Moving toward an international standard in informed consent: the impact of intersexuality and the Internet on the standard of care."He was young; he was boyish boy·ish adj. Characteristic of or befitting a boy: boyish charm. boy ish·ly adv. ; he did but as nature bade him.
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I. INTRODUCTION What determines sexual identity? David Reimer's revelation that he was raised as a girl beside his twin brother, and his rejection of the sex assignment made for him at the age of twenty-two months provides additional data for the age-old debate. No longer would Reimer be the "puppet" of Dr. John Money, psychologist and sexologist, who proclaimed nurture over nature in the determination of sexual identity. The painful story of David is related in the book, As Nature Made Him, (2) where author John Colapinto John Colapinto (Toronto 1958) is an award-winning journalist, author and novelist and is currently a staff writer at The New Yorker. Prior to working at The New Yorker, Colapinto wrote for Vanity Fair, New York magazine and The New York Times Magazine, and in 1995 he became relates how David, through an accident of electricity and bad medicine, suffered through years of gender misidentity, psychological abuse, child molestation Child molestation is a crime involving a range of indecent or sexual activities between an adult and a child, usually under the age of 14. In psychiatric terms, these acts are sometimes known as pedophilia. , counseling, teasing and confusion. (3) The publication of Reimer's story (using his real name) and the scientific papers that preceded this revelation (4) brought the issue of intersexuality intersexuality /in·ter·sex·u·al·i·ty/ (in?ter-sek?shoo-al´i-te) 1. hermaphroditism. 2. pseudohermaphroditism. 3. androgyny. into the public eye. Basic assumptions about human gender, sexual identity and sexual re-assignment, and what makes a person male or female, or man or woman, are being re-evaluated in light of David Reimer's experience and subsequent revelations from intersexed individuals, concomitant with new medical procedures, theories and standards. Although David Reimer
David Reimer (August 22, 1965 – May 4, 2004) was a Canadian man who was born as a healthy boy, but was sexually reassigned and raised as female after his penis was inadvertently is not an intersexual in·ter·sex·u·al adj. Having both male and female characteristics, including in varying degrees reproductive organs and secondary sexual characteristics, as a result of an abnormality of the sex chromosomes or a hormonal imbalance during embryogenesis. , the exploration of intersex intersex /in·ter·sex/ (in´ter-seks) 1. hermaphrodite. 2. pseudohermaphrodite. 3. intersexuality. female intersex a female pseudohermaphrodite. issues was fueled by David Reimer's revelations. (5) Some of these intersex issues include the creation of "new genders," definitions of sexuality, the legal issues of rights of the intersexed, medical informed consent and standard of care issues, all of which are being questioned and challenged in part as a result of Reimer's experience and Dr. John Money's experiment. Now that the intersexed are in the open, the issue will not disappear. It is the purpose of this article to discuss the changing gender landscape, largely through the experience of David Reimer. His story is similar to that of the fairy tale fairy tale Simple narrative typically of folk origin dealing with supernatural beings. Fairy tales may be written or told for the amusement of children or may have a more sophisticated narrative containing supernatural or obviously improbable events, scenes, and personages puppet Pinocchio, a puppet who metamorphosed into a "real boy." David Reimer was also a puppet--an individual created, raised and advised by the paternalistic pa·ter·nal·ism n. A policy or practice of treating or governing people in a fatherly manner, especially by providing for their needs without giving them rights or responsibilities. medical and psychological community as a female who struggled to find his own identity as a man, son, father, and husband. (6) Just as Pinocchio encountered adventurers, con artists and misinformation mis·in·form tr.v. mis·in·formed, mis·in·form·ing, mis·in·forms To provide with incorrect information. mis and temptation throughout his journey to become his real self, so did David Reimer encounter difficulties, untruths and manipulators. Just as the story of Pinocchio has encouraged millions to value truth, David Reimer's deeply personal revelations have encouraged many intersexed individuals to reveal their own stories in both public and private forums, resulting in an increased awareness of intersex issues worldwide. (7) The intersex movement is an international movement that has had an impact on both medicine and law. The Intersex Society of North America The Intersex Society of North America, founded in 1993 by Cheryl Chase, is an organisation formed to represent the interest of intersexuals in the USA: people whose bodies do not fit the accepted conventional ideas of "male" or "female". is active and gaining grass-roots support and public attention. As these intersexed individuals reveal their stories, abuses, misuses, and medical and psychological treatment histories, incidences of litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute. When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation. will naturally rise. Current medical practices are being challenged. (8) The practice of surgery on intersexed individuals at birth has been challenged at the highest court level in Colombia, and may have implications on international human and child rights in international courts. (9) Although this article will include a brief look at the history of intersexuality, and some discussion of the current work on gender identity, the primary focus is to illustrate how the intersexed, through the internet, international connections and the example of David Reimer are impacting three medical-legal questions in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. : 1) What is the appropriate and evolving standard of care for the intersexed individual? 2) What constitutes informed consent when physicians treat the intersexed individual and his/her family? 