivers an easy way to identify patients based on two distinct identifiers. But staff generally check the patient's name and date of birth, not gender.

Until recently, the hospital's record system did not distinguish between sex assigned at birth, legal gender and gender identity. The ID bracelet had been showing the patient's legal name and sex assigned at birth.

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"For a lot of those patients, that didn't match, and that was distressing for our patients," Scrafford said. "This is one little baby step in providing affirming care that is probably the first visible sign of many efforts that are underway at St. Charles and communitywide."

Last year the hospital held a transgender health care training event for providers, and this year convened an internal sexual orientation and gender identity work group to guide initiatives around welcoming transgender patients. Meanwhile, the new Central Oregon Transgender Healthcare Coalition held its first meeting last month, establishing a goal of expanding capacity for transgender health in the community.

The hospital has now trained its staff about when and how to ask about gender identity, and how to record that information in the patient's record.

"You can have the nicest provider in the world, but if the person at the front desk says the wrong name and gender, it's not going to be the greatest experience," Scrafford said.

Surveys show many transgender people have had negative experiences interacting with the health care system and nearly half say they avoid medical care because of it.

"Patients will access care first and foremost if they feel safe accessing care," said Dr. Christina Milano, a professor of family medicine at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, and an expert in transgender health issues. "Unfortunately, transgender and gender diverse individuals have a long history experiencing things like discrimination or inappropriate questions and comments regarding their gender when accessing health care."

Limitations in electronic health records, she says, often mean printed labels or ID bracelets don't align with a patient's gender identity.

"A wristband that a patient is wearing in a hospital during a critical time, a scary hospital admission, that's something that they're staring at 24/7 during their waking hours," Milano said. "So having that being gender affirming by either having the correct gender or having no gender marker — so avoiding the risk of the wrong gender marker — is a big positive."

But the limitations of the record system often mean transgender patients must sacrifice their privacy to get things corrected.

"I've had to publicly out myself many times," said Rob Landis, a transgender man from Prineville and a board member of the Human Dignity Coalition. "If I was any other transgender person, I could have gotten very offended and hurt by that."

Landis recounted a visit to one clinic where the woman checking him in for his appointment burst out laughing when she pulled up his records.

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"That's so weird. There's an F here on the screen where there should be an M," he recalls her saying. "Yeah, it's not really funny because I'm transgender."

Another time he had to explain why he was coming for an appointment with a gynecologist.

"I had to out myself again, to say I had some female parts that needed to be removed," he said.

Still Landis says he has seen tremendous change in Central Oregon. When he started his transition six year ago, he had to research which providers locally were familiar with transgender health issues and if offices would treat him with respect.

"I thought Central Oregon was like its own little island that has been kept from the real world," Landis said. "But doing some research, there are a lot of providers out there locally. I don't have to go to Portland."

The Human Dignity Coalition has served as a clearinghouse for transgender individuals seeking health providers, sharing word-of-mouth reviews of which doctors were knowledgeable and accommodating. It also holds training sessions for providers and staff on transgender issues.

Coalition president Jamie Bowman has two transgender daughters and tries to pre-empt problems by informing the front desk when she checks in that her child's legal name isn't the name she now uses.

"I just hope that the waiting room full of parents and other children didn't hear, and then hope and cross my fingers that when the nurse comes to the door to call my child, she would call the right name," Bowman said. "And just last week, they didn't."

Two years ago, her daughter received an ID bracelet with the wrong gender at the emergency room at St. Charles Redmond.

"I just looked at it and sighed. And then the admit person came back with a different bracelet, took the M off, and put an F on instead," she said. "Even that little bitty thing, it just made all the difference to my child."

There are an estimated 1.4 million transgender people in the United States, representing about 0.6 percent of the population, although those numbers may represent an undercount.