In pursuit of health care
Lecture explores obstacles facing transgendered people seeking medical help
Travis Moore
Issue date: 11/5/09 Section: Focus
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Park then moved on to discuss Gender Identity Disorder (GID), which has been officially documented in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). GID acts as a broad diagnosis for individuals who are believed to display behavior of gender variance.
The lecture raised the question: does transgender identity fall under the jurisdiction of GID and should it be considered a mental illness? According to Park, a transgendered person herself, the perception of transgender as being abnormal should not be viewed as a personal issue, but a cultural one.
"I don't think I have a gender identity disorder," she said. "I think society has a gender identity disorder."
Nevertheless, in order for transsexual and transgendered people to receive transitional treatments as hormone replacement therapy and sexual reassignment surgery, they must first be diagnosed with GID. While many individuals seeking such treatment consider the diagnosis of GID as a necessary step in the process, the implications speak to the greater issue of transgender's cultural stigmatization.
"In order to get access to hormones or surgery, you have to get yourself declared mentally ill," Park said.
While the GID label is a pressing issue for adults who identify themselves as transgender, Park revealed that the majority of people diagnosed with GID are children, particularly those who are gender-variant. Since parents have the power to enforce gender conformity in their children, they can choose to subject their children to aversion therapy - a treatment designed to repress the patient's "abnormal" behavior.
"This treatment is not only perfectly legal, but perfectly consistent with the diagnosis of Gender Identity Disorder," Park said.
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