3) What other torts might concern the medical professional when treating an intersexed individual? The story of David Reimer is told in Part II. Part III gives a brief background of intersexuality and hermaphrodites Hermaphrodites half-man, half-woman; offspring of Hermes and Aphrodite. [Gk. Myth.: Hall, 153] See : Androgyny , and includes some of the newer theories on sexuality and gender identity. This part sets the limits on this paper, and directs the reader to other issues created by questions of gender identity. Part IV discusses informed consent and the standard of care in the context of intersexuality and surgical treatment of ambiguous genitalia ambiguous genitalia Endocrinology♂ or ♀ external genitalia that are undifferentiated, indistinct or discordant with the genotype. See Hermaphroditism, Intersexuality. . It also identifies corollary causes of action arising from the doctrine of informed consent. The specific current treatment for the intersexed and the current standard of care is covered in Part V. Part VI is a discussion of the factors forcing change in the standard of care, including the growth of intersex support groups, especially through the internet, new medical procedures and psychological theories, and recent revelations of long-term complications with standard intersexed treatment. Recent legal decisions in other countries that are affecting informed consent, and ethical considerations that may provoke change are discussed in this part as well. Part VII explores several models of informed consent proposed in various disciplines and suggests a legally appropriate model for physicians to adopt and incorporate into their practice. Part VIII concludes with concerns for the physicians and the intersexed. II. DAVID'S STORY: THE TRUTH ABOUT BRUCE AND BRENDA, JOAN AND JOHN The lynchpin lynch·pin n. Variant of linchpin. lynchpin Noun same as linchpin Noun 1. of the story of the intersexed, especially those with ambiguous genitalia or those who by accident have been assigned a sexual identity, is David Reimer. Born Bruce Reimer in 1965, in Canada, a second of two twins, David lost his penis in a circumcision circumcision (sûr'kəmsĭzh`ən), operation to remove the foreskin covering the glans of the penis. It dates back to prehistoric times and was widespread throughout the Middle East as a religious rite before it was introduced among the accident (negligent/malpractice) incident in 1967. Given the doctors' dismal predictions regarding David's future as a boy and a man, his desperate parents turned to the charismatic and forceful psychologist Dr. John Money of the Johns Hopkins Noun 1. Johns Hopkins - United States financier and philanthropist who left money to found the university and hospital that bear his name in Baltimore (1795-1873) Hopkins 2. Gender Identity Clinic after seeing him present his successful sex change therapy on a television program. (10) The parents traveled to Maryland and visited with Money, who convinced them that changing David's sex and raising him as a girl was David's only chance for a normal life. (11) As agonizing and difficult as the decision was for the parents, they wanted to do what was best for David. (12) They agreed with Money's plan of therapy, and brought David to Johns Hopkins for surgery that would castrate castrate /cas·trate/ (kas´trat) 1. to deprive of the gonads, rendering the individual incapable of reproduction. 2. a castrated individual. cas·trate v. 1. him and alter David into a female. (13) His name was changed from Bruce to Brenda. What made this particular sexual reassignment sexual reassignment Transsexual conversion, sex change, sex conversion The constellation of surgical and medical therapies intended to physically change a person from one sexual phenotype to the other; most SRs are in a he → she case so attractive to Money and other researchers was the fact that David had a twin, Brian, who could serve as a scientific control. (14) At last Money's theories of nurture prevailing over nature, could be scientifically tested. For the next seven years or so, John/Joan, as David was David Was (born David Weiss, 26 October 1952, Detroit) is, with his stage-brother Don Was, the founder of the influential 1980s pop group, Was (Not Was). Reviewed by The New York Times called in psychological literature, was a hallmark of Money's theories, and further solidified his reputation. (15) Money capitalized on his success with the Reimer experiment until Milton Diamond's research and a BBC BBC in full British Broadcasting Corp. Publicly financed broadcasting system in Britain. A private company at its founding in 1922, it was replaced by a public corporation under royal charter in 1927. documentary in 1980 questioned the "success" of the experiment. (16) While Money's reputation soared, Bruce/Brenda struggled through late childhood and early adolescence. Bruce/Brenda's personal difficulties negatively affected classroom performance and relationships with classmates Classmates can refer to either:
Late in 1976, after a number of family upheavals, David's case was referred to Dr. Keith Sigmundson, a psychiatrist in Winnipeg. (20) Sigmundson's first impression was that Bruce/Brenda "had nothing feminine about her." (21) However, Sigmundson felt his primary task was to "promote Brenda's female identification" (22) and he referred Brenda to a series of female psychiatrists, one of whom believed that no further progress could be made until the child was told the truth. (23) At this stage Bruce/Brenda was also resisting female hormone therapy Hormone therapy Treating cancers by changing the hormone balance of the body, instead of by using cell-killing drugs. Mentioned in: Breast Cancer, Thyroid Cancer hormone therapy , although he finally began to take the pills under strict parental supervision Parental supervision is a parenting technique that involves looking after, or monitoring a child's activities. Young children are generally incapable of looking after themselves, and incompetent in making informed decisions for their own well-being. . (24) The hormone regimen resulted, to David's horror, in a pair of breasts and fat around the waist, and his response was to overeat o·ver·eat v. To eat to excess, especially habitually. to conceal his new body shape. (25) Complicating David's identity confusion was a male voice change, even though his testes testes or testicles Male reproductive organs (see reproductive system). Humans have two oval-shaped testes 1.5–2 in. (4–5 cm) long that produce sperm and androgens (mainly testosterone), contained in a sac (scrotum) behind the penis. had been removed in the initial castration castration, removal of the sex glands of an animal, i.e., testes in the male, or ovaries and often the uterus in the female. Castration of the female animal is commonly referred to as spaying. surgery. (26) Money remained unconcerned about "Brenda's" lack of progress, even though the psychiatrists updated him regularly and asked for his advice. (27) At age 14, David completely rebelled, and gave up trying to be a girl. (28) About the same time, A BBC cameraman caught David urinating standing up outside a classroom in an