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Standards of Care
Harry Benjamin International
Gender Dysphoria Association
The Standards of Care for Gender Identity Disorders (Fifth and Sixth Version)
[Abstract] Full Text PDF
6th Version
The Harry Benjamin International
Gender Dysphoria Association's
Standards of Care for Gender
Identity Disorders, Sixth Version
February, 2001
Committee Members: Walter Meyer III M.D.
(Chairperson), Walter O. Bockting Ph.D., Peggy Cohen-Kettenis Ph.D., Eli
Coleman Ph.D., Domenico DiCeglie M.D., Holly Devor Ph.D., Louis Gooren
M.D., Ph.D., J. Joris Hage M.D., Sheila Kirk M.D., Bram Kuiper Ph.D.,
Donald Laub M.D., Anne Lawrence M.D., Yvon Menard M.D., Stan Monstrey
M.D., Jude Patton PA-C, Leah Schaefer Ed.D., Alice Webb D.H.S., Connie
Christine Wheeler Ph.D.
This is the sixth version of the
Standards of Care since the original 1979 document. Previous revisions
were in 1980, 1981, 1990, and 1998.
Table of Contents:
I. Introductory Concepts
The Purpose of the Standards of Care.
The major purpose of the Standards of Care (SOC) is to articulate this
international organization's professional consensus about the
psychiatric, psychological, medical, and surgical management of gender
identity disorders. Professionals may use this document to understand
the parameters within which they may offer assistance to those with
these conditions. Persons with gender identity disorders, their
families, and social institutions may use the SOC to understand the
current thinking of professionals. All readers should be aware of the
limitations of knowledge in this area and of the hope that some of the
clinical uncertainties will be resolved in the future through scientific
investigation.
The Overarching Treatment Goal. The
general goal of psychotherapeutic, endocrine, or surgical therapy for
persons with gender identity disorders is lasting personal comfort with
the gendered self in order to maximize overall psychological well-being
and self-fulfillment.
The Standards of Care Are Clinical
Guidelines. The SOC are intended to provide flexible directions for the
treatment of persons with gender identity disorders. When eligibility
requirements are stated they are meant to be minimum requirements.
Individual professionals and organized programs may modify them.
Clinical departures from these guidelines may come about because of a
patient's unique anatomic, social, or psychological situation, an
experienced professional's evolving method of handling a common
situation, or a research protocol. These departures should be recognized
as such, explained to the patient, and documented both for legal
protection and so that the short and long term results can be retrieved
to help the field to evolve.
The Clinical Threshold. A clinical
threshold is passed when concerns, uncertainties, and questions about
gender identity persist during a person's development, become so intense
as to seem to be the most important aspect of a person's life, or
prevent the establishment of a relatively unconflicted gender identity.
The person's struggles are then variously informally referred to as a
gender identity problem, gender dysphoria, a gender problem, a gender
concern, gender distress, gender conflict, or transsexualism. Such
struggles are known to occur from the preschool years to old age and
have many alternate forms. These reflect various degrees of personal
dissatisfaction with sexual identity, sex and gender demarcating body
characteristics, gender roles, gender identity, and the perceptions of
others. When dissatisfied individuals meet specified criteria in one of
two official nomenclatures--the International Classification of
Diseases-10 (ICD-10) or the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders--Fourth Edition (DSM-IV)--they are formally designated as
suffering from a gender identity disorder (GID). Some persons with GID
exceed another threshold--they persistently possess a wish for surgical
transformation of their bodies.
Two Primary Populations with GID Exist
-- Biological Males and Biological Females. The sex of a patient always
is a significant factor in the management of GID. Clinicians need to
separately consider the biologic, social, psychological, and economic
dilemmas of each sex. All patients, however, should follow the SOC.
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II. Epidemiological Considerations
Prevalence. When the gender identity
disorders first came to professional attention, clinical perspectives
were largely focused on how to identify candidates for sex reassignment
surgery. As the field matured, professionals recognized that some
persons with bona fide gender identity disorders neither desired nor
were candidates for sex reassignment surgery. The earliest estimates of
prevalence for transsexualism in adults were 1 in 37,000 males and 1 in
107,000 females. The most recent prevalence information from the
Netherlands for the transsexual end of the gender identity disorder
spectrum is 1 in 11,900 males and 1 in 30,400 females. Four
observations, not yet firmly supported by systematic study, increase the
likelihood of an even higher prevalence: 1) unrecognized gender problems
are occasionally diagnosed when patients are seen with anxiety,
depression, bipolar disorder, conduct disorder, substance abuse,
dissociative identity disorders, borderline personality disorder, other
sexual disorders and intersexed conditions; 2) some nonpatient male
transvestites, female impersonators, transgender people, and male and
female homosexuals may have a form of gender identity disorder; 3) the
intensity of some persons' gender identity disorders fluctuates below
and above a clinical threshold; 4) gender variance among female-bodied
individuals tends to be relatively invisible to the culture,
particularly to mental health professionals and scientists.
Natural History of Gender Identity
Disorders. Ideally, prospective data about the natural history of gender
identity struggles would inform all treatment decisions. These are
lacking, except for the demonstration that, without therapy, most boys
and girls with gender identity disorders outgrow their wish to change
sex and gender. After the diagnosis of GID is made the therapeutic
approach usually includes three elements or phases (sometimes labeled
triadic therapy): a real-life experience in the desired role, hormones
of the desired gender, and surgery to change the genitalia and other sex
characteristics. Five less firmly scientifically established
observations prevent clinicians from prescribing the triadic therapy
based on diagnosis alone: 1) some carefully diagnosed persons
spontaneously change their aspirations; 2) others make more comfortable
accommodations to their gender identities without medical interventions;
3) others give up their wish to follow the triadic sequence during
psychotherapy; 4) some gender identity clinics have an unexplained high
drop out rate; and 5) the percentage of persons who are not benefited
from the triadic therapy varies significantly from study to study. Many
persons with GID will desire all three elements of triadic therapy.
Typically, triadic therapy takes place in the order of hormones ==>
real-life experience ==> surgery, or sometimes: real-life experience
==> hormones ==> surgery. For some biologic females, the preferred
sequence may be hormones ==> breast surgery ==> real-life
experience. However, the diagnosis of GID invites the consideration of a
variety of therapeutic options, only one of which is the complete
therapeutic triad. Clinicians have increasingly become aware that not
all persons with gender identity disorders need or want all three
elements of triadic therapy.
Cultural Differences in Gender Identity
Variance throughout the World. Even if epidemiological studies
established that a similar base rate of gender identity disorders
existed all over the world, it is likely that cultural differences from
one country to another would alter the behavioral expressions of these
conditions. Moreover, access to treatment, cost of treatment, the
therapies offered and the social attitudes towards gender variant people
and the professionals who deliver care differ broadly from place to
place. While in most countries, crossing gender boundaries usually
generates moral censure rather than compassion, there are striking
examples in certain cultures of cross- gendered behaviors (e.g., in
spiritual leaders) that are not stigmatized.
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III. Diagnostic Nomenclature
The Five Elements of Clinical Work.
Professional involvement with patients with gender identity disorders
involves any of the following: diagnostic assessment, psychotherapy,
real-life experience, hormone therapy, and surgical therapy. This
section provides a background on diagnostic assessment.
The Development of a Nomenclature. The
term transexxual emerged into professional and public usage in the 1950s
as a means of designating a person who aspired to or actually lived in
the anatomically contrary gender role, whether or not hormones had been
administered or surgery had been performed. During the 1960s and 1970s,
clinicians used the term true transsexual. The true transsexual was
thought to be a person with a characteristic path of atypical gender
identity development that predicted an improved life from a treatment
sequence that culminated in genital surgery. True transsexuals were
thought to have: 1) cross-gender identifications that were consistently
expressed behaviorally in childhood, adolescence, and adulthood; 2)
minimal or no sexual arousal to cross-dressing; and 3) no heterosexual
interest, relative to their anatomic sex. True transsexuals could be of
either sex. True transsexual males were distinguished from males who
arrived at the desire to change sex and gender via a reasonably
masculine behavioral developmental pathway. Belief in the true
transsexual concept for males dissipated when it was realized that such
patients were rarely encountered, and that some of the original true
transsexuals had falsified their histories to make their stories match
the earliest theories about the disorder. The concept of true
transsexual females never created diagnostic uncertainties, largely
because patient histories were relatively consistent and gender variant
behaviors such as female cross-dressing remained unseen by clinicians.
The term "gender dysphoria syndrome" was later adopted to
designate the presence of a gender problem in either sex until
psychiatry developed an official nomenclature.
The diagnosis of Transsexualism was
introduced in the DSM-III in 1980 for gender dysphoric individuals who
demonstrated at least two years of continuous interest in transforming
the sex of their bodies and their social gender status. Others with
gender dysphoria could be diagnosed as Gender Identity Disorder of
Adolescence or Adulthood, Nontranssexual Type; or Gender Identity
Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (GIDNOS). These diagnostic terms were
usually ignored by the media, which used the term transsexual for any
person who wanted to change his/her sex and gender.
