gender-affirming surgery
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- Also called:
- gender affirmation surgery, gender confirmation surgery, or sex reassignment surgery
- Related Topics:
- surgery
- gender dysphoria
- transgender
- hysterectomy
- intersex
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gender-affirming surgery, medical procedure in which the physical sex characteristics of an individual are modified. Gender-affirming surgery typically is undertaken when an individual chooses to align their physical appearance with their gender identity, enabling the individual to achieve a greater sense of self and helping to reduce psychological distress that may be associated with gender dysphoria.
Gender-affirmation care
An individual’s physical sex may not match their gender identity when the person is intersex, having been born outside the binary of male and female and thus having ambiguous genitalia, or when the person identifies as transgender. Parents of an intersex child may elect to have surgical procedures carried out in order to have the child’s anatomy conform to binary notions of gender. A person’s ascribed legal sex may not match their gender identity as they mature. However, this situation raises serious concerns regarding the appropriateness of performing unnecessary medical procedures on the bodies of minors. Intersexuality is a normal biological variation and is not considered a medical condition. Therefore, medical interventions such as surgery and hormone therapy are typically unnecessary for intersex children.
Transgender individuals may seek gender-affirming surgery to align their physical body with their perception of their gender identity. Gender identity refers to an individual’s perception of their own gender, which may or may not correspond to their designated gender at birth. Gender identity encompasses the identification as male, female, both, neither, or somewhere else on the spectrum of gender. It is distinct from biological sex, which is determined by the sex chromosomes and anatomy of an individual. While the gender identity of most individuals corresponds to their ascribed biological sex, the gender identity of some individuals differs from their ascribed sex at birth, which can result in gender dysphoria and thereby lead the individual to seek gender-affirming surgery.
Individuals assigned male at birth may undergo one or more procedures to feminize their anatomy, including facial feminization surgery, penectomy (removal of the penis), orchidectomy (removal of the testicles), vaginoplasty (construction of a vagina), and a tracheal shave (reduction of the Adam’s apple). Individuals who are assigned female at birth and who desire surgical intervention to masculinize their anatomy may seek breast reduction surgery, hysterectomy (removal of the uterus), oophorectomy (removal of the ovaries), and phalloplasty (construction of a penis).
Development
Gender-affirming surgeries were performed during the 1920s and ’30s, primarily in Europe. These procedures were experimental and not extensively accepted by the medical community. At the time, it was widely believed that gender identity was immutable and that surgery could not alter it. However, Magnus Hirschfeld, a German sexologist and vocal advocate for sexual and gender diversity, assisted with the care of several transgender individuals.
Dora Richter was the first transgender individual to undergo complete male-to-female genital surgery under Hirschfeld’s supervision. Richter was one of several transgender individuals under Hirschfeld’s care at the Berlin Institute for Sexual Research. In 1922 Richter underwent an orchidectomy and, in 1931, a penectomy and vaginoplasty.
In 1930 and 1931 Lili Elbe also underwent several gender-affirming surgeries. These procedures included an orchidectomy, an ovarian transplant, and a penectomy. Elbe underwent a fourth surgery in June 1931, which consisted of an experimental uterine transplant and vaginoplasty. Elbe’s body rejected the transplanted uterus, and she died of postoperative complications in 1931.
Advances in gender-affirming care
During the 1950s and ’60s, significant advancements were made in the field of gender-affirming surgery, including the establishment of several major medical centres and the refinement of surgical techniques. Christian Hamburger, a Danish endocrinologist, performed a gender-affirming surgery in 1952 on Christine Jorgensen, a transgender individual, who underwent hormone replacement therapy and surgery to remove her testicles and create a vagina. Jorgensen became a public figure advocating for transgender rights and promoting awareness about gender-affirming surgery after their case received significant media attention.
Other medical centres in Europe and the United States began conducting gender-affirming surgeries around the same time, including the Johns Hopkins Gender Identity Clinic, founded in 1966. The founder of the clinic, psychiatrist John Money, believed that gender was a social construct and that gender-affirming surgery could be an effective treatment for individuals with gender dysphoria. Money’s theories had a significant impact on the field of gender-affirming surgery and helped to change the attitudes of the medical community regarding the procedure.
During the 1960s, new surgical techniques were developed, including advances in vaginoplasty and phalloplasty. In the 1950s Belgian surgeon Georges Burou devised a technique involving the use of skin grafts from the patient’s thigh to create a vaginal canal lining. For penises, he attached the phallus to a blood supply using tissue. This technique improved tissue perfusion and decreased the risk of complications such as tissue necrosis. These procedures marked a turning point in the development of gender-affirming care because they demonstrated the potential for successful genital reconstruction in transgender patients.