alley, and the story began to unravel. (29) When confronted, Dr. Sigmundson agreed to speak with reporters on the condition of anonymity. (30) David was finally told the truth soon after that incident, (31) and with a great sense of relief, immediately decided to revert to his biological sex. (32) The process came at a cost--it included injections of testosterone testosterone (tĕstŏs`tərōn), principal androgen, or male sex hormone. One of the group of compounds known as anabolic steroids, testosterone is secreted by the testes (see testis) but is also synthesized in small quantities in the , a double mastectomy mastectomy (măstĕk`təmē), surgical removal of breast tissue, usually done as treatment for breast cancer. There are many types of mastectomy. In general, the farther the cancer has spread, the more tissue is taken. , depression, surgery to create a penis, and numerous hospitalizations for infections. (33) He changed his name to David, and he eventually married a woman and adopted his new wife's children. (34) III. A BRIEF BACKGROUND IN INTERSEXUALITY Intersexuality and gender identity are fields of study in and of themselves, and fall into the even larger categories of biology, sociology and anthropology. (35) The following part is intended only to give a brief description of intersexuality, the underlying conditions, and how intersexed individuals have been treated historically. A. Hermaphrodites in History Although "intersexed" is a new term making its way into sociological and academic jargon, intersexuality is not new or unique to the twenty-first century. The popular press does not yet use "Intersexed." It has been defined as "a range of anatomical conditions in which an individual's anatomy mixes key masculine anatomy with key feminine anatomy." (36) The term "transgendered transgendered adjective Relating to a person who has undergone genital/sexual reassignment surgery Transgender health issues Hormonal therapy, cosmetic surgery, fertility options–eg, egg and sperm banking. See Sexual reassignment. Cf Transsexual. " is gaining in use, and refers to those who have crossed over from male to female or female to male, often with surgery and hormonal therapy Hormonal therapy Use of hormone medications to inhibit menstruation and relieve the symptoms of endometriosis. Mentioned in: Endometriosis . (37) A more "Victorian," yet familiar word, "hermaphrodite hermaphrodite (hərmăf`rədīt'), animal or plant that normally possesses both male and female reproductive systems, producing both eggs and sperm. ," is used by many to describe individuals who seem to be neither male nor female, or have genitalia genitalia /gen·i·ta·lia/ (jen?i-tal´e-ah) [L.] the reproductive organs. ambiguous genitalia representative of both sexes. (38) Historical references to hermaphrodites pre-date Plato, and references to the intersexed condition are common in biological and physician studies from medieval and renaissance periods. (39) Students of biology and medieval physicians recognized that this "third sex" (40) existed fairly commonly, and that even the "three" sexes appeared in a spectrum or continuum of sizes and shapes. (41) When the sex of an individual had to be determined, lawyers or judges, the "primary arbiters of intersexual status" made the distinction. (42) The advances in medicine, and especially surgical techniques, made way for new arbiters of sex in the early twentieth century however: "physicians were recognized as the chief regulators of sexual intermediacy." (43) Hormonal and surgical treatments made it possible to eliminate the outward manifestations of hermaphroditism hermaphroditism Condition of having both male and female reproductive organs (see reproductive system). It is normal in most flowering plants and in some invertebrate animals. True human hermaphrodites are extremely rare. and "make" an individual male or female. (44) By 1950, as surgical techniques improved and doctors developed a more sophisticated understanding of the hormonal and biochemical functions of the body, physicians were able to "catch" intersexuals at the time of birth and perform surgery to eliminate ambiguous or "abnormal" physical genital traits. (45) B. The Spectrum of Sexuality Recent studies on sexuality and gender argue that humans are not limited to two genders. One important discussion on this topic is found in Sexing the Body, by Anne Fausto-Sterling Anne Fausto-Sterling, Ph. D., (born 1944) is Professor of Biology and Gender Studies at Brown University. She participates actively in the field of sexology and has written extensively on the fields of biology of gender, sexual identity, gender identity, and gender roles. . Fausto-Sterling, a professor of Biology and Women's Studies women's studies pl.n. (used with a sing. or pl. verb) An academic curriculum focusing on the roles and contributions of women in fields such as literature, history, and the social sciences. at Brown University, argues, partly tongue-in-cheek, for five sexes, not just male and female. She suggests a spectrum of sexuality, including "Herms" (true hermaphrodites), "Merms" (male pseudo-hermaphrodites) and "Ferms" (female pseudo-hermaphrodites), in addition to male and female. (46) Fausto-Sterling's idea provoked support, moral outrage and creativity when she proposed it in 1993, (47) but today, following David Reimer's revelations, it seems less preposterous than when first proposed. (48) While Fausto-Sterling's work focuses on intersexuality from the biological, medical and historical context, Professor Julie Greenberg approaches intersexuality from a legal perspective. She too challenges the binary sexual classifications, arguing its impact on legal issues and the legal system and therapeutic jurisprudence Therapeutic jurisprudence (TJ) is a term first used by Professor David Wexler, University of Arizona Rogers College of Law and University of Puerto Rico School of Law, in a paper delivered to the National Institute of Mental Health in 1987. . (49) If one uses an objective standard to classify gender, eight identifiable factors should be considered: 1) chromosomal sex (XX, XY); 2) gonadal gonadal pertaining to or arising from a gonad. See also testicular, ovarian. gonadal cords cords formed by epithelial cells which migrate from the mesonephric tubules in the embryo to the gonadal ridge and establish the indifferent sex (ovaries Ovaries The female sex organs that make eggs and female hormones. Mentioned in: Choriocarcinoma ovaries (ō´v and testes); 3) external morphologic sex (penis, scrotum scrotum: see testis. ; clitoris clitoris /clit·o·ris/ (klit´ah-ris) the small, elongated, erectile body in the female, situated at the anterior angle of the rima pudendi and homologous