The DSM-IV. In 1994, the DSM-IV
committee replaced the diagnosis of Transsexualism with Gender Identity
Disorder. Depending on their age, those with a strong and persistent
cross-gender identification and a persistent discomfort with their sex
or a sense of inappropriateness in the gender role of that sex were to
be diagnosed as Gender Identity Disorder of Childhood (302.6),
Adolescence, or Adulthood (302.85). For persons who did not meet these
criteria, Gender Identity Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (GIDNOS)(302.6)
was to be used. This category included a variety of individuals,
including those who desired only castration or penectomy without a
desire to develop breasts, those who wished hormone therapy and
mastectomy without genital reconstruction, those with a congenital
intersex condition, those with transient stress-related cross-dressing,
and those with considerable ambivalence about giving up their gender
status. Patients diagnosed with GID and GIDNOS were to be subclassified
according to the sexual orientation: attracted to males; attracted to
females; attracted to both; or attracted to neither. This
subclassification was intended to assist in determining, over time,
whether individuals of one sexual orientation or another experienced
better outcomes using particular therapeutic approaches; it was not
intended to guide treatment decisions.
Between the publication of DSM-III and
DSM-IV, the term "transgender" began to be used in various
ways. Some employed it to refer to those with unusual gender identities
in a value-free manner -- that is, without a connotation of
psychopathology. Some people informally used the term to refer to any
person with any type of gender identity issues. Transgender is not a
formal diagnosis, but many professionals and members of the public found
it easier to use informally than GIDNOS, which is a formal diagnosis.
The ICD-10. The ICD-10 now provides
five diagnoses for the gender identity disorders (F64):
Transsexualism (F64.0) has three
criteria:
- The desire to live and be accepted
as a member of the opposite sex, usually accompanied by the wish
to make his or her body as congruent as possible with the
preferred sex through surgery and hormone treatment;
- The transsexual identity has been
present persistently for at least two years;
- The disorder is not a symptom of
another mental disorder or a chromosomal abnormality.
Dual-role Transvestism (F64.1) has
three criteria:
- The individual wears clothes of
the opposite sex in order to experience temporary membership in
the opposite sex;
- There is no sexual motivation for
the cross-dressing;
- The individual has no desire for a
permanent change to the opposite sex.
Gender Identity Disorder of Childhood
(64.2) has separate criteria for girls and for boys.
For girls:
- The individual shows persistent
and intense distress about being a girl, and has a stated desire
to be a boy (not merely a desire for any perceived cultural
advantages to being a boy) or insists that she is a boy;
- Either of the following must be
present:
- Persistent marked aversion to
normative feminine clothing and insistence on wearing
stereotypical masculine clothing;
- Persistent repudiation of
female anatomical structures, as evidenced by at least one of
the following:
- An assertion that she has,
or will grow, a penis;
- Rejection of urination in
a sitting position;
- Assertion that she does
not want to grow breasts or menstruate.
- The girl has not yet reached
puberty;
- The disorder must have been
present for at least 6 months.
For boys:
- The individual shows persistent
and intense distress about being a boy, and has a desire to be a
girl, or, more rarely, insists that he is a girl.
- Either of the following must be
present:
- Preoccupation with stereotypic
female activities, as shown by a preference for either
cross-dressing or simulating female attire, or by an intense
desire to participate in the games and pastimes of girls and
rejection of stereotypical male toys, games, and activities;
- Persistent repudiation of male
anatomical structures, as evidenced by at least one of the
following repeated assertions:
- That he will grow up to
become a woman (not merely in the role);
- That his penis or testes
are disgusting or will disappear;
- That it would be better
not to have a penis or testes.
- The boy has not yet reached
puberty;
- The disorder must have been
present for at least 6 months.
Other Gender Identity Disorders
(F64.8) has no specific criteria.
Gender Identity Disorder, Unspecified
has no specific criteria.
Either of the previous two diagnoses
could be used for those with an intersexed condition.
The purpose of the DSM-IV and ICD-10 is
to guide treatment and research. Different professional groups created
these nomenclatures through consensus processes at different times.
There is an expectation that the differences between the systems will be
eliminated in the future. At this point, the specific diagnoses are
based more on clinical reasoning than on scientific investigation.
Are Gender Identity Disorders Mental
Disorders? To qualify as a mental disorder, a behavioral pattern must
result in a significant adaptive disadvantage to the person or cause
personal mental suffering. The DSM-IV and ICD-10 have defined hundreds
of mental disorders which vary in onset, duration, pathogenesis,
functional disability, and treatability. The designation of gender
identity disorders as mental disorders is not a license for
stigmatization, or for the deprivation of gender patients' civil rights.
The use of a formal diagnosis is often important in offering relief,
providing health insurance coverage, and guiding research to provide
more effective future treatments.
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IV. The Mental Health Professional
The Ten Tasks of the Mental Health
Professional. Mental health professionals (MHPs) who work with
individuals with gender identity disorders may be regularly called upon
to carry out many of these responsibilities:
- To accurately diagnose the
individual's gender disorder;
- To accurately diagnose any co-morbid
psychiatric conditions and see to their appropriate treatment;
- To counsel the individual about the
range of treatment options and their implications;
- To engage in psychotherapy;
- To ascertain eligibility and
readiness for hormone and surgical therapy;
- To make formal recommendations to
medical and surgical colleagues;
- To document their patient's relevant
history in a letter of recommendation;
- To be a colleague on a team of
professionals with an interest in the gender identity disorders;
- To educate family members,
employers, and institutions about gender identity disorders;
- To be available for follow-up of
previously seen gender patients.
The Adult-Specialist. The education of
the mental health professional who specializes in adult gender identity
disorders rests upon basic general clinical competence in diagnosis and
treatment of mental or emotional disorders. Clinical training may occur
within any formally credentialing discipline -- for example, psychology,
psychiatry, social work, counseling, or nursing. The following are the
recommended minimal credentials for special competence with the gender
identity disorders:
- A master's degree or its equivalent
in a clinical behavioral science field. This or a more advanced
degree should be granted by an institution accredited by a
recognized national or regional accrediting board. The mental health
professional should have documented credentials from a proper
training facility and a licensing board.
- Specialized training and competence
in the assessment of the DSM-IV/ICD-10 Sexual Disorders (not simply
gender identity disorders).
- Documented supervised training and
competence in psychotherapy.
- Continuing education in the
treatment of gender identity disorders, which may include attendance
at professional meetings, workshops, or seminars or participating in
research related to gender identity issues.
The Child-Specialist. The professional
who evaluates and offers therapy for a child or early adolescent with
GID should have been trained in childhood and adolescent developmental
psychopathology. The professional should be competent in diagnosing and
treating the ordinary problems of children and adolescents. These
requirements are in addition to the adult-specialist requirement.
The Differences between Eligibility and
Readiness. The SOC provide recommendations for eligibility requirements
for hormones and surgery. Without first meeting these recommended
eligibility requirements, the patient and the therapist should not
request hormones or surgery. An example of an eligibility requirement
is: a person must live full time in the preferred gender for twelve
months prior to genital surgery. To meet this criterion, the
professional needs to document that the real-life experience has
occurred for this duration. Meeting readiness criteria -- further
consolidation of the evolving gender identity or improving mental health
in the new or confirmed gender role -- is more complicated, because it
rests upon the clinician's and the patient's judgment.
The Mental Health Professional's
Relationship to the Prescribing Physician and Surgeon. Mental health
professionals who recommend hormonal and surgical therapy share the
legal and ethical responsibility for that decision with the physician
who undertakes the treatment. Hormonal treatment can often alleviate
anxiety and depression in people without the use of additional
psychotropic medications. Some individuals, however, need psychotropic
medication prior to, or concurrent with, taking hormones or having
surgery. The mental health professional is expected to make this
assessment, and see that the appropriate psychotropic medications are
offered to the patient. The presence of psychiatric co-morbidities does
not necessarily preclude hormonal or surgical treatment, but some
diagnoses pose difficult treatment dilemmas and may delay or preclude
the use of either treatment.
The Mental Health Professional's
Documentation Letter for Hormone Therapy or Surgery Should Succinctly
Specify:
- The patient's general identifying
characteristics;
- The initial and evolving gender,
sexual, and other psychiatric diagnoses;
- The duration of their professional
relationship including the type of psychotherapy or evaluation that
the patient underwent;
- The eligibility criteria that have
been met and the mental health professional's rationale for hormone
therapy or surgery;
- The degree to which the patient has
followed the Standards of Care to date and the likelihood of future
compliance;
- Whether the author of the report is
part of a gender team;
- That the sender welcomes a phone
call to verify the fact that the mental health professional actually
wrote the letter as described in this document.
