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by Paul McHugh
University Distinguished Service
Professor of Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University.
NOTE: See also
http://www.help4families.com/hopkins.htm for this article and others on this
issue.
See also, Transsexualism.
[COMMENT: The evidence on sex-change operations
seems to be quite clear and unassailable. There is no substitute for
the Biblical understanding of human sexuality,
made in the Image of God, male and female. This article needs a
theological foundation, which is the only way the moral consensus can be
established and maintained. See Sexuality
Libraries.
E. Fox]
When
the practice of sex-change surgery first emerged back in the early 1970s, I
would often remind its advocating psychiatrists that with other patients,
alcoholics in particular, they would quote the Serenity Prayer, “God, give me
the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the
things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” Where did they get the
idea that our sexual identity (“gender” was the term they preferred) as men or
women was in the category of things that could be changed?
Their regular response
was to show me their patients. Men (and until recently they were all men) with
whom I spoke before their surgery would tell me that their bodies and sexual
identities were at variance. Those I met after surgery would tell me that the
surgery and hormone treatments that had made them “women” had also made them
happy and contented. None of these encounters were persuasive, however. The
post-surgical subjects struck me as caricatures of women. They wore high heels,
copious makeup, and flamboyant clothing; they spoke about how they found
themselves able to give vent to their natural inclinations for peace,
domesticity, and gentleness—but their large hands, prominent Adam’s apples, and
thick facial features were incongruous (and would become more so as they aged).
Women psychiatrists whom I sent to talk with them would intuitively see through
the disguise and the exaggerated postures. “Gals know gals,” one said to me,
“and that’s a guy.”
The subjects before the
surgery struck me as even more strange, as they struggled to convince anyone who
might influence the decision for their surgery. First, they spent an unusual
amount of time thinking and talking about sex and their sexual experiences;
their sexual hungers and adventures seemed to preoccupy them. Second, discussion
of babies or children provoked little interest from them; indeed, they seemed
indifferent to children. But third, and most remarkable, many of these
men-who-claimed-to-be-women reported that they found women sexually attractive
and that they saw themselves as “lesbians.” When I noted to their champions that
their psychological leanings seemed more like those of men than of women, I
would get various replies, mostly to the effect that in making such judgments I
was drawing on sexual stereotypes.
Until 1975, when I
became psychiatrist-in-chief at Johns Hopkins Hospital, I could usually keep my
own counsel on these matters. But once I was given authority over all the
practices in the psychiatry department I realized that if I were passive I would
be tacitly co-opted in encouraging sex-change surgery in the very department
that had originally proposed and still defended it. I decided to challenge what
I considered to be a misdirection of psychiatry and to demand more information
both before and after their operations.
Two issues presented
themselves as targets for study.
First, I wanted to test the claim that
men who had undergone sex-change surgery found resolution for their many general
psychological problems.
Second (and this was more ambitious), I wanted
to see whether male infants with ambiguous genitalia who were being surgically
transformed into females and raised as girls did, as the theory (again from
Hopkins) claimed, settle easily into the sexual identity that was chosen for
them. These claims had generated the opinion in psychiatric circles that one’s
“sex” and one’s “gender” were distinct matters, sex being genetically and
hormonally determined from conception, while gender was culturally shaped by the
actions of family and others during childhood.
The first issue was
easier and required only that I encourage the ongoing research of a member of
the faculty who was an accomplished student of human sexual behavior. The
psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Jon Meyer was already developing a means of
following up with adults who received sex-change operations at Hopkins in order
to see how much the surgery had helped them. He found that most of the patients
he tracked down some years after their surgery were contented with what they had
done and that only a few regretted it. But in every other respect, they were
little changed in their psychological condition. They had much the same problems
with relationships, work, and emotions as before. The hope that they would
emerge now from their emotional difficulties to flourish psychologically had not
been fulfilled.
We saw the results as demonstrating that
just as these men enjoyed cross-dressing as women before the operation so they
enjoyed cross-living after it. But they were no better in their psychological
integration or any easier to live with. With these facts in hand I concluded
that Hopkins was fundamentally cooperating with a mental illness. We
psychiatrists, I thought, would do better to concentrate on trying to fix their
minds and not their genitalia.