with the penis in the male. clit·o·ris n. , labia; 4) internal morphological sex (seminal vesicles, prostate; vagina, uterus and fallopian tubes Fallopian tubes The narrow ducts leading from a woman's ovaries to the uterus. After an egg is released from the ovary during ovulation, fertilization (the union of sperm and egg) normally occurs in the fallopian tubes. ); 5) hormonal patterns (androgen androgen (ăn`drəjən): see testosterone. androgen Any of a group of hormones that mainly influence the development of the male reproductive system. and estrogen); 6) phenotype phenotype (fē`nətīp'): see genetics. phenotype All the observable characteristics of an organism, such as shape, size, colour, and behaviour, that result from the interaction of its genotype (total genetic makeup) with (secondary sexual characteristics Noun 1. secondary sexual characteristic - the genetically determined sex characteristics that are not functionally necessary for reproduction (pitch of the voice and body hair and musculature) secondary sex character, secondary sex characteristic such as facial hair Noun 1. facial hair - hair on the face (especially on the face of a man) hair - a covering for the body (or parts of it) consisting of a dense growth of threadlike structures (as on the human head); helps to prevent heat loss; "he combed his hair"; "each hair , chest hair, breasts; 7) assigned sex (such as that assigned by Dr. Money to David Reimer); and 8) personal sexual identity (such as that shown by "Aurora"). Even within these classifications, there is a continuum of manifestations, and varieties: for example, the chromosomal combinations can include XXX, XXY, XXXY, XYY, XYYY, XYYYY and XO. (50) When all of these factors converge and are consistent with one sex, classification is simple, either male or female. It is when ambiguity in one or even more of these characteristics occurs that an intersexed condition can exist. (51) In general, "intersexuality constitutes a range of anatomical conditions in which an individual's anatomy mixes key masculine anatomy with key female anatomy." (52) The underlying presumption in the treatment of the sex reassignment Sex reassignment may refer to:
relating to relate prep → bezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc human sexuality This article is about human sexual perceptions. For information about sexual activities and practices, see Human sexual behavior. Generally speaking, human sexuality is how people experience and express themselves as sexual beings. , (57) Specifically, Money's view was that infants started as gender neutrals, and he and his colleagues had seven determining criteria for sex or gender determination: 1) sex of assignment; 2) chromosomal sex; 3) gonadal sex, 4) hormonal sex; 5) sex of internal organs, 6) sex of external genitalia external genitalia n. 1. The vulva of the female. 2. The penis and scrotum of the male. secondary sex characteristic , 7) psychological or gender role. (58) The fewer the overt or obvious signs or indications of a particular sex, for example having only two of the seven characteristics, the stronger was the presumption that gender reassignment was a correct diagnosis and treatment. (59) While Money was propagating the sex clinic at Hopkins, Milton Diamond Milton Diamond (born 6 March 1934 in New York, New York) is a professor of anatomy and reproductive biology at the University of Hawaii. He has had a very long and productive career in the study of human sexuality. Diamond graduated City College of New York with a B.S. was a young researcher at the University of Kansas The University of Kansas (often referred to as KU or just Kansas) is an institution of higher learning in Lawrence, Kansas. The main campus resides atop Mount Oread. , who, although keenly aware of Money's work, began to publish the results of his own research, which ran contrary to Money's theories. (60) As prenatal hormonal research became more refined and determinative, Money's influence began to wane in some schools, and the nurture argument began to be questioned. (61) Current research suggests that the explanation is not as simplistic sim·plism n. The tendency to oversimplify an issue or a problem by ignoring complexities or complications. [French simplisme, from simple, simple, from Old French; see simple as Money proclaimed. The explanations for the differences in the appearances of human genitalia are several, but it now appears that "gender identity may be a function of the degree and timing of brain exposure to male hormones during development." (62) C. Frequency of Intersexuality Sexuality itself is difficult to define, so classifying the range of intersexed conditions and then applying statistical analysis may seem futile--however, it is significant that intersexuality is not a rarity. The most common forms of gender variance and the occurrences, although not necessarily resulting in an intersexual condition, are as follows: late onset adrenal hyperplasia adrenal hyperplasia Diffuse enlargement of the adrenal glands. See Congenital adrenal hyperplasia. occurs in 1 in 66 individuals; (63) hypospadias hypospadias /hy·po·spa·di·as/ (-spa´de-is) a developmental anomaly in which the urethra opens inferior to its normal location; usually seen in males, with the opening on the underside of the penis or on the perineum. (urethral urethral pertaining to or emanating from urethra. urethral agenesis, urethral atresia failure of development of all or part of the urethra: characterized by complete urine retention. A rare cause of neonatal uremia. opening between con and tip of glans penis glans penis n. The conical expansion of the corpus spongiosum that forms the head of the penis. Glans penis The bulbous tip of the penis. Mentioned in: Neurogenic Bladder ) occurs in one in 770 births; Klinefelter's Syndrome Kline·fel·ter's syndrome n. A chromosomal anomaly in males characterized by the presence of two X-chromosomes and one Y-chromosome, causing reduced testicular size, seminiferous tubule dysgenesis, and infertility. Also called XXY syndrome. (XXY) one in 1,000, (64) and "Not XX and not XY", one in 1,666 births. (65) The total number of births whose bodies "differ" from "standard" is one in 100, and one to two of every 1,000 births results in a surgery to "normalize normalize to convert a set of data by, for example, converting them to logarithms or reciprocals so that their previous non-normal distribution is converted to a normal one. " external appearance of the genitalia. (66) "Five children a day are born in the United States with some form of intersexuality." (67) New Zealand New Zealand (zē`lənd), island country (2005 est. pop. 4,035,000), 104,454 sq mi (270,534 sq km), in the S Pacific