sex reassignment therapy
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Sex reassignment therapy (SRT) is an umbrella term for all medical procedures regarding sex reassignment of both
Sex reassignment therapy can consist of
In addition to undergoing medical procedures,
Psychological treatment
Psychological techniques that attempt to alter gender identity to one considered appropriate for the person's assigned sex have typically been shown to be ineffective. Therefore, it is generally accepted that the only reasonable and effective course of treatment for transsexual people would be sex reassignment therapy.[citation needed]
The need for treatment is emphasized by the higher rate of mental health problems,
including depression, anxiety, and various
Many transgender and transsexual activists, as well as many caregivers, point out that health and health-related problems are not usually related to the gender identity issues themselves, but to problems that arise from dealing with a gender identity that does not match an assigned gender role and the related social conflicts. Many feel that the health-related problems from the gender identity conflict are much more likely to be diagnosed in transsexual people than in the general population. Transsexual people are usually required to visit a mental health professional to obtain approval for hormones and sex reassignment surgery, thus exposing the transsexual community to a higher level of evaluation for mental health issues than the general populace.
Therapists' records reveal that many transsexual people do not believe they need psychological treatment as mandated by the
Harry Benjamin
Diagnosing transsexualism
The current
Some individuals who desire sex reassignment therapy do not have
However, some transsexual people may suffer from
Some transsexual people have pressured the American Psychiatric
Association to remove
Andrea James, in an article rejecting terminology and disease-models of transsexuality, has proposed the terms "interest in feminization" and "interest in masculinization" to refer to a desire for sex reassignment therapy, regardless of whether or not the person with the desire is transsexual.[4] Although James has admitted that there are numerous difficulties and issues related to this terminology and she hasn't advanced this terminology to a finalized state, she does consider it a start towards finding terminology that avoids the traditional descriptions that label transsexuality as a "disease" or a "deviant" condition.[4] Critics of James' proposed terminology insist that she has swung the pendulum too far in the other direction, now equating transsexuality to a "life-style choice" which can offend those transsexuals who feel that their condition has a biological origin. James agrees that transsexuality is not a choice, but she strongly rejects any assertion that it should be classified as a disease rather than as part of typical human variance.[4]
Other people, under the position that transsexuality is a physical condition and not a psychological issue, assert that sex
reassignment therapy should be given if requested, and may even align with those who feel that all
Additionally, the rules or requirements for diagnosis of transexuality and sex reassignment therapy are almost always determined by non-transsexual medical personnel who have the power to allow or deny a transsexual person's will to transition, based on their own perceptions of how a transsexual person should act and/or appear. These perceptions are sometimes prejudiced or based largely on cultural stereotypes; for example, medical personnel may reject a transexual man as a candidate based on the length of his hair, judging it to be "too long" even though many non-transsexual men like to wear long hair.
Hormone replacement therapy
For transsexual men and women, hormone replacement therapy (HRT) causes the development of many of the
As with all medical activities, health risks are associated with hormone replacement therapy, especially when high hormone doses are taken as is common for pre-operative transsexual patients. It is always advised that all changes in therapeutic hormonal treatment should be supervised by a physician because starting, stopping or even changing dosage rates and levels can have physical and psychological health risks.
Although some transsexual women use herbal phytoestrogens as alternatives to
pharmaceutical
Sex reassignment surgery
Sex reassignment surgery is the most common term for what may be more accurately described as "genital reassignment surgery"
or "genital reconstruction surgery." Other proposed terms for SRS include "gender confirmation surgery," "gender realignment
surgery," and "transsexual surgery." The aforementioned terms may also specifically refer to genital surgeries like
SRS tends to be expensive and is not always covered by public or private health insurance. In many countries with
comprehensive nationalized health care, such as Canada and most European countries, SRS is covered under these plans. However, requirements for obtaining SRS and other
transsexual services under these plans are sometimes more stringent than the requirements laid out in the
There are significant medical risks associated with SRS that should be considered before undergoing the surgery.
Prior to surgery, transsexual men and women are often referred to as pre-operative (pre-op); those who have already had the surgery may be referred to as post-operative (post-op) or simply identified as members of the sex to which they have transitioned. Not all transsexual people undergo sexual reassignment surgery (either because of the high cost of such surgery, medical reasons, or other reasons), although they live constantly in their preferred gender role; these people are often called non-operative (non-op).
A more modern idea suggests that the focus on surgery status is misplaced, and therefore, an increasing number of people are refusing to define themselves in terms of operative status, often defining themselves based on their social presentation instead. Many transsexual people believe that SRS is only a small part of a complete transition.
A 1998 clinical review[5] found that MTF
Requirements
The requirements for hormone replacement therapy vary greatly; often, at least a certain period of psychological counseling is required, as is a period of living in the desired gender role, if possible, to ensure that they can psychologically function in that life-role.
Generally speaking, physicians who perform sex-reassignment surgery require the patient to live as the members of their target gender in all possible ways for at least a year ("cross-live"), prior to the start of surgery, in order to assure that they can psychologically function in that life-role. This period is sometimes called the Real Life Test (RLT); it is part of a battery of requirements. Other frequent requirements are regular psychological counseling and letters of recommendation for this surgery.