The organization and completeness of
these letters provide the hormone- prescribing physician and the surgeon
an important degree of assurance that mental health professional is
knowledgeable and competent concerning gender identity disorders.
One Letter is Required for Instituting
Hormone Therapy, or for Breast Surgery. One letter from a mental health
professional, including the above seven points, written to the physician
who will be responsible for the patient's medical treatment, is
sufficient for instituting hormone therapy or for a referral for breast
surgery (e.g., mastectomy, chest reconstruction, or augmentation
mammoplasty).
Two Letters are Generally Required for
Genital Surgery. Genital surgery for biologic males may include
orchiectomy, penectomy, clitoroplasty, labiaplasty or creation of a
neovagina; for biologic females it may include hysterectomy,
salpingo-oophorectomy, vaginectomy, metoidioplasty, scrotoplasty,
urethroplasty, placement of testicular prostheses, or creation of a
neophallus.
It is ideal if mental health
professionals conduct their tasks and periodically report on these
processes as part of a team of other mental health professionals and
nonpsychiatric physicians. One letter to the physician performing
genital surgery will generally suffice as long as two mental health
professionals sign it.
More commonly, however, letters of
recommendation are from mental health professionals who work alone
without colleagues experienced with gender identity disorders. Because
professionals working independently may not have the benefit of ongoing
professional consultation on gender cases, two letters of recommendation
are required prior to initiating genital surgery. If the first letter is
from a person with a master's degree, the second letter should be from a
psychiatrist or a Ph.D. clinical psychologist, who can be expected to
adequately evaluate co-morbid psychiatric conditions. If the first
letter is from the patient's psychotherapist, the second letter should
be from a person who has only played an evaluative role for the patient.
Each letter, however, is expected to cover the same topics. At least one
of the letters should be an extensive report. The second letter writer,
having read the first letter, may choose to offer a briefer summary and
an agreement with the recommendation.
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V. Assessment and Treatment of Children
and Adolescents
Phenomenology. Gender identity
disorders in children and adolescents are different from those seen in
adults, in that a rapid and dramatic developmental process (physical,
psychological and sexual) is involved. Gender identity disorders in
children and adolescents are complex conditions. The young person may
experience his or her phenotype sex as inconsistent with his or her own
sense of gender identity. Intense distress is often experienced,
particularly in adolescence, and there are frequently associated
emotional and behavioral difficulties. There is greater fluidity and
variability in outcomes, especially in pre-pubertal children. Only a few
gender variant youths become transsexual, although many eventually
develop a homosexual orientation.
Commonly seen features of gender
identity conflicts in children and adolescents include a stated desire
to be the other sex; cross dressing; play with games and toys usually
associated with the gender with which the child identifies; avoidance of
the clothing, demeanor and play normally associated with the child's sex
and gender of assignment; preference for playmates or friends of the sex
and gender with which the child identifies; and dislike of bodily sex
characteristics and functions. Gender identity disorders are more often
diagnosed in boys.
Phenomenologically, there is a
qualitative difference between the way children and adolescents present
their sex and gender predicaments, from and the presentation of
delusions or other psychotic symptoms. Delusional beliefs about their
body or gender can occur in psychotic conditions but they can be
distinguished from the phenomenon of a gender identity disorder. Gender
identity disorders in childhood are not equivalent to those in adulthood
and the former do not inevitably lead to the latter. The younger the
child the less certain and perhaps more malleable the outcome.
Psychological and Social Interventions.
The task of the child-specialist mental health professional is to
provide assessment and treatment that broadly conforms to the following
guidelines:
- The professional should recognize
and accept the gender identity problem. Acceptance and removal of
secrecy can bring considerable relief.
- The assessment should explore the
nature and characteristics of the child's or adolescent's gender
identity. A complete psychodiagnostic and psychiatric assessment
should be performed. A complete assessment should include a family
evaluation, because other emotional and behavioral problems are very
common, and unresolved issues in the child's environment are often
present.
- Therapy should focus on ameliorating
any comorbid problems in the child's life, and on reducing distress
the child experiences from his or her gender identity problem and
other difficulties. The child and family should be supported in
making difficult decisions regarding the extent to which to allow
the child to assume a gender role consistent with his or her gender
identity. This includes issues of whether to inform others of the
child's situation, and how others in the child's life should
respond; for example, whether the child should attend school using a
name and clothing opposite to his or her sex of assignment. They
should also be supported in tolerating uncertainty and anxiety in
relation to the child's gender expression and how best to manage it.
Professional network meetings can be very useful in finding
appropriate solutions to these problems.
Physical Interventions. Before any
physical intervention is considered, extensive exploration of
psychological, family and social issues should be undertaken. Physical
interventions should be addressed in the context of adolescent
development. Adolescents' gender identity development can rapidly and
unexpectedly evolve. An adolescent shift toward gender conformity can
occur primarily to please the family, and may not persist or reflect a
permanent change in gender identity. Identity beliefs in adolescents may
become firmly held and strongly expressed, giving a false impression of
irreversibility; more fluidity may return at a later stage. For these
reasons, irreversible physical interventions should be delayed as long
as is clinically appropriate. Pressure for physical interventions
because of an adolescent's level of distress can be great and in such
circumstances a referral to a child and adolescent multi- disciplinary
specialty service should be considered, in locations where these exist.
Physical interventions fall into three
categories or stages:
- Fully reversible interventions.
These involve the use of LHRH agonists or medroxyprogesterone to
suppress estrogen or testosterone production, and consequently to
delay the physical changes of puberty.
- Partially reversible interventions.
These include hormonal interventions that masculinize or feminize
the body, such as administration of testosterone to biologic females
and estrogen to biologic males. Reversal may involve surgical
intervention.
- Irreversible interventions. These
are surgical procedures.
A staged process is recommended to keep
options open through the first two stages. Moving from one state to
another should not occur until there has been adequate time for the
young person and his/her family to assimilate fully the effects of
earlier interventions.
Fully Reversible Interventions.
Adolescents may be eligible for puberty-delaying hormones as soon as
pubertal changes have begun. In order for the adolescent and his or her
parents to make an informed decision about pubertal delay, it is
recommended that the adolescent experience the onset of puberty in his
or her biologic sex, at least to Tanner Stage Two. If for clinical
reasons it is thought to be in the patient's interest to intervene
earlier, this must be managed with pediatric endocrinological advice and
more than one psychiatric opinion.
Two goals justify this intervention: a)
to gain time to further explore the gender identity and other
developmental issues in psychotherapy; and b) to make passing easier if
the adolescent continues to pursue sex and gender change. In order to
provide puberty delaying hormones to an adolescent, the following
criteria must be met:
- throughout childhood the adolescent
has demonstrated an intense pattern of cross-sex and cross-gender
identity and aversion to expected gender role behaviors;
- sex and gender discomfort has
significantly increased with the onset of puberty;
- the family consents and participates
in the therapy.
Biologic males should be treated with
LHRH agonists (which stop LH secretion and therefore testosterone
secretion), or with progestins or antiandrogens (which block
testosterone secretion or neutralize testosterone action). Biologic
females should be treated with LHRH agonists or with sufficient
progestins (which stop the production of estrogens and progesterone) to
stop menstruation.
Partially Reversible Interventions.
Adolescents may be eligible to begin masculinizing or feminizing hormone
therapy, as early as age 16, preferably with parental consent. In many
countries 16-year olds are legal adults for medical decision making, and
do not require parental consent.
Mental health professional involvement
is an eligibility requirement for triadic therapy during adolescence.
For the implementation of the real-life experience or hormone therapy,
the mental health professional should be involved with the patient and
family for a minimum of six months. While the number of sessions during
this six-month period rests upon the clinician's judgment, the intent is
that hormones and the real-life experience be thoughtfully and
recurrently considered over time. In those patients who have already
begun the real-life experience prior to being seen, the professional
should work closely with them and their families with the thoughtful
recurrent consideration of what is happening over time.
Irreversible Interventions. Any
surgical intervention should not be carried out prior to adulthood, or
prior to a real-life experience of at least two years in the gender role
of the sex with which the adolescent identifies. The threshold of 18
should be seen as an eligibility criterion and not an indication in
itself for active intervention.
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VI. Psychotherapy with Adults
A Basic Observation. Many adults with
gender identity disorder find comfortable, effective ways of living that
do not involve all the components of the triadic treatment sequence.
While some individuals manage to do this on their own, psychotherapy can
be very helpful in bringing about the discovery and maturational
processes that enable self-comfort.