Ocean, over 1,000 mi (1,600 km) SE of Australia. The capital is Wellington; the largest city and leading port is Auckland. reports about 30 "intersex" children born each year. (68) 14 percent of the world's population may have ambiguous genitals gen·i·tals pl.n. Genitalia. , and 7-10 million intersexuals may be in the U.S. alone. (69) It is the last number that is significant for the issues being discussed in this paper. Many of these individuals are surgically corrected at birth: one in every 2000 live births. (70) The obstetrician obstetrician /ob·ste·tri·cian/ (ob?ste-trish´in) one who practices obstetrics. ob·ste·tri·cian n. A physician who specializes in obstetrics. who delivers babies in a typical practice may see several cases in the course of her career. (71) Some theorize the·o·rize v. the·o·rized, the·o·riz·ing, the·o·riz·es v.intr. To formulate theories or a theory; speculate. v.tr. To propose a theory about. that the incidences of intersexed conditions are increasing. (72) A recent BBC documentary about Joella Holliday, a girl who was classified as male at birth, suggests that the Pill or other chemicals in the environment could be factors that have an estrogen effect on humans and other animals. (73) Clearly intersexuality is an issue that affects thousands of people: those with the physical manifestations, and the families who raise and nurture them. D. Limits in this Article The wide range of intersexual conditions precludes adequate discussion of each in depth. (74) This paper will focus on the condition of ambiguous genitalia that results in a surgical alteration and choice of sex for the individual by the treating physicians or parents. This also includes those cases of individuals born with "normal" genitalia that undergo surgery to change their gender due to accident or medical mistake, such as David Reimer. (75) Sexual identity affects a number of legal issues, including the primary documentation required by our society: birth certificates, (76) drivers' licenses, social security cards, draft registration, school registration, passports--each of these documents requires a sexual identification of male or female. (77) For those who do not fit into a "binary" system of sexual identity, fundamental rights such as access to education, marriage rights, freedom from sexual harassment sexual harassment, in law, verbal or physical behavior of a sexual nature, aimed at a particular person or group of people, especially in the workplace or in academic or other institutional settings, that is actionable, as in tort or under equal-opportunity statutes. in the workplace, (78) inheritance and succession, (79) or even participation in the Olympics can be affected. (80) The law has not adopted Fausto-Sterling's five classifications of sexes, but social forces and the growth of the voice of the intersexed and transgendered may force new classifications. IV. INFORMED CONSENT A belief in the fundamental adult human right to determine what will be done to his own body is the foundational principle leading to the doctrine of informed consent in the doctor-patient relationship doctor-patient relationship, n in-teraction between a physician and a patient. . (81) As a relatively new and unnatural addition to the practice of medicine, torts for the breach of informed consent assume a patchwork pattern throughout jurisdictions in the United States. (82) The suits alleging an informed consent violation can be brought in battery or in negligence. (83) Most states have abrogated the battery basis for informed consent suits when implementing malpractice reform. (84) In these jurisdictions, the common cause of action is negligent non-disclosure, which is more favorable for the physicians, as it allows more defenses. (85) Inadequate informed consent is analyzed under traditional negligence concepts, including conforming to a standard of care. (86) Informed consent is an issue of concern for the intersexed, and affects parents, the intersex child, and the doctor-parent, parent-child and doctor-patient relationships. (87) Consent remains an issue even if the recommended standard is followed and a psychologist is involved, because the course of treatment decided upon often includes deliberately withholding medical information from the child. (88) The intersexed and professionals who treat them are questioning whether or not the surgeries and course of treatment recommended for these individuals constitutes informed consent. (89) Possibly the patients and their parents are not completely informed as to the "anatomically strict psychosocial model" followed by the intersex team. (91) They often are not informed that current practice is a theory, which is unconfirmed by long-term studies and is being challenged by the John/Joan case, and other contrary studies. (91) Furthermore, the successes of the physical aspects of sex assignment surgery may have been exaggerated. (92) Long-term scarring, lack of sexual function, or gratification, risk of infection, and multiple surgeries are only some of the complications and difficulties experienced by the intersexual. (93) Dreger asserts that this creates an ethical problem as well because "risky surgeries are being performed as standard care and are not being followed-up." (94) A. Standards of Disclosure The standard of disclosure for informed consent varies from state to state but assumes one of three forms: 1) a physician based standard; 2) a reasonable patient standard; and 3) the subjective patient standard. (95) The physician-based standard requires expert testimony Testimony about a scientific, technical, or professional issue given by a person qualified to testify because of familiarity with the subject or special training in the field. , and measures the duty of disclosure by the standard of a reasonable medical practitioner in a similar situation. (96) More than 25 states have adopted this standard. (97) The reasonable patient standard, held in the landmark case landmark case Law & medicine A civil or, far less commonly, criminal action that has had an impact on a particular area of medicine. , Canterbury v. Spencer, (98) calls for a judgment as to what a reasonable patient would find material in making an informed decision. This approach does not require expert testimony and has been adopted in almost all of the remaining states. (99) The third standard, the subjective patient standard, has not gained support, because it gives the patient the option to testify as to what information she would have found important, and that she would have declined treatment, had the information been disclosed. (100) A list of the factors that must be disclosed to satisfy the elements of informed consent may help to illustrate