Most US professionals who provide services to transsexual women and men follow the controversial
The requirements for
Some surgeons who perform sex reassignment surgeries may require their patients to live as members of their target gender in as many ways as possible for a specified period of time, prior to any surgery. However, some surgeons recognize that this so-called real-life test for transmen, without breast removal and/or chest reconstruction, may be difficult. Therefore, many surgeons are willing to perform some or all elements of sex reassignment surgery without a real-life test. This is especially common amongst surgeons who practice in Asia. However, almost all surgeons practicing in North America and Europe who perform genital reassignment surgery require letters of approval from two psychotherapists; most Standards of Care recommend, and most therapists require, a one-year real-life test prior to genital reassignment surgery, though some therapists are willing to waive this requirement for certain patients. A recent study done on transwomen has shown that a real-life test of less than one year, or no real-life test at all, does not increase the likelihood that a patient will regret genital reassignment surgery.[7] Many transsexual people opt for a real-life experience longer than is officially required, to remove any doubts they may have of whether they should undergo surgery.
Controversy
Although the overwhelming majority of individuals who undergo sex reassignment express happiness in living as members of their
target sex, some believe that sex reassignment is ineffective as a treatment for
Many religious conservatives believe that physical sex reassignment is morally wrong, and cite evidence that transsexuality can be cured spiritually or psychologically. However, evidence suggests that current psychological treatments for transsexuality are highly ineffective.
Although it is undeniably offensive to transsexual women and men, some people consider transsexuals to be members of the
physical sex assigned to them at birth, even after they have completed all aspects of transition and sex reassignment. Their
reasoning is often based in the facts that sex chromosomes cannot be changed
with the procedures currently available. It has also been argued that transsexuals do not have reproductive organs and that the
procedures merely create a facsimile of the desired genitals by modifying the genitals they were born with. Many other people
believe that an individual's sex is determined by factors such as gender presentation,
gender identity, external genitalia, and
In 1967, John Money, a prominent sexologist at Johns Hopkins Hospital, recommended that
In 1979, when Paul McHugh became chairperson of the psychiatric department at Johns Hopkins, he ordered the department to conduct follow-up evaluations on as many of their former transsexual patients as possible. When the follow-ups were performed, they found that most of the patients claimed to be happy as members of their target sex, but that their overall level of psychological functioning had not improved. McHugh reasoned that to perform physical gender reassignment was to "cooperate with a mental illness rather than try to cure it." At that time, Johns Hopkins closed its gender clinic and has not performed any sex reassignment surgeries since then. Many people have criticized McHugh's conclusion, often stating their belief that the purpose of gender reassignment is to make transsexual people happy and content with their bodies, not to improve their psychological functioning.
Many medical textbooks state that "significant psychological problems often persist after surgical and hormonal sex
reassignment."[citation needed] However, many people, especially transsexual people, feel that sex
reassignment is a highly effective treatment for transsexuality, and that there are higher priorities for medical
researchers.[citation needed] This is especially true of those who feel that mainstream medical
professionals who research transsexuality are attempting to find ways to cure the condition psychologically;[citation needed] many transsexual people feel that
physical sex reassignment is a far better treatment for their
References
- ^ Seattle and King County Health - Transgender Health
- ^ The International Transsexual Sisterhood - Study On Transsexuality
- ^ What can I do about this? Is there hope for me? - transsexual.org
- ^ a b c A defining moment in our history - TS Road Map
- ^ The Wessex Institute for Health Research and Development. Surgical gender reassignment for male to female transsexual people (Structured abstract) [1] 1998:25. Southampton: Wessex Institute for Health Research and Development
- ^ a b Kuiper, A.J; P.T. Cohen-Kettenis (September 1998). "Gender Role Reversal among Postoperative Transsexuals". International Journal of Transgenderism 2 (3). Retrieved on 2007-02-25.
- ^ SRS After Less Than a One-Year Real-Life Test : Absence of Regrets - Anne A. Lawrence, M.D
Bibliography
- Brown, Mildred L.; Chloe Ann Rounsley (1996). True Selves: Understanding Transsexualism - For Families, Friends, Coworkers, and Helping Professionals. Jossey-Bass. ISBN 978-0787967024.
- Dallas, Denny (2006). Transgender Rights: Transgender Communities of the United States in the Late Twentieth Century. University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0816643127.
- Feinberg, Leslie (1999). Trans Liberation : Beyond Pink or Blue. Beacon Press. ISBN 978-0807079515.
- Kruijver, Frank P. M.; Jiang-Ning Zhou, Chris W. Pool, Michel A. Hofman, Louis J. G. Gooren and Dick F. Swaab (2000). "Male-to-Female Transsexuals Have Female Neuron Numbers in a Limbic Nucleus". Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism 85 (5): 2034-2041. DOI:10.1126. Retrieved on 2007-02-25.
- Meier III, M.D., Walter (Chairperson) (2001), Standards of Care for Gender Identity Disorders (Sixth ed.), Harry Benjamin International Gender Dysphoria Association., <http://www.wpath.org/Documents2/socv6.pdf>
- Pfäfflin, Friedemann & Astrid Junge -Sex Reassignment. Thirty Years of International Follow-up Studies After Sex
Reassignment Surgery: A Comprehensive Review, 1961-1991 (translated from German into American English by
Roberta B. Jacobson and Alf B. Meier) - Rathus, Spencer A.; Jeffery S. Nevid, Lois Fichner-Rathus (2002). Human Sexuality in a World of Diversity. Allyn & Bacon. ISBN 978-0205406159.
- Schneider, Harald J.; Johanna Pickel, Günter K. Stalla (2006). "Typical female 2nd-4th finger length (2D:4D) ratios in male-to-female transsexuals-possible implications for prenatal
androgen exposure". International Society of Psychoneuroendocrinology 31 (2): 265-269. Elsevier, Oxford, UK.
ISSN 0306-4530 PMID 16140461. Retrieved on 2007-02-25. - Xavier, J., Simmons, R. (2000) - The Washington transgender needs assessment survey, Washington, DC: The Administration for HIV and AIDS of the District of Columbia Government
See also
List of transgender-related topics
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