| News Item | ![]() |
A plague undetected
Did shady backroom hormone treatments and dirty needles cause a killer outbreak of HIV in the transgender community?
By Nina Siegal
Salon.com
March 28, 2001 | NEW YORK -- Fourteen years ago, when
Barbara Cassis was a 24-year-old man, she asked a familyphysician to give her
hormones so she could become a woman. He prescribed a visit to a psychiatrist instead.
Undeterred, Cassis, now a towering blond with swimming-pool-blue eyes and a C-cup chest,
entered an underground economy of fake doctors and self-appointed medical gurus who were
willing to help her make the transformation she desired. She didn't know at the time that
she was putting herself at risk for AIDS.
At transgender clubs in Hell's Kitchen, she asked the convincing-looking girls where to
start. One gave her a business card for a hormone home delivery service. Another, she
recalls, told her about a doctor who administered treatments in the bathroom of Sally's, a
popular Hell's Kitchen bar catering primarily to transgender patrons.
According to Cassis and outreach workers who are familiar with the transgender scene in
New York, this so-called doctor would set up shop in a bathroom stall for hours, injecting
possibly hundreds with a single needle, without sterilizing it between shots.
"You could just walk in there, pay him $30 and he injected you in your butt,"
says Cassis, with an anguished expression on her
face, because she now knows the risks associated with such activity. "They had the
needles packaged, so it looked like they were new, but the tops of the packets were always
open. I don't have any doubt that they were being reused."
Hormone needle sharing has not been identified as a major risk factor for HIV transmission
among transsexuals, but a growing number of physicians and AIDS outreach workers believe
it may be the cause of hundreds of cases in the United States and abroad. Very little is
known about healthcare issues facing transgender people -- an umbrella term for anyone who
does not identify with the sex they had at birth -- because research focused on
transgenders is scarce. Recently, however, public health officials across the United
States have begun to explore transgender health needs, and they are particularly concerned
about high rates of HIV infection in this population.
"Due to the lack of tracking, there might be an epidemic out of control and we don't
know about it, nor do we have the resources to address it if we need to," warns Jason
Farrell, executive director of the Positive Health Project, an AIDS outreach program in
New York. "Some advocates think that the rates of infection may be going up in the
transgender community, but there's no way to know because there's no tracking whatsoever
of transgenders now."
In the last 10 years, HIV prevalence rates amongst intravenous drug users have dropped
dramatically, according to David A. Hansell, associate commissioner for HIV services for
the New York Department of Health, and many researchers believe outreach to drug users and
widespread use of needle exchange programs have been partially responsible for the
decline. But rates of transmission in the transgender population have remained
staggeringly high, and may be continuing to rise, according to recent health studies.
Researchers are now asking whether black-market hormones could be at least partly
responsible for high HIV infection rates.
"Clearly, sharing of hormone needles is a possible route of transmission because with
any injection there's a possible risk," Hansell
says. "It's one of the risks that people need to be educated about so they avoid
it."
Health departments in New York, Los Angeles, Boston and San Francisco are exploring the
issue. Finding that the rates of infection in the group were phenomenally high in Los
Angeles County, the city's Community HIV Prevention Planning Committee recently designated
the transgender population as one of its highest priorities for HIV prevention efforts.
Dr. Paul Simon, a medical epidemiologist with the Los Angeles County Department of Health
Services, is one of several researchers who conducted a survey of 244 male-to-female
transsexuals in 1998 and 1999. The results of the study were published in a December 2000
issue of the journal "AIDS."
The findings stunned Simon and his researchers. Twenty-two percent of those in the study
group were HIV-positive (while only a fraction of 1 percent of the general population in
the United States is thought to be HIV-positive today). They conducted a follow-up study
and determined that in a group of 100 transsexuals, the chance of getting infected was 3.4
percent.
"That's as high as what we were seeing among gay and bisexual men in the 1980s at the
peak of the epidemic," says Simon. "It's a very high rate of HIV
infection."
As a group, transsexuals face several risk factors. Although most transgender people do
not think of themselves as gay, most engage in anatomically homosexual sex. And among
male-to-female transsexuals, the group reported a high rate of unprotected anal sex (47
percent reported having unprotected receptive anal sex in the last six months). Recent
public health studies also reveal that sexual partners of transsexuals tend to
identify as straight, providing anecdotal evidence that safe-sex education that is widely
available in the gay community may not be reaching them.
When asked about needles, 69 percent reported that they had injected hormones at some
point in their lives; 44 percent in the previous six months alone. Of those who had
recently injected hormones, 72 percent said they got their needles off the streets. But
Simon says it is unclear what role black market needles played, since unsafe sex and drug
use are also dangers (8 percent reported using intravenous drugs in the last six months).
Sharing hormone needles may be less risky than sharing drug needles, he added, because
transsexuals do not typically draw blood directly back into the needle, as drug users do.
Female and male hormones come in various forms -- pills, patches and liquid -- but many
transsexuals prefer injections to the other methods because liquid hormones supposedly
take effect faster. Hormone needles are about twice the length and width of the needles
used to shoot heroin, which is usually diluted with water before it is injected. But just
like drug syringes, hormone needles are not readily available in pharmacies without a
prescription, and are sometimes even harder to come by than clean drug needles on the
streets.
The San Francisco and New York health departments have both studied HIV risk factors in
the transgender population. Of 94 transgender people surveyed for the 1999
"Transgender Needs Assessment" for the New York City HIV Prevention Planning
Group, 90 percent of respondents said they had a history of using hormones. Of those, 40
percent said they had gotten them off the black market.