the intersexed position and concern on informed consent. (101) Physicians must disclose: (a) Diagnosis (b) Nature and Purpose of Treatment (c) Material Risks and Outcomes (102) (d) Skills or Status Risks (e) Alternatives (103) (f) Prognosis if Treatment Declined (g) Prognosis with Treatment (h) Conflicts of Interest (104) Failure or negligence in any one of these eight elements can contribute to a cause of action for negligence in informed consent. The following section highlights the aspects of informed consent that are most applicable in the treatment of intersexuals. B. Variations on a Tort In addition to the differences in the standard of disclosure, (105) the negligence in informed consent can take a variety of forms and duty, which may be applicable to the intersex issue. Particularly, these issues come to the fore Verb 1. come to the fore - make oneself visible; take action; "Young people should step to the fore and help their peers" come forward, step forward, step to the fore, step up, come out when parents and doctors are faced with the decision of whether or not to perform cosmetic or corrective surgery on intersex infants soon after birth. The possible duties a health professional might incur include a duty to inform of subsequently discovered danger, (106) the duty to obtain parental conset, (107) a duty to advise the patient to consult a specialist, and liability for failure to inform patient of alternative methods of treatment or diagnosis. (108) Current changes and theories in intersex treatment, and the rapidly spreading increase in information on the condition for patients creates the potential for one or more of the following torts to be used as a cause of action for an intersex patient injured by treatment or surgery. 1. A Duty to Inform of Subsequently Discovered Danger While a physician can avoid some liability by receiving informed consent, it is also possible that a physician might have a duty to inform of a subsequently discovered danger. (109) This may be particularly applicable in intersexed cases. (110) New information on treatment is appearing daily and because long-term studies and follow-up of intersexed individuals are lacking, (111) physicians and psychologists may be susceptible to these suits. A patient's long-term psychological damage, (112) inability to function in adult life and interaction, regret over infertility, and depression over not being "normal," may contribute to a physician's vulnerability to suit in this area. Furthermore, the late onset of some conditions and complications, which are only manifested at puberty or early adulthood, may form the basis for a claim against the medical practitioner who performs a neonatal assessment, sex assignment and surgery, and then fails to follow-up. A physician's duty to inform of a subsequently discovered danger has been recognized in several jurisdictions, including Colorado. The case Gorab v. Zook illustrates the application of this duty. (113) The court describes this as a "a new duty based on changed circumstances." (114) Gorab v. Zook concerned the danger from continued use of a medication, and the court rejected the argument that the physician had a continuing duty to warn duty to warn AIDS A legal concept indicating that a health care provider who learns that an HIV-infected Pt is likely to transmit the virus to another identifiable person must take steps to warn that person the patient in informed consent cases but left the door open for general negligence cases. (115) A California case, Tresemer v. Barke, (116) also recognizes this duty, stating that the failure to warn arises from the "confidential relationship between doctor and patient. It is not a malpractice cause of action in the commonly understood sense but rather a malpractice action from the imposed continuing status of physician-patient when the danger arose from that relationship. It is also a cause of action for common negligence." (117) As new complications in the surgery for intersexuals are discovered, or as long-term studies indicate negative results, doctors who were part of a team treating intersexuals may have a duty to locate and inform their patients of potential complications. In the cases of the intersexed whose gender has been surgically assigned, new and substantial risks have arisen: scarring, gender misidentity and confusion, psychological trauma Psychological trauma is a type of damage to the psyche that occurs as a result of a traumatic event. When that trauma leads to Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, damage can be measured in physical changes inside the brain and to brain chemistry, which affect the person's , sexual dysfunction sexual dysfunction Inability to experience arousal or achieve sexual satisfaction under ordinary circumstances, as a result of psychological or physiological problems. , and an increased risk of suicide. (118) Treating physicians may now have a duty to inform former intersex patients of these potential dangers that have now come to light based on the new experiences of the intersexed. 2. Parental Consent Parental consent laws (also known as parental involvement or parental notification laws) in some countries require that one or more parents consent to or be notified before their minor child can legally engage in certain activities. A second major issue in informed consent is the parental right to make decisions for their minor child. (119) Generally, parental consent is required for treatment of a minor child, and a practitioner will be held liable for failing to obtain consent. (120) Exceptions are made in life-threatening cases, where immediate medical attention is required. (121) One of the threshold issues is whether the treatment is for the minor's own benefit or for the benefit of a third party. One argument is that cosmetic genital surgery benefits the parents more than the child at the early stages. (122) The ethical ramifications of informed consent and the parent's right to choose for the child are particularly ambiguous when the "illness" or "condition" is not life threatening. (123) One example is the case of Baby E, (124) a 46-chromosome XY child born with miniscule min·is·cule adj. Variant of minuscule. Adj. 1. miniscule - very small; "a minuscule kitchen"; "a minuscule amount of rain fell" minuscule external genitalia. Although initial indicators and the standard of care would have called for a sex assignment of female, based on the newborn conditions, the parents, expecting a boy based on the amniocentesis amniocentesis (ăm'nēō'sĕntē`sĭs), diagnostic procedure in which a sample of the amniotic fluid surrounding a fetus is removed from the uterus by means of a fine needle inserted through the abdomen of