Psychotherapy is Not an Absolute
Requirement for Triadic Therapy. Not every adult gender patient requires
psychotherapy in order to proceed with hormone therapy, the real-life
experience, hormones, or surgery. Individual programs vary to the extent
that they perceive a need for psychotherapy. When the mental health
professional's initial assessment leads to a recommendation for
psychotherapy, the clinician should specify the goals of treatment, and
estimate its frequency and duration. There is no required minimum number
of psychotherapy sessions prior to hormone therapy, the real-life
experience, or surgery, for three reasons: 1) patients differ widely in
their abilities to attain similar goals in a specified time; 2) a
minimum number of sessions tends to be construed as a hurdle, which
discourages the genuine opportunity for personal growth; 3) the mental
health professional can be an important support to the patient
throughout all phases of gender transition. Individual programs may set
eligibility criteria to some minimum number of sessions or months of
psychotherapy.
The mental health professional who
conducts the initial evaluation need not be the psychotherapist. If
members of a gender team do not do psychotherapy, the psychotherapist
should be informed that a letter describing the patient's therapy might
be requested so the patient can proceed with the next phase of
treatment.
Goals of Psychotherapy. Psychotherapy
often provides education about a range of options not previously
seriously considered by the patient. It emphasizes the need to set
realistic life goals for work and relationships, and it seeks to define
and alleviate the patient's conflicts that may have undermined a stable
lifestyle.
The Therapeutic Relationship. The
establishment of a reliable trusting relationship with the patient is
the first step toward successful work as a mental health professional.
This is usually accomplished by competent nonjudgmental exploration of
the gender issues with the patient during the initial diagnostic
evaluation. Other issues may be better dealt with later, after the
person feels that the clinician is interested in and understands their
gender identity concerns. Ideally, the clinician's work is with the
whole of the person's complexity. The goals of therapy are to help the
person to live more comfortably within a gender identity and to deal
effectively with non-gender issues. The clinician often attempts to
facilitate the capacity to work and to establish or maintain supportive
relationships. Even when these initial goals are attained, mental health
professionals should discuss the likelihood that no educational,
psychotherapeutic, medical, or surgical therapy can permanently
eradicate all vestiges of the person's original sex assignment and
previous gendered experience.
Processes of Psychotherapy.
Psychotherapy is a series of interactive communications between a
therapist who is knowledgeable about how people suffer emotionally and
how this may be alleviated, and a patient who is experiencing distress.
Typically, psychotherapy consists of regularly held 50 minute sessions.
The psychotherapy sessions initiate a developmental process. They enable
the patient's history to be appreciated current dilemmas to be
understood, and unrealistic ideas and maladaptive behaviors to be
identified. Psychotherapy is not intended to cure the gender identity
disorder. Its usual goal is a long-term stable life style with realistic
chances for success in relationships, education, work, and gender
identity expression. Gender distress often intensifies relationship,
work, and educational dilemmas.
The therapist should make clear that it
is the patient's right to choose among many options. The patient can
experiment over time with alternative approaches. Ideally, psychotherapy
is a collaborative effort. The therapist must be certain that the
patient understands the concepts of eligibility and readiness, because
the therapist and patient must cooperate in defining the patient's
problems, and in assessing progress in dealing with them. Collaboration
can prevent a stalemate between a therapist who seems needlessly
withholding of a recommendation, and a patient who seems too profoundly
distrusting to freely share thoughts, feelings, events, and
relationships.
Patients may benefit from psychotherapy
at every stage of gender evolution. This includes the post-surgical
period, when the anatomic obstacles to gender comfort have been removed,
but the person may continue to feel a lack of genuine comfort and skill
in living in the new gender role.
Options for Gender Adaptation. The
activities and processes that are listed below have, in various
combinations, helped people to find more personal comfort. These
adaptations may evolve spontaneously and during psychotherapy. Finding
new gender adaptations does not mean that the person may not in the
future elect to pursue hormone therapy, the real-life experience, or
genital surgery.
Activities:
Biological Males:
- Cross-dressing: unobtrusively
with undergarments; unisexually; or in a feminine fashion;
- Changing the body through: hair
removal through electrolysis or body waxing; minor plastic
cosmetic surgical procedures;
- Increasing grooming, wardrobe,
and vocal expression skills.
Biological Females:
- Cross-dressing: unobtrusively
with undergarments, unisexually, or in a masculine fashion;
- Changing the body through breast
binding, weight lifting, applying theatrical facial hair;
- Padding underpants or wearing a
penile prosthesis.
Both Genders:
- Learning about transgender
phenomena from: support groups and gender networks,
communication with peers via the Internet, studying these
Standards of Care, relevant lay and professional literatures
about legal rights pertaining to work, relationships, and public
cross-dressing;
- Involvement in recreational
activities of the desired gender;
- Episodic cross-gender living.
Processes:
- Acceptance of personal homosexual
or bisexual fantasies and behaviors (orientation) as distinct from
gender identity and gender role aspirations;
- Acceptance of the need to maintain
a job, provide for the emotional needs of children, honor a
spousal commitment, or not to distress a family member as
currently having a higher priority than the personal wish for
constant cross-gender expression;
- Integration of male and female
gender awareness into daily living;
- Identification of the triggers for
increased cross-gender yearnings and effectively attending to
them; for instance, developing better self-protective,
self-assertive, and vocational skills to advance at work and
resolve interpersonal struggles to strengthen key relationships.
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VII. Requirements for Hormone Therapy
for Adults
Reasons for Hormone Therapy. Cross-sex
hormonal treatments play an important role in the anatomical and
psychological gender transition process for properly selected adults
with gender identity disorders. Hormones are often medically necessary
for successful living in the new gender. They improve the quality of
life and limit psychiatric co-morbidity, which often accompanies lack of
treatment. When physicians administer androgens to biologic females and
estrogens, progesterone, and testosterone-blocking agents to biologic
males, patients feel and appear more like members of their preferred
gender.
Eligibility Criteria. The
administration of hormones is not to be lightly undertaken because of
their medical and social risks. Three criteria exist.
- Age 18 years;
- Demonstrable knowledge of what
hormones medically can and cannot do and their social benefits and
risks;
- Either:
- a documented real-life
experience of at least three months prior to the administration
of hormones; or
- a period of psychotherapy of a
duration specified by the mental health professional after the
initial evaluation (usually a minimum of three months).
In selected circumstances, it can be
acceptable to provide hormones to patients who have not fulfilled
criterion 3 - for example, to facilitate the provision of monitored
therapy using hormones of known quality, as an alternative to
black-market or unsupervised hormone use.
Readiness Criteria. Three criteria
exist:
- The patient has had further
consolidation of gender identity during the real-life experience or
psychotherapy;
- The patient has made some progress
in mastering other identified problems leading to improving or
continuing stable mental health (this implies satisfactory control
of problems such as sociopathy, substance abuse, psychosis and
suicidality;
- The patient is likely to take
hormones in a responsible manner.
Can Hormones Be Given To Those Who Do
Not Want Surgery or a Real-life Experience? Yes, but after diagnosis and
psychotherapy with a qualified mental health professional following
minimal standards listed above. Hormone therapy can provide significant
comfort to gender patients who do not wish to cross live or undergo
surgery, or who are unable to do so. In some patients, hormone therapy
alone may provide sufficient symptomatic relief to obviate the need for
cross living or surgery.
Hormone Therapy and Medical Care for
Incarcerated Persons. Persons who are receiving treatment for gender
identity disorders should continue to receive appropriate treatment
following these Standards of Care after incarceration. For example,
those who are receiving psychotherapy and/or cross-sex hormonal
treatments should be allowed to continue this medically necessary
treatment to prevent or limit emotional lability, undesired regression
of hormonally-induced physical effects and the sense of desperation that
may lead to depression, anxiety and suicidality. Prisoners who are
subject to rapid withdrawal of cross- sex hormones are particularly at
risk for psychiatric symptoms and self- injurious behaviors. Medical
monitoring of hormonal treatment as described in these Standards should
also be provided. Housing for transgendered prisoners should take into
account their transition status and their personal safety.
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VIII. Effects of Hormone Therapy in
Adults
The maximum physical effects of
hormones may not be evident until two years of continuous treatment.
Heredity limits the tissue response to hormones and this cannot be
overcome by increasing dosage. The degree of effects actually attained
varies from patient to patient.
Desired Effects of Hormones. Biologic
males treated with estrogens can realistically expect treatment to
result in: breast growth, some redistribution of body fat to approximate
a female body habitus, decreased upper body strength, softening of skin,
decrease in body hair, slowing or stopping the loss of scalp hair,
decreased fertility and testicular size, and less frequent, less firm
erections. Most of these changes are reversible, although breast
enlargement will not completely reverse after discontinuation of
treatment.
Biologic females treated with
testosterone can expect the following permanent changes: a deepening of
the voice, clitoral enlargement, mild breast atrophy, increased facial
and body hair and male pattern baldness. Reversible changes include
increased upper body strength, weight gain, increased social and sexual
interest and arousability, and decreased hip fat.