Thanks to this
research, Dr. Meyer was able to make some sense of the mental disorders that
were driving this request for unusual and radical treatment. Most of the cases
fell into one of two quite different groups. One group consisted of conflicted
and guilt-ridden homosexual men who saw a sex-change as a way to resolve their
conflicts over homosexuality by allowing them to behave sexually as females with
men. The other group, mostly older men, consisted of heterosexual (and some
bisexual) males who found intense sexual arousal in cross-dressing as females.
As they had grown older, they had become eager to add more verisimilitude to
their costumes and either sought or had suggested to them a surgical
transformation that would include breast implants, penile amputation, and pelvic
reconstruction to resemble a woman.
Further study of
similar subjects in the psychiatric services of the Clark Institute in Toronto
identified these men by the auto-arousal they experienced in imitating sexually
seductive females. Many of them imagined that their displays might be sexually
arousing to onlookers, especially to females. This idea, a form of “sex in the
head” (D. H. Lawrence), was what provoked their first adventure in dressing up
in women’s undergarments and had eventually led them toward the surgical option.
Because most of them found women to be the objects of their interest they
identified themselves to the psychiatrists as lesbians. The name eventually
coined in Toronto to describe this form of sexual misdirection was “autogynephilia.”
Once again I concluded that to provide a surgical alteration to the body of
these unfortunate people was to collaborate with a mental disorder rather than
to treat it.
This information and the improved
understanding of what we had been doing led us to stop prescribing sex-change
operations for adults at Hopkins—much, I’m glad to say, to the relief of several
of our plastic surgeons who had previously been commandeered to carry out the
procedures. And with this solution to the first issue I could turn to the
second—namely, the practice of surgically assigning femaleness to male newborns
who at birth had malformed, sexually ambiguous genitalia and severe phallic
defects. This practice, more the province of the pediatric department than of my
own, was nonetheless of concern to psychiatrists because the opinions generated
around these cases helped to form the view that sexual identity was a matter of
cultural conditioning rather than something fundamental to the human
constitution.
Several conditions, fortunately rare, can
lead to the misconstruction of the genito-urinary tract during embryonic life.
When such a condition occurs in a male, the easiest form of plastic surgery by
far, with a view to correcting the abnormality and gaining a cosmetically
satisfactory appearance, is to remove all the male parts, including the testes,
and to construct from the tissues available a labial and vaginal configuration.
This action provides these malformed babies with female-looking genital anatomy
regardless of their genetic sex. Given the claim that the sexual identity of the
child would easily follow the genital appearance if backed up by familial and
cultural support, the pediatric surgeons took to constructing female-like
genitalia for both females with an XX chromosome constitution and males with an
XY so as to make them all look like little girls, and they were to be raised as
girls by their parents.
All this was done of
course with consent of the parents who, distressed by these grievous
malformations in their newborns, were persuaded by the pediatric
endocrinologists and consulting psychologists to accept transformational surgery
for their sons. They were told that their child’s sexual identity (again his
“gender”) would simply conform to environmental conditioning. If the parents
consistently responded to the child as a girl now that his genital structure
resembled a girl’s, he would accept that role without much travail.
This proposal presented the parents with a critical
decision. The doctors increased the pressure behind the proposal by noting to
the parents that a decision had to be made promptly because a child’s sexual
identity settles in by about age two or three. The process of inducing the child
into the female role should start immediately, with name, birth certificate,
baby paraphernalia, etc. With the surgeons ready and the physicians confident,
the parents were faced with an offer difficult to refuse (although,
interestingly, a few parents did refuse this advice and decided to let nature
take its course).
I thought these professional opinions and
the choices being pressed on the parents rested upon anecdotal evidence that was
hard to verify and even harder to replicate. Despite the confidence of their
advocates, they lacked substantial empirical support. I encouraged one of our
resident psychiatrists, William G. Reiner (already interested in the subject
because prior to his psychiatric training he had been a pediatric urologist and
had witnessed the problem from the other side), to set about doing a systematic
follow-up of these children—particularly the males transformed into females in
infancy—so as to determine just how sexually integrated they became as adults.