the pregnant woman (see diagnosis, refused to accept assignment as a female. Parents are empowered to make the decision for a child based on best interests. (125) The parents desired to spare their child additional pain (achieving a diagnosis had caused the child to endure much testing), and the parents did not accept the risks associated with what they perceived as an elective procedure. (126) These parents felt the decision for surgery was more appropriate for the child to make at puberty or at an age of understanding. (127) The 1998 article analyzing the case concludes that the case reached a less than satisfactory outcome. Today the ethical considerations, based on recent research and new information from intersexuals, might favor the parents' decision to do nothing and wait. (128) Another issue in parental consent is determining when a child is capable of understanding outcomes and consequences. Many organizations and medical protocols are calling for a moratorium on early genital surgery, suggesting that the child give consent. A child's ability to give consent is generally thought to be when the child can appreciate the "nature, extent, and probable consequences of the conduct consented to." (129) This is a question of fact and depends on "age, ability, experience, education, training and maturity." (130) In the case of a conflict, a physician's "good-faith assessment" would minimize the liability in case of failure to obtain parental consent. 3. Fraudulent Affirmative Representations A third informed consent variant concerns liability for a medical practitioner's negligent or fraudulent affirmative representations as to the nature of hazards of treatment. The premise for this cause of action is that a "medical practitioner's prediction as to the patient's future condition can be an actionable misrepresentation misrepresentation In law, any false or misleading expression of fact, usually with the intent to deceive or defraud. It most commonly occurs in insurance and real-estate contracts. False advertising may also constitute misrepresentation. when the prediction implies the practitioner's knowledge of facts which the practitioner does not have knowledge of." (131) A particular misrepresentation is that which will "... induce consent to surgery." (132) Practitioners, who emphasize the benefits of cosmetic or correctional surgery for the intersex without revealing the now known risks may be liable under this cause of action. Arguably ar·gu·a·ble adj. 1. Open to argument: an arguable question, still unresolved. 2. That can be argued plausibly; defensible in argument: three arguable points of law. , John Money fraudulently misrepresented the surgery and sex assignment and its consequences to the Reimer family. 4. Duty to Advise to Consult a Specialist Under malpractice and negligence tort law A body of rights, obligations, and remedies that is applied by courts in civil proceedings to provide relief for persons who have suffered harm from the wrongful acts of others. , a physician has a duty to advise his patient to consult a specialist or one qualified in a method of treatment, which the physician knows or should know she is not qualified to give. (133) Since the standard of care recommended by professionals in the transgender transgender or transgendered adj. Transsexual. area states that surgeons should be qualified in the area of genital reconstruction, and that cases of ambiguous genitalia should be treated by a team, (134) all physicians who may encounter an individual with ambiguous genitalia in their practices should be aware of the treatment protocol in order to avoid malpractice_claims. The national standard of care will be useful to plaintiffs in these cases, since it overcomes the problem of medical expert testimony. (135) 5. Failure to Advise of Alternatives As other alternatives to surgical treatment in infancy become more common and publicized pub·li·cize tr.v. pub·li·cized, pub·li·ciz·ing, pub·li·ciz·es To give publicity to. Adj. 1. publicized - made known; especially made widely known publicised , treating physicians will need to advise parents that counseling and minimal corrective surgery is an alternative to surgery. Physicians who fail to disclose feasible alternatives to proposed surgery may be held liable to patients for their later complications. (136) As shown above, several variations on the tort of informed consent are applicable to the current medical issues in intersex care. Obviously, informed consent is not the only cause of action available--negligence is also a viable cause of action in these situations. Statutes of limitations will need to be analyzed as well. V. HOW THE STANDARD OF CARE RELATES TO INFORMED CONSENT A. How a Standard of Care is Established Establishing the applicable standard of care is the prerequisite or essential element of a medical malpractice Improper, unskilled, or negligent treatment of a patient by a physician, dentist, nurse, pharmacist, or other health care professional. or negligence tort case. For the informed consent torts, the standard of care that was breached must first be established. In some jurisdictions, "expert medical testimony describing the actual pattern of medical practice" is required. (137) Professional or expert testimony on the national standard of care basis is now the norm in most jurisdictions, rather than a standard of care for the "locality" rule. (138) Generally, the Duty of care takes two forms: (a) a duty to render a quality of care consonant with the level of medical and practical knowledge the physician may reasonably be expected to possess and the medical judgment he may be expected to exercise, and (b) a duty based upon the adept use of such medical facilities, services, equipment and options as are reasonably available. (139) The judge or jury does not set those standards: the medical community sets them. (140) These standards are rapidly changing in the treatment of the intersexed. Physicians dealing with the intersexed need to be aware of these changes to avoid a breach of duty to their patients. Customary practice has been rejected by some courts if the practice is dangerous or out of date. (141) How the standard of care develops is not straightforward: it often develops through interaction of medical academics, professional meetings, research reports, networking and case studies. (142) The standard of care is not necessarily regulated nor promulgated prom·ul·gate tr.v. prom·ul·gat·ed, prom·ul·gat·ing, prom·ul·gates 1. To make known (a decree, for example) by public declaration; announce officially. See Synonyms at announce. 