Potential Negative Medical Side
Effects. Patients with medical problems or otherwise at risk for
cardiovascular disease may be more likely to experience serious or fatal
consequences of cross-sex hormonal treatments. For example, cigarette
smoking, obesity, advanced age, heart disease, hypertension, clotting
abnormalities, malignancy, and some endocrine abnormalities may increase
side effects and risks for hormonal treatment. Therefore, some patients
may not be able to tolerate cross-sex hormones. However, hormones can
provide health benefits as well as risks. Risk-benefit ratios should be
considered collaboratively by the patient and prescribing physician.
Side effects in biologic males treated
with estrogens and progestins may include increased propensity to blood
clotting (venous thrombosis with a risk of fatal pulmonary embolism),
development of benign pituitary prolactinomas, infertility, weight gain,
emotional lability, liver disease, gallstone formation, somnolence,
hypertension, and diabetes mellitus.
Side effects in biologic females
treated with testosterone may include infertility, acne, emotional
lability, increases in sexual desire, shift of lipid profiles to male
patterns which increase the risk of cardiovascular disease, and the
potential to develop benign and malignant liver tumors and hepatic
dysfunction.
The Prescribing Physician's
Responsibilities. Hormones are to be prescribed by a physician, and
should not be administered without adequate psychological and medical
assessment before and during treatment. Patients who do not understand
the eligibility and readiness requirements and who are unaware of the
SOC should be informed of them. This may be a good indication for a
referral to a mental health professional experienced with gender
identity disorders.
The physician providing hormonal
treatment and medical monitoring need not be a specialist in
endocrinology, but should become well-versed in the relevant medical and
psychological aspects of treating persons with gender identity
disorders.
After a thorough medical history,
physical examination, and laboratory examination, the physician should
again review the likely effects and side effects of hormone treatment,
including the potential for serious, life- threatening consequences. The
patient must have the capacity to appreciate the risks and benefits of
treatment, have his/her questions answered, and agree to medical
monitoring of treatment. The medical record must contain a written
informed consent document reflecting a discussion of the risks and
benefits of hormone therapy.
Physicians have a wide latitude in what
hormone preparations they may prescribe and what routes of
administration they may select for individual patients. Viable options
include oral, injectable, and transdermal delivery systems. The use of
transdermal estrogen patches should be considered for males over 40
years of age or those with clotting abnormalities or a history of venous
thrombosis. Transdermal testosterone is useful in females who do not
want to take injections. In the absence of any other medical, surgical,
or psychiatric conditions, basic medical monitoring should include:
serial physical examinations relevant to treatment effects and side
effects, vital sign measurements before and during treatment, weight
measurements, and laboratory assessment. Gender patients, whether on
hormones or not, should be screened for pelvic malignancies as are other
persons.
For those receiving estrogens, the
minimum laboratory assessment should consist of a pretreatment free
testosterone level, fasting glucose, liver function tests, and complete
blood count with reassessment at 6 and 12 months and annually
thereafter. A pretreatment prolactin level should be obtained and
repeated at 1, 2, and 3 years. If hyperprolactemia does not occur during
this time, no further measurements are necessary. Biologic males
undergoing estrogen treatment should be monitored for breast cancer and
encouraged to engage in routine self-examination. As they age, they
should be monitored for prostatic cancer.
For those receiving androgens, the
minimum laboratory assessment should consist of pretreatment liver
function tests and complete blood count with reassessment at 6 months,
12 months, and yearly thereafter. Yearly palpation of the liver should
be considered. Females who have undergone mastectomies and who have a
family history of breast cancer should be monitored for this disease.
Physicians may provide their patients
with a brief written statement indicating that the person is under
medical supervision, which includes cross- sex hormone therapy. During
the early phases of hormone treatment, the patient may be encouraged to
carry this statement at all times to help prevent difficulties with the
police and other authorities.
Reductions in Hormone Doses After
Gonadectomy. Estrogen doses in post-orchiectomy patients can often be
reduced by 1/3 to 1/2 and still maintain feminization. Reductions in
testosterone doses post-oophorectomy should be considered, taking into
account the risks of osteoporosis. Lifelong maintenance treatment is
usually required in all gender patients.
The Misuse of Hormones. Some
individuals obtain hormones without prescription from friends, family
members, and pharmacies in other countries. Medically unmonitored
hormone use can expose the person to greater medical risk. Persons
taking medically monitored hormones have been known to take additional
doses of illicitly obtained hormones without their physician's
knowledge. Mental health professionals and prescribing physicians should
make an effort to encourage compliance with recommended dosages, in
order to limit morbidity. It is ethical for physicians to discontinue
treatment of patients who do not comply with prescribed treatment
regimens.
Other Potential Benefits of Hormones.
Hormonal treatment, when medically tolerated, should precede any genital
surgical interventions. Satisfaction with the hormone's effects
consolidates the person's identity as a member of the preferred sex and
gender and further adds to the conviction to proceed. Dissatisfaction
with hormonal effects may signal ambivalence about proceeding to
surgical interventions. In biologic males, hormones alone often generate
adequate breast development, precluding the need for augmentation
mammaplasty. Some patients who receive hormonal treatment will not
desire genital or other surgical interventions.
The Use of Antiandrogens and Sequential
Therapy. Antiandrogens can be used as adjunctive treatments in biologic
males receiving estrogens, though they are not always necessary to
achieve feminization. In some patients, antiandrogens may more
profoundly suppress the production of testosterone, enabling a lower
dose of estrogen to be used when adverse estrogen side effects are
anticipated.
Feminization does not require
sequential therapy. Attempts to mimic the menstrual cycle by prescribing
interrupted estrogen therapy or substituting progesterone for estrogen
during part of the month are not necessary to achieve feminization.
Informed Consent. Hormonal treatment
should be provided only to those who are legally able to provide
informed consent. This includes persons who have been declared by a
court to be emancipated minors and incarcerated persons who are
considered competent to participate in their medical decisions. For
adolescents, informed consent needs to include the minor patient's
assent and the written informed consent of a parent or legal guardian.
Reproductive Options. Informed consent
implies that the patient understands that hormone administration limits
fertility and that the removal of sexual organs prevents the capacity to
reproduce. Cases are known of persons who have received hormone therapy
and sex reassignment surgery who later regretted their inability to
parent genetically related children. The mental health professional
recommending hormone therapy, and the physician prescribing such
therapy, should discuss reproductive options with the patient prior to
starting hormone therapy. Biologic males, especially those who have not
already reproduced, should be informed about sperm preservation options,
and encouraged to consider banking sperm prior to hormone therapy.
Biologic females do not presently have readily available options for
gamete preservation, other than cryopreservation of fertilized embryos.
However, they should be informed about reproductive issues, including
this option. As other options become available, these should be
presented.
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IX. The Real-Life Experience
The act of fully adopting a new or
evolving gender role or gender presentation in everyday life is known as
the real-life experience. The real- life experience is essential to the
transition to the gender role that is congruent with the patient's
gender identity. Since changing one's gender presentation has immediate
profound personal and social consequences, the decision to do so should
be preceded by an awareness of what the familial, vocational,
interpersonal, educational, economic, and legal consequences are likely
to be. Professionals have a responsibility to discuss these predictable
consequences with their patients. Change of gender role and presentation
can be an important factor in employment discrimination, divorce,
marital problems, and the restriction or loss of visitation rights with
children. These represent external reality issues that must be
confronted for success in the new gender presentation. These
consequences may be quite different from what the patient imagined prior
to undertaking the real-life experiences. However, not all changes are
negative.
Parameters of the Real-Life Experience.
When clinicians assess the quality of a person's real-life experience in
the desired gender, the following abilities are reviewed:
- To maintain full or part-time
employment;
- To function as a student;
- To function in community-based
volunteer activity;
- To undertake some combination of
items 1-3;
- To acquire a (legal)
gender-identity-appropriate first name;
- To provide documentation that
persons other than the therapist know that the patient functions in
the desired gender role.
Real-Life Experience versus Real-Life
Test. Although professionals may recommend living in the desired gender,
the decision as to when and how to begin the real-life experience
remains the person's responsibility. Some begin the real-life experience
and decide that this often imagined life direction is not in their best
interest. Professionals sometimes construe the real-life experience as
the real-life test of the ultimate diagnosis. If patients prosper in the
preferred gender, they are confirmed as "transsexual," but if
they decided against continuing, they "must not have been."
This reasoning is a confusion of the forces that enable successful
adaptation with the presence of a gender identity disorder. The
real-life experience tests the person's resolve, the capacity to
function in the preferred gender, and the adequacy of social, economic,
and psychological supports. It assists both the patient and the mental
health professional in their judgments about how to proceed. Diagnosis,
although always open for reconsideration, precedes a recommendation for
patients to embark on the real-life experience. When the patient is
successful in the real- life experience, both the mental health
professional and the patient gain confidence about undertaking further
steps.