The results here were even more startling than in
Meyer’s work. Reiner picked out for intensive study cloacal exstrophy, because
it would best test the idea that cultural influence plays the foremost role in
producing sexual identity. Cloacal exstrophy is an embryonic misdirection that
produces a gross abnormality of pelvic anatomy such that the bladder and the
genitalia are badly deformed at birth. The male penis fails to form and the
bladder and urinary tract are not separated distinctly from the gastrointestinal
tract. But crucial to Reiner’s study is the fact that the embryonic development
of these unfortunate males is not hormonally different from that of normal
males. They develop within a male-typical prenatal hormonal milieu provided by
their Y chromosome and by their normal testicular function. This exposes these
growing embryos/fetuses to the male hormone testosterone—just like all males in
their mother’s womb.
Although animal
research had long since shown that male sexual behavior was directly derived
from this exposure to testosterone during embryonic life, this fact did not
deter the pediatric practice of surgically treating male infants with this
grievous anomaly by castration (amputating their testes and any vestigial male
genital structures) and vaginal construction, so that they could be raised as
girls. This practice had become almost universal by the mid-1970s. Such cases
offered Reiner the best test of the two aspects of the doctrine underlying such
treatment: (1) that humans at birth are neutral as to their sexual identity, and
(2) that for humans it is the postnatal, cultural, nonhormonal influences,
especially those of early childhood, that most influence their ultimate sexual
identity. Males with cloacal exstrophy were regularly altered surgically to
resemble females, and their parents were instructed to raise them as girls. But
would the fact that they had had the full testosterone exposure in utero defeat
the attempt to raise them as girls? Answers might become evident with the
careful follow-up that Reiner was launching.
Before describing his results, I should note that the doctors proposing this
treatment for the males with cloacal exstrophy understood and acknowledged that
they were introducing a number of new and severe physical problems for these
males. These infants, of course, had no ovaries, and their testes were
surgically amputated, which meant that they had to receive exogenous hormones
for life. They would also be denied by the same surgery any opportunity for
fertility later on. One could not ask the little patient about his willingness
to pay this price. These were considered by the physicians advising the parents
to be acceptable burdens to bear in order to avoid distress in childhood about
malformed genital structures, and it was hoped that they could follow a
conflict-free direction in their maturation as girls and women.
Reiner, however,
discovered that such re-engineered males were almost never comfortable as
females once they became aware of themselves and the world. From the start of
their active play life, they behaved spontaneously like boys and were obviously
different from their sisters and other girls, enjoying rough-and-tumble games
but not dolls and “playing house.” Later on, most of those individuals who
learned that they were actually genetic males wished to reconstitute their lives
as males (some even asked for surgical reconstruction and male hormone
replacement)—and all this despite the earnest efforts by their parents to treat
them as girls.
Reiner’s results, reported in the January
22, 2004, issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, are worth recounting. He
followed up sixteen genetic males with cloacal exstrophy seen at Hopkins, of
whom fourteen underwent neonatal assignment to femaleness socially, legally, and
surgically. The other two parents refused the advice of the pediatricians and
raised their sons as boys. Eight of the fourteen subjects assigned to be females
had since declared themselves to be male. Five were living as females, and one
lived with unclear sexual identity. The two raised as males had remained male.
All sixteen of these people had interests that were typical of males, such as
hunting, ice hockey, karate, and bobsledding. Reiner concluded from this work
that the sexual identity followed the genetic constitution. Male-type tendencies
(vigorous play, sexual arousal by females, and physical aggressiveness) followed
the testosterone-rich intrauterine fetal development of the people he studied,
regardless of efforts to socialize them as females after birth.
Having looked at the
Reiner and Meyer studies, we in the Johns Hopkins Psychiatry Department
eventually concluded that human sexual identity is mostly built into our
constitution by the genes we inherit and the embryogenesis we undergo. Male
hormones sexualize the brain and the mind. Sexual dysphoria—a sense of disquiet
in one’s sexual role—naturally occurs amongst those rare males who are raised as
females in an effort to correct an infantile genital structural problem. A
seemingly similar disquiet can be socially induced in apparently
constitutionally normal males, in association with (and presumably prompted by)
serious behavioral aberrations, amongst which are conflicted homosexual
orientations and the remarkable male deviation now called autogynephilia.