"A small number reported sharing, but when people are accessing hormones from the
black market there's no way of knowing if they're using syringes that have been used
before," says Kelly McGowan, author of the report. "It was definitely discussed
as a perceived risk factor, particularly amongst female-to-males."
In San Francisco, however, researchers found little needle sharing. Out of 500
transsexuals surveyed, only three men who were taking hormones to become women, and one
woman trying to become a man, reported sharing needles in the last six months. Of the
transgenders who inject hormones, 84 percent reported that they had obtained their needles
from safe sources in the last six months.
Kristen Clements, an epidemiologist with the San Francisco Department of Public Health and
the chief investigator for that city's report, says the divergence might reflect the two
cities' different approaches to needle exchange and transgender lifestyles. In San
Francisco, several health clinics provide free hormone syringes and free and low-cost
hormone therapy in a safe, medical setting, with hours set aside exclusively for
transsexuals.
"I can guarantee you that if someone is grappling with gender identity, they're going
to get hormone needles off the street," Clements says. "But we take that
seriously here, and we provide needles."
By comparison, the 1999 "Gay and Lesbian Health Report" by the New York City
Department of Public Health found that "members of the transgender community report
barriers to accessing body altering drugs and procedures."
When asked if he knew of any clinics in New York City that offer low-cost or free hormone
therapy for transitioning adults, Farrell just laughed, shaking his head. "That's San
Francisco," he says. (Indeed, San Francisco is currently considering a proposal to
add sex changes to the list of medical procedures covered by city employees' health
plans.) Farrell adds that he knew of only two needle exchange programs in New York that
specifically do outreach to the transgender community -- his own and Streetworks, a
program for adolescent transsexuals.
However, on Jan. 1, New York state implemented a new policy of needle deregulation. For
three years, it will make syringes available to adults without a prescription, through
licensed pharmacies, healthcare facilities and certain healthcare practitioners who
voluntarily register with the state.
But the sea change in New York and progressive politics in San Francisco will do little
for transgenders like Barbara Cassis, who is already HIV-positive.
Cassis didn't think much about the potential of getting infected by sharing hormone
needles. But she is HIV-positive, and says that other AIDS risk factors don't apply to
her. She has never injected illicit drugs, she says, or worked as a prostitute. She
assumes she got HIV from unsafe sex or sharing hormones.
Though Cassis has no way of determining the origin of her HIV, it's hard to imagine that
she, or her friends, weren't putting themselves at risk. In the '80s and early '90s, she
recalls, one so-called doctor parked a gray van in front of popular transgender clubs in
New York, from about 10 p.m. till 2 a.m., and later near the Chelsea Piers where
transgender prostitutes waited for johns. People lined up for $30-to-$40 shots,
administered assembly-line style, climbing in through the van's back door and exiting
through the side door, says Cassis.
When hormones were delivered to her house, she remembers, the situation was no more
sanitary. "You might get one or two needles with a vial of hormones," she says.
"But they were always open. I didn't think about it much at the time, because I was
so excited to get the hormones. I remember taking my needle and shooting my girlfriend up,
and just rinsing it out with water. I never thought about it."
But now she thinks about it a lot. "Probably hundreds of girls were infected that
way, from about 1979 to about 1991 or 1992. Now, the transgender community in New York is
small, but there used to be hundreds of girls who would come to the city, get their
hormones that way and leave. A lot of them are dead now," she says.
Unsafe sex was another major risk activity for HIV transmission. In the beginning of the
epidemic, many transsexuals didn't think they had to worry about safe sex, as gay men did.
"Everyone thought of AIDS as a gay man's disease," she explains. "And we
weren't gay."
Cassis stopped buying hormones on the street, and found an above-board physician who is
now helping her manage her transition. She's also active in the transgender community, and
works as an administrative assistant at the Positive Health Project, one of only a few
AIDS programs in New York that gives out hormone needles in its needle exchange program.
She and several other transsexuals on the group's staff educate others about needle
sharing. They also helped to design an unusual pamphlet, "Safety Guidelines for
Injecting Hormones," as well as a small brochure, "Calling All Girls:
Transgenders and HIV," which warns about the risks of hormone-needle
sharing.
Jason Farrell is Cassis' boss at the Positive Health Project. An HIV-positive former
intravenous drug user, Farrell set up the needle-exchange program in 1994 in the heart of
Hell's Kitchen. While canvassing the neighborhood to assess the needs of the population he
hoped to serve, he discovered that most AIDS education and outreach programs had largely
overlooked transsexuals. But the stories he heard in transgender bars and clubs worried
him.
"If what has been told to me is in fact true, I can only assume that sharing hormone
needles was leading people to getting HIV," he says. "It would be no different
from me having a shooting gallery in my house and having everyone share syringes. I assume
these guys would have infected a lot of people."
Yet despite widespread efforts to educate people about the dangers of sharing needles of
any kind, Cassis says she still knows transgender girls who buy their hormones on the
black market and reuse syringes or shoot up their friends.
And that's because of the lack of specific efforts to educate the transgender community
about HIV risk. "It's obvious that it's a risk factor," says McGowan of the New
York City HIV Prevention Planning Group. "And it's obvious that we can do something
about it. Hormone needle exchange is a very simple precautionary tool that can be easily
implemented and should be."
![]()