Removal of Beard and other Unwanted
Hair for the Male to Female Patient. Beard density is not significantly
slowed by cross-sex hormone administration. Facial hair removal via
electrolysis is a generally safe, time- consuming process that often
facilitates the real-life experience for biologic males. Side effects
include discomfort during and immediately after the procedure and less
frequently hypo- or hyper-pigmentation, scarring, and folliculitis.
Formal medical approval for hair removal is not necessary; electrolysis
may be begun whenever the patient deems it prudent. It is usually
recommended prior to commencing the real-life experience, because the
beard must grow out to visible lengths to be removed. Many patients will
require two years of regular treatments to effectively eradicate their
facial hair. Hair removal by laser is a new alternative approach, but
experience with it is limited.
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X. Surgery
Sex Reassignment is Effective and
Medically Indicated in Severe GID. In persons diagnosed with
transsexualism or profound GID, sex reassignment surgery, along with
hormone therapy and real-life experience, is a treatment that has proven
to be effective. Such a therapeutic regimen, when prescribed or
recommended by qualified practitioners, is medically indicated and
medically necessary. Sex reassignment is not "experimental,"
"investigational," "elective," "cosmetic,"
or optional in any meaningful sense. It constitutes very effective and
appropriate treatment for transsexualism or profound GID.
How to Deal with Ethical Questions
Concerning Sex Reassignment Surgery. Many persons, including some
medical professionals, object on ethical grounds to surgery for GID. In
ordinary surgical practice, pathological tissues are removed in order to
restore disturbed functions, or alterations are made to body features to
improve the patient's self image. Among those who object to sex
reassignment surgery, these conditions are not thought to present when
surgery is performed for persons with gender identity disorders. It is
important that professionals dealing with patients with gender identity
disorders feel comfortable about altering anatomically normal
structures. In order to understand how surgery can alleviate the
psychological discomfort of patients diagnosed with gender identity
disorders, professionals need to listen to these patients discuss their
life histories, and dilemmas. The resistance against performing surgery
on the ethical basis of "above all do no harm" should be
respected, discussed, and met with the opportunity to learn from
patients themselves about the psychological distress of having profound
gender identity disorder.
It is unethical to deny availability or
eligibility for sex reassignment surgeries or hormone therapy solely on
the basis of blood seropositivity for blood-borne infections such as
HIV, or hepatitis B or C, etc.
The Surgeon's Relationship with the
Physician Prescribing Hormones and the Mental Health Professional. The
surgeon is not merely a technician hired to perform a procedure. The
surgeon is part of the team of clinicians participating in a long-term
treatment process. The patient often feels an immense positive regard
for the surgeon, which ideally will enable long-term follow-up care.
Because of his or her responsibility to the patient, the surgeon must
understand the diagnosis that has led to the recommendation for genital
surgery. Surgeons should have a chance to speak at length with their
patients to satisfy themselves that the patient is likely to benefit
from the procedures. Ideally, the surgeon should have a close working
relationship with the other professionals who have been actively
involved in the patient's psychological and medical care. This is best
accomplished by belonging to an interdisciplinary team of professionals
who specialize in gender identity disorders. Such gender teams do not
exist everywhere, however. At the very least, the surgeon needs to be
assured that the mental health professional and physician prescribing
hormones are reputable professionals with specialized experience with
gender identity disorders. This is often reflected in the quality of the
documentation letters. Since fictitious and falsified letters have
occasionally been presented, surgeons should personally communicate with
at least one of the mental health professionals to verify the
authenticity of their letters.
Prior to performing any surgical
procedures, the surgeon should have all medical conditions appropriately
monitored and the effects of the hormonal treatment upon the liver and
other organ systems investigated. This can be done alone or in
conjunction with medical colleagues. Since pre-existing conditions may
complicate genital reconstructive surgeries, surgeons must also be
competent in urological diagnosis. The medical record should contain
written informed consent for the particular surgery to be performed.
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XI. Breast Surgery
Breast augmentation and removal are
common operations, easily obtainable by the general public for a variety
of indications. Reasons for these operations range from cosmetic
indications to cancer. Although breast appearance is definitely
important as a secondary sex characteristic, breast size or presence are
not involved in the legal definitions of sex and gender and are not
important for reproduction. The performance of breast operations should
be considered with the same reservations as beginning hormonal therapy.
Both produce relatively irreversible changes to the body.
The approach for male-to-female
patients is different than for female-to-male patients. For
female-to-male patients, a mastectomy procedure is usually the first
surgery performed for success in gender presentation as a man; and for
some patients it is the only surgery undertaken. When the amount of
breast tissue removed requires skin removal, a scar will result and the
patient should be so informed. Female-to-male patients might may have
surgery at the same time they begin hormones. For male-to-female
patients, augmentation mammoplasty may be performed if the physician
prescribing hormones and the surgeon have documented that breast
enlargement after undergoing hormone treatment for 18 months is not
sufficient for comfort in the social gender role.
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XII. Genital Surgery
Eligibility Criteria. These minimum
eligibility criteria for various genital surgeries equally apply to
biologic males and females seeking genital surgery. They are:
- Legal age of majority in the
patient's nation;
- Usually 12 months of continuous
hormonal therapy for those without a medical contraindication (see
below, "Can Surgery Be Performed Without Hormones and the
Real-life Experience");
- 12 months of successful continuous
full time real-life experience. Periods of returning to the original
gender may indicate ambivalence about proceeding and generally
should not be used to fulfill this criterion;
- If required by the mental health
professional, regular responsible participation in psychotherapy
throughout the real-life experience at a frequency determined
jointly by the patient and the mental health professional.
Psychotherapy per se is not an absolute eligibility criterion for
surgery;
- Demonstrable knowledge of the cost,
required lengths of hospitalizations, likely complications, and post
surgical rehabilitation requirements of various surgical approaches;
- Awareness of different competent
surgeons.
Readiness Criteria. The readiness
criteria include:
- Demonstrable progress in
consolidating one's gender identity;
- Demonstrable progress in dealing
with work, family, and interpersonal issues resulting in a
significantly better state of mental health (this implies
satisfactory control of problems such as sociopathy, substance
abuse, psychosis, suicidality, for instance).
Can Surgery Be Provided Without
Hormones and the Real-Life Experience? Individuals cannot receive
genital surgery without meeting the eligibility criteria. Genital
surgery is a treatment for a diagnosed gender identity disorder, and
should undertaken only after careful evaluation. Genital surgery is not
a right that must be granted upon request. The SOC provide for an
individual approach for every patient; but this does not mean that the
general guidelines, which specify treatment consisting of diagnostic
evaluation, possible psychotherapy, hormones, and real-life experience,
can be ignored. However, if a person has lived convincingly as a member
of the preferred gender for a long period of time and is assessed to be
a psychologically healthy after a requisite period of psychotherapy,
there is no inherent reason that he or she must take hormones prior to
genital surgery.
Conditions under which Surgery May
Occur. Genital surgical treatments for persons with a diagnosis of
gender identity disorder are not merely another set of elective
procedures. Typical elective procedures only involve a private mutually
consenting contract between a patient and a surgeon. Genital surgeries
for individuals diagnosed as having GID are to be undertaken only after
a comprehensive evaluation by a qualified mental health professional.
Genital surgery may be performed once written documentation that a
comprehensive evaluation has occurred and that the person has met the
eligibility and readiness criteria. By following this procedure, the
mental health professional, the surgeon and the patient share
responsibility of the decision to make irreversible changes to the body.
Requirements for the Surgeon Performing
Genital Reconstruction. The surgeon should be a urologist, gynecologist,
plastic surgeon or general surgeon, and Board-Certified as such by a
nationally known and reputable association. The surgeon should have
specialized competence in genital reconstructive techniques as indicated
by documented supervised training with a more experienced surgeon. Even
experienced surgeons in this field must be willing to have their
therapeutic skills reviewed by their peers. Surgeons should attend
professional meetings where new techniques are presented.
Ideally, the surgeon should be
knowledgeable about more than one of the surgical techniques for genital
reconstruction so that he or she, in consultation with the patient, will
be able to choose the ideal technique for the individual patient. When
surgeons are skilled in a single technique, they should so inform their
patients and refer those who do not want or are unsuitable for this
procedure to another surgeon.
Genital Surgery for the Male-to-Female
Patient. Genital surgical procedures may include orchiectomy, penectomy,
vaginoplasty, clitoroplasty, and labiaplasty. These procedures require
skilled surgery and postoperative care. Techniques include penile skin
inversion, pedicled rectosigmoid transplant, or free skin graft to line
the neovagina. Sexual sensation is an important objective in
vaginoplasty, along with creation of a functional vagina and acceptable
cosmesis.
Other Surgery for the Male-to-Female
Patient. Other surgeries that may be performed to assist feminization
include reduction thyroid chondroplasty, suction-assisted lipoplasty of
the waist, rhinoplasty, facial bone reduction, face-lift, and
blepharoplasty. These do not require letters of recommendation from
mental health professionals.