Quite clearly, then, we psychiatrists should work
to discourage those adults who seek surgical sex reassignment. When Hopkins
announced that it would stop doing these procedures in adults with sexual
dysphoria, many other hospitals followed suit, but some medical centers still
carry out this surgery. Thailand has several centers that do the surgery “no
questions asked” for anyone with the money to pay for it and the means to travel
to Thailand. I am disappointed but not surprised by this, given that some
surgeons and medical centers can be persuaded to carry out almost any kind of
surgery when pressed by patients with sexual deviations, especially if those
patients find a psychiatrist to vouch for them. The most astonishing example is
the surgeon in England who is prepared to amputate the legs of patients who
claim to find sexual excitement in gazing at and exhibiting stumps of amputated
legs. At any rate, we at Hopkins hold that official psychiatry has good evidence
to argue against this kind of treatment and should begin to close down the
practice everywhere.
For children with birth
defects the most rational approach at this moment is to correct promptly any of
the major urological defects they face, but to postpone any decision about
sexual identity until much later, while raising the child according to its
genetic sex. Medical caretakers and parents can strive to make the child aware
that aspects of sexual identity will emerge as he or she grows. Settling on what
to do about it should await maturation and the child’s appreciation of his or
her own identity.
Proper care, including good parenting,
means helping the child through the medical and social difficulties presented by
the genital anatomy but in the process protecting what tissues can be retained,
in particular the gonads. This effort must continue to the point where the child
can see the problem of a life role more clearly as a sexually differentiated
individual emerges from within. Then as the young person gains a sense of
responsibility for the result, he or she can be helped through any surgical
constructions that are desired. Genuine informed consent derives only from the
person who is going to live with the outcome and cannot rest upon the decisions
of others who believe they “know best.”
How are these ideas now
being received? I think tolerably well. The “transgender” activists (now often
allied with gay liberation movements) still argue that their members are
entitled to whatever surgery they want, and they still claim that their sexual
dysphoria represents a true conception of their sexual identity. They have made
some protests against the diagnosis of autogynephilia as a mechanism to generate
demands for sex-change operations, but they have offered little evidence to
refute the diagnosis. Psychiatrists are taking better sexual histories from
those requesting sex-change and are discovering more examples of this strange
male exhibitionist proclivity.
Much of the enthusiasm
for the quick-fix approach to birth defects expired when the anecdotal evidence
about the much-publicized case of a male twin raised as a girl proved to be
bogus. The psychologist in charge hid, by actually misreporting, the news that
the boy, despite the efforts of his parents to treat him and raise him as a
girl, had constantly challenged their treatment of him, ultimately found out
about the deception, and restored himself as a male. Sadly, he carried an
additional diagnosis of major depression and ultimately committed suicide.
I think the issue of
sex-change for males is no longer one in which much can be said for the other
side. But I have learned from the experience that the toughest challenge is
trying to gain agreement to seek empirical evidence for opinions about sex and
sexual behavior, even when the opinions seem on their face unreasonable. One
might expect that those who claim that sexual identity has no biological or
physical basis would bring forth more evidence to persuade others. But as I’ve
learned, there is a deep prejudice in favor of the idea that nature is totally
malleable.
Without any fixed position on what is
given in human nature, any manipulation of it can be defended as legitimate. A
practice that appears to give people what they want—and what some of them are
prepared to clamor for—turns out to be difficult to combat with ordinary
professional experience and wisdom. Even controlled trials or careful follow-up
studies to ensure that the practice itself is not damaging are often resisted
and the results rejected.
I have witnessed a
great deal of damage from sex-reassignment. The children transformed from their
male constitution into female roles suffered prolonged distress and misery as
they sensed their natural attitudes. Their parents usually lived with guilt over
their decisions—second-guessing themselves and somewhat ashamed of the
fabrication, both surgical and social, they had imposed on their sons. As for
the adults who came to us claiming to have discovered their “true” sexual
identity and to have heard about sex-change operations, we psychiatrists have
been distracted from studying the causes and natures of their mental
misdirection by preparing them for surgery and for a life in the other sex. We
have wasted scientific and technical resources and damaged our professional
credibility by collaborating with madness rather than trying to study, cure, and
ultimately prevent it.
Paul McHugh is
University Distinguished Service Professor of Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins
University.
Copyright (c) 2004 First Things 147 (November 2004):
34-38.
NOTE: See also
http://www.help4families.com/hopkins.htm for this article and others on this
issue.
also, Transsexualism.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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Date Posted - 09/21/2009 - Date Last Edited - 09/21/2009