There are concerns about the safety and
effectiveness of voice modification surgery and more follow-up research
should be done prior to widespread use of this procedure. In order to
protect their vocal cords, patients who elect this procedure should do
so after all other surgeries requiring general anesthesia with
intubation are completed.
Genital Surgery for the Female-to-Male
Patient. Genital surgical procedures may include hysterectomy,
salpingo-oophorectomy, vaginectomy, metoidioplasty, scrotoplasty,
urethroplasty, placement of testicular prostheses, and phalloplasty.
Current operative techniques for phalloplasty are varied. The choice of
techniques may be restricted by anatomical or surgical considerations.
If the objectives of phalloplasty are a neophallus of good appearance,
standing micturition, sexual sensation, and/or coital ability, the
patient should be clearly informed that there are several separate
stages of surgery and frequent technical difficulties which may require
additional operations. Even metoidioplasty, which in theory is a
one-stage procedure for construction of a microphallus, often requires
more than one surgery. The plethora of techniques for penis construction
indicates that further technical development is necessary.
Other Surgery for the Female-to-Male
Patient. Other surgeries that may be performed to assist masculinization
include liposuction to reduce fat in hips, thighs and buttocks.
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XIII. Post-Transition Follow-up
Long-term postoperative follow-up is
encouraged in that it is one of the factors associated with a good
psychosocial outcome. Follow-up is important to the patient's subsequent
anatomic and medical health and to the surgeon's knowledge about the
benefits and limitations of surgery.
Long-term follow-up with the surgeon is
recommended in all patients to ensure an optimal surgical outcome.
Surgeons who operate on patients who are coming from long distances
should include personal follow-up in their care plan and attempt to
ensure affordable, local, long-term aftercare in the patient's
geographic region. Postoperative patients may also sometimes exclude
themselves from follow-up with the physician prescribing hormones, not
recognizing that these physicians are best able to prevent, diagnose and
treat possible long term medical conditions that are unique to
hormonally and surgically treated patients. Postoperative patients
should undergo regular medical screening according to recommended
guidelines for their age. The need for follow-up extends to the mental
health professional, who having spent a longer period of time with the
patient than any other professional, is in an excellent position to
assist in any post-operative adjustment difficulties.
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Archives
5th Version
Committee Members
Stephen B. Levine MD (Chairperson), George
Brown MD, Eli Coleman PhD, Peggy Cohen-Kettenis PhD, J. Joris Hage MD, Judy
Van Maasdam MA, Maxine Petersen MA, Friedemann Pfafflin, MD, Leah C.
Schaefer EdD.
Consultants: Dallas Denny MA, Domineco DiCeglie MD,
Wolf Eicher MD, Jamison Green, Richard Green MD, Louis Gooren MD,
Donald Laub MD, Anne Lawrence MD, Walter Meyer III MD, C. Christine Wheeler
PhD
PART ONE--INTRODUCTORY CONCEPTS
The Purpose of the Standards of Care.
The major purpose of the Standards of Care (SOC) is to articulate this
international organization's professional consensus about the psychiatric,
psychologic, medical, and surgical management of gender identity disorders.
Professionals may use this document to understand the parameters within
which they may offer assistance to those with these problems. Persons with
gender identity disorders, their families, and social institutions may use
the SOC as a means to understand the current thinking of professionals. All
readers should be aware of the limitations of knowledge in this area and of
the hope that some of the clinical uncertainties will be resolved in the
future through scientific investigation.
The Overarching Treatment Goal.
The general goal of the specific psychotherapeutic, endocrine, or surgical
therapies for people with gender identity disorders is lasting personal
comfort with the gendered self in order to maximize overall psychological
well-being and self-fulfillment.
The Standards of Care Are Clinical
Guidelines. The SOC are intended to
provide flexible directions for the treatment of gender identity disorders.
When eligibility requirements are stated they are meant to be minimum
requirements. Individual professionals and organized programs may raise
them. Clinical departures from these guidelines may come about because of a
patient's unique anatomic, social, or psychological situation, an
experienced professional's evolving method of handling a common situation,
or a research protocol. These departures should be recognized as such,
explained to the patient, documented both for legal protection and so that
the short and long term results can be retrieved to help the field to
evolve.
The Clinical Threshold.
A clinical threshold is passed when concerns, uncertainties, and questions
about gender identity persist in development, become so intense as to seem
to be the most important aspect of a person's life, or prevent the
establishment of a relatively unconflicted gender identity. The person's
struggles are then variously informally referred to as a gender identity
problem, gender dysphoria, a gender problem, a gender concern, gender
distress, or transsexualism. Such struggles are known to be manifested from
the preschool years to old age and have many alternate forms. These forms
come about by various degrees of personal dissatisfaction with sexual
anatomy, gender demarcating body characteristics, gender roles, gender
identity, and perceptions of others. When dissatisfied individuals meet
specified criteria in one of two official nomenclatures--the International
Classification of Diseases-10 (ICD-10) or the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders--Fourth Edition (DSM-IV)--they are formally
designated as suffering from a gender identity disorder (GID). Some
persons with GID exceed another threshold--they persistently possess a wish
for surgical transformation of their bodies.
Two Primary Populations with GID
Exist--Biological Males and Biological Females.
The sex of a patient always is a significant factor in the management of GID.
Clinicians need to separately consider the biological, social,
psychological, and economic dilemmas of each sex. For example, when
first requesting professional assistance, the typical biological female
seems to be further along in consolidating a male gender identity than does
the typical biological male in his quest for a comfortable female gender
identity. This often enables the sequences of therapy to proceed more
rapidly for male-identified persons. All patients, however, must follow the
SOC.
PART TWO
A BRIEF REFERENCE GUIDE TO THE STANDARDS OF
CARE
CAVEAT–It is recommended that no one use
this guide without consulting the full text of the SOC (Part Three) which
provides an explication of these concepts.
- Professional involvement with patients
with gender identity disorders involves any of the following:
- Diagnostic assessment
- Psychotherapy
- Real life experience
- Hormonal therapy
- Surgical therapy.
The Roles of the Mental Health
Professional with the Gender Patient. Mental health professionals (MHP)
who work with individuals with gender identity disorders may be regularly
called upon to carry out many of these responsibilities:
- To accurately diagnose the
individual's gender disorder according to either the DSM-IV or ICD-10
nomenclature
- To accurately diagnose any co-morbid
psychiatric conditions and see to their appropriate treatment
- To counsel the individual about the
range of treatment options and their implications
- To engage in psychotherapy
- To ascertain eligibility and readiness
for hormone and surgical therapy
- To make formal recommendations to
medical and surgical colleagues
- To document their patient's relevant
history in a letter of recommendation
- To be a colleague on a team of
professionals with interest in the gender identity disorders
- To educate family members, employers,
and institutions about gender identity disorders
- To be available for follow-up of
previously seen gender patients.
The Training of Mental Health
Professionals
- The Adult-Specialist
- basic clinical competence in
diagnosis and treatment of mental or emotional disorders
- the basic clinical training may
occur within any formally credentialing discipline--for example,
psychology, psychiatry, social work, counseling, or nursing.
- recommended minimal credentials
for special competence with the gender identity disorders:
- master's degree or its
equivalent in a clinical behavioral science field granted by
an institution accredited by a recognized national or regional
accrediting board
- specialized training and
competence in the assessment of the DSM-IV/ICD-10 Sexual
Disorders (not simply gender identity disorders)
- documented supervised training
and competence in psychotherapy
- continuing education in the
treatment of gender identity disorders
- The Child-Specialist
- training in childhood and
adolescent developmental psychopathology.
- competence in diagnosing and
treating the ordinary problems of children and adolescents
The Differences between Eligibility and
Readiness Criteria for Hormones or Surgery.
- Eligibility
--the
specified criteria that must be documented before moving to a next step
in a triadic therapeutic sequence (real life experience, hormones, and
surgery)
- Readiness
--the
specified criteria that rest upon the clinician's judgment prior to
taking the next step in a triadic therapeutic sequence
The Mental Health Professional's
Documentation Letters for Hormones or Surgery Should Succinctly Specify:
- The patient's general identifying
characteristics
- The initial and evolving gender,
sexual, and other psychiatric diagnoses
- The duration of their professional
relationship including the type of psychotherapy or evaluation that
the patient underwent
- The eligibility criteria that have
been met and the MHP's rationale for hormones or surgery
- The patient's ability to follow the
Standards of Care to date and the likelihood of future compliance
- Whether the author of the report is
part of a gender team or is working without benefit of an organized
team approach
- The offer of receiving a phone call to
verify that the documentation letter is authentic
One-Letter is Required for Instituting
Hormone Treatment;
Two-Letters are Required for Surgery
- Two separate letters of recommendation
from mental health professionals who work alone without colleagues
experienced with gender identity disorders are required for surgery
and
- If the first letter is from a
person with a master's degree, the second letter should be from a
psychiatrist or a clinical psychologist--those who can be expected
to adequately evaluate co-morbid psychiatric conditions.
- If the first letter is from the
patient's psychotherapist, the second letter should be from a
person who has only played an evaluative role for the patient.
Each letter writer, however, is expected to cover the same seven
elements
- One letter with two signatures is
acceptable if the mental health professionals conduct their tasks and
periodically report on these processes to a team of other mental
health professionals and nonpsychiatric physicians.
Children with Gender Identity Disorders
- The initial task of the
child-specialist mental health professional is to provide careful
diagnostic assessments of gender-disturbed children.
- the child's gender identity and
gender role behaviors, family dynamics, past traumatic
experiences, and general psychological health are separately
assessed. Gender-disturbed children differ significantly along
these parameters.
- hormonal and surgical therapies
should never be undertaken with this age group.
- treatment over time may involve
family therapy, marital therapy, parent guidance, individual
therapy of the child, or various combinations.
- treatment should be extended to
all forms of psychopathology, not simply the gender disturbance.
Treatment of Adolescents
- In typical cases the treatment is
conservative because gender identity development can rapidly
and unexpectedly evolve. Teenagers should be followed, provided
psychotherapeutic support, educated about gender options, and
encouraged to pay attention to other aspects of their social,
intellectual, vocational, and interpersonal development.
- They may be eligible for beginning
triadic therapy as early as age 18, preferably with parental consent.
- Parental consent presumes a good
working relationship between the mental health professional and
the parents, so that they, too, fully understand the nature of the
GID.
- In many European countries sixteen
to eighteen-year-olds are legal adults for medical decision
making, and do not require parental consent. In the United States,
age 18 is legal adulthood.
- Hormonal Therapy for Adolescents.
Hormonal treatment should be conducted in two phases only after
puberty is well established.
- in the initial phase biological
males should be administered an antiandrogen (which neutralize
testosterone effects only) or an LHRH agonist (which stops the
production of testosterone only)
- biological females should be
administered sufficient androgens, progestins, or LHRH agonists
(which stops the production of estradiol, estrone, and
progesterone) to stop menstruation.
- second phase treatments--after
these changes have occurred and the adolescent's mental health
remains stable
- biologic males may be given
estrogenic agents
- biologic females may be given
higher masculinizing doses of androgens
- second phase medications
produce irreversible changes
- Prior to Age 18. In selected cases,
the real life experience can begin at age 16, with or without first
phase hormones. The administration of hormones to adolescents younger
than age 18 should rarely be done.
- first phase therapies to delay the
somatic changes of puberty are best carried out in specialized
treatment centers under supervision of, or in consultation with,
an endocrinologist, and preferably, a pediatric endocrinologist,
who is part of an interdisciplinary team.
- two goals justify this
intervention
- to gain time to further
explore the gender and other developmental issues in
psychotherapy
- to make passing easier if the
adolescent continues to pursue gender change.
- in order to provide puberty
delaying hormones to a person less than age 18, the following
criteria must be met
- throughout childhood they have
demonstrated an intense pattern of cross-gender identity and
aversion to expected gender role behaviors
- gender discomfort has
significantly increased with the onset of puberty
- social, intellectual,
psychological, and interpersonal development are limited as a
consequence of their GID
- serious psychopathology,
except as a consequence of the GID, is absent
- the family consents and
participates in the triadic therapy
- Prior to Age 16. Second phase
hormones, those which induce opposite sex characteristics should not
be given prior to age 16 years.
- Mental Health Professional Involvement
is an Eligibility Requirement for Triadic Therapy During Adolescence.
- To be eligible for the
implementation of the real life experience or hormone therapy,
the mental health professional should be involved with the
patient and family for a minimum of six months.
- To be eligible for the
recommendation of genital reconstructive surgery or mastectomy,
the mental health professional should be integrally involved
with the adolescent and the family for at least eighteen months.
- School-aged adolescents with
gender identity disorders often are so uncomfortable due to
negative peer interactions and a felt incapacity to
participate in the roles of their biologic sex that they refuse
to attend school.
- Mental health professionals
should be prepared to work collaboratively with school
personnel to find ways to continue the educational and
social development of their patients.
Psychotherapy with Adults
- Many adults with gender identity
disorder find comfortable, effective ways of identifying themselves
without the triadic treatment sequence, with or without psychotherapy
- Psychotherapy is not an absolute
requirement for triadic therapy.
- Individual programs vary to the
extent that they perceive the need for psychotherapy.
- When the mental health
professional's initial assessment leads to a recommendation
for psychotherapy, the clinician should specify the goals of
treatment, estimate its frequency and duration.
- The SOC committee is wary of
insistence on some minimum number of psychotherapy sessions prior
to the real life experience, hormones, or surgery but expects
individual programs to set these
- If psychotherapy is not done by
members of a gender team, the psychotherapist should be informed
that a letter describing the patient's therapy may be requested so
the patient can move on to the next phase of rehabilitation.
- Psychotherapy often provides education
about a range of options not previously seriously considered by the
patient. Its goals are:
- to be realistic about work and
relationships
- to define and alleviate the
patient's conflicts that may have undermined a stable lifestyle
and to attempt to create a long term stable life style
- to find a comfortable way to live
within a gender role and body
- Even when the initial goals are
attained, mental health professionals should discuss the likelihood
that no educational, psychotherapeutic, medical, or surgical therapy
can permanently eradicate all psychological vestiges of the person's
original sex assignment
The Real-Life Experience
- Since changing one's gender role has
immediate profound personal and social consequences, the decision to
do so should be preceded by an awareness of what these familial,
vocational, interpersonal, educational, economic, and legal
consequences are likely to be.
- When clinicians assess the quality of
a person's real-life experience in the new gender role, the following
abilities are reviewed
- to maintain full or part-time
employment
- to function as a student
- to function in community-based
volunteer activity
- to undertake some combination of
items 1-3
- to acquire a new (legal) first or
last name
- to provide documentation that
persons other than the therapist know that the patient functions
in the new gender role.
Eligibility and Readiness Criteria for
Hormone Therapy for Adults
- Three eligibility criteria exist.
- age 18 years
- demonstrable knowledge of what
hormones medically can and cannot do and their social benefits and
risks
- Either
a documented real life experience should be undertaken for at
least three months prior to the administration of hormones Or
- a period of psychotherapy of a
duration specified by the mental health professional after the
initial evaluation (usually a minimum of three months) should be
undertaken
- under no circumstances should an
person be provided hormones who has neither fulfilled criteria #3
or #4.
- Three readiness criteria exist:
- the patient has had further
consolidation of gender identity during the real-life experience
or psychotherapy
- the patient has made some progress
in mastering other identified problems leading to improving or
continuing stable mental health
- hormones are likely to be taken in
a responsible manner
- Hormones can be given for those who do
not initially want surgery or a real life experience. They must be
appropriately diagnosed, however, and meet the criteria stated above
for hormone administration.
Requirements for Genital Reconstructive
and Breast Surgery
- Six eligibility criteria for various
surgeries exist and equally apply to biological males and biological
females
- legal age of majority in the
patient's nation
- 12 months of continuous hormonal
therapy for those without a medical contraindication
- 12 months of successful continuous
full time real-life experience. Periods of returning to the
original gender may indicate ambivalence about proceeding and
should not be used to fulfill this criterion
- while psychotherapy is not an
absolute requirement for surgery for adults, regular sessions may
be required by the mental health professional throughout the real
life experience at a minimum frequency determined by the mental
health professional.
- knowledge of the cost, required
lengths of hospitalizations, likely complications, and post
surgical rehabilitation requirements of various surgical
approaches.
- awareness of different competent
surgeons
- Two readiness criteria exist
- demonstrable progress in
consolidating the new gender identity
- demonstrable progress in dealing
with work, family, and interpersonal issues resulting in a
significantly better or at least a stable state of mental health.
Surgery
- Genital, Breast, and Other Surgery for
the Male to Female Patient
- Surgical procedures may include
orchiectomy, penectomy, vaginoplasty, augmentation mammaplasty,
and vocal cord surgery.
- Vaginoplasty requires both skilled
surgery and postoperative treatment. Three techniques are: penile
skin inversion, pedicled rectosigmoid transplant, or free skin
graft to line the neovagina
- Augmentation mammaplasty may be
performed prior to vaginoplasty if the physician prescribing
hormones and the surgeon have documented that breast enlargement
after undergoing hormonal treatment for two years is not
sufficient for comfort in the social gender role. Other surgeries
that may be performed to assist feminization include: reduction
thyroid chondroplasty, liposuction of the waist, rhinoplasty,
facial bone reduction, face-lift, and blephoroplasty.
- Genital an
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