2. by any national board or govern mental institution. (143) Generally, through the meetings of academics, reports in literature, and clinical experience, a "clinical policy" develops. If it "becomes generally accepted, it becomes `standard practice."' (144) One of the organizations that emphasizes developing clinical policies or protocols is the 55,000 member American Academy of Pediatrics The American Academy of Pediatrics ("AAP") is an organization of pediatricians, physicians trained to deal with the medical care of infants, children, and adolescents. Its motto is: "Dedicated to the Health of All Children. (AAP AAP - Association of American Publishers ): (145) The development of practice standards and guidelines by national medical organizations is accelerating the process of moving all medical practice toward national standards. Such guidelines provide a particularized source of standards against which to judge the conduct of the defendant physician, and their production ... will be influential. (146) Because the American Academy of Pediatrics has developed a clinical protocol for evaluation of the newborn with ambiguous genitalia, (147) and these guidelines will be influential in determining the standard of care expected in a malpractice or negligence suit, this report is discussed in detail in Section VI. B. The Standard of Care for the Child Born with Ambiguous Genitalia For pediatricians and urologists from the 1950s to the early 1990s, the standard of care in cases of ambiguous genitalia (148) was straightforward and relatively uniform (149) and routinely included surgical modification of infant's genitalia soon after birth. (150) For example, Joycelyn Elders, a pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children. pe·di·at·ric adj. Of or relating to pediatrics. endocrinologist and former Surgeon General The U.S. Surgeon General is charged with the protection and advancement of health in the United States. Since the 1960s the surgeon general has become a highly visible federal public health official, speaking out against known health risks such as tobacco use, and promoting disease of the United States, relates her experiences with the intersexed in this passage from her autobiography: Whenever there were cases of ambiguous genitalia or any questions involving the child's sex, I got called in immediately. The first thing I'd do was order chromosome and hormonal studies, to try to determine exactly what kind of defect we were dealing with. Once I knew that, I could attempt to correct the imbalance or replace the deficient hormones. Often the treatment was successful, at which point we'd have to look at fixing up the structures surgically. ... Occasionally our work-ups would show a mosaic of male and female chromosomes, children who were both male and female. Then our problem was to decide which sex to make the child. We knew these things had to be done before the child got to be eighteen months or so.... It was far easier to make a functional female than a male. (151) Usually, doctors tested the individual genetically, physically, and a team (geneticists This is a list of people who have made notable contributions to genetics. The growth and development of genetics represents the work of many people. This list of geneticists is therefore by no means complete. Contributors of great distinction to genetics are not yet on the list. , pediatric endocrinologists, urologists and psychologists), would then assign a sex at birth, performing surgery and follow-up hormonal therapy to reinforce the sexual assignment. (152) The basis of this treatment was the assumption that specialists (including the surgeon, pediatric endocrinologist, and psychologist) (153) could reassign the sex of an intersex child. (154) It was believed that this procedure had to be performed early, preferably before 30 months, (155) when children become aware of their own sexual identity. (156) Since the 1950s, treatment for intersexuals has been based on the underlying assumption that doctors could turn any intersexed child into either gender. Once the "optimum" sex is chosen at birth, doctors would reconstruct the genitals to best reflect that decision, telling the children--and often the parents--as little as possible to avoid raising the child with doubts about its gender. (157) Intersexuality was considered a problem that had to be dealt with at the neonatal stage or soon after birth--within three days of birth. (158) It was not only a physical, but also a psychological crisis for the parents. (159) "Early surgery and parental conviction that the sex chosen by doctors is the child's true sex is supposed to guarantee that the child develops into a happy girl or boy and, ultimately, a well-adjusted and heterosexual woman or man." (160) Those individuals who expressed doubts about their sexual identity were treated with extra estrogen. (161) "Normalcy nor·mal·cy n. Normality. Noun 1. normalcy - being within certain limits that define the range of normal functioning normality " was the model underlying assumption of the standard of care. (162) The less debate or ambiguity on the part of the doctor, the easier it was (163) thought to be for the parents to raise the child in the newly determined sex. This standard of care left little room for consultation with parents. Since surgically it was easier to "construct" females; a functional vagina being easier to create than a sexually functional penis, (164) many of the intersexed were surgically altered to be females. Two major factors in sex assignment were the "adequacy of the phallus phallus /phal·lus/ (fal´us) pl. phal´li 1. penis. 2. a representation of the penis. 3. the primordium of the penis or clitoris that develops from the genital tubercle. in the male, potential fertility in the female and the cosmetic appearance of the reconstructed genitalia." (165) Underlying the standard of care were some unwritten LAW, UNWRITTEN, or lex non scripta. All the laws which do not come under the definition of written law; it is composed, principally, of the law of nature, the law of nations, the common law, and customs. assumptions. One assumption was that surgeries are performed with confidence. (166) A second assumption was that the surgery itself was worthwhile--an unstated value judgment that a scarred and insensitive vagina, clitoris or penis is preferable to a "larger-than-typical" clitoris, or penis that does not urinate urinate /uri·nate/ (u´ri-nat) to discharge urine. u·ri·nate v. To excrete urine. urinate to void urine. in a stream. (167) A third assumption was each sex has a "normal" range or appearance. (168) A fourth assumption was that being born with ambiguous genitalia was a "trauma" and called for an "emergency" action. (169) In any setting, a problem with a newborn is traumatic, and causes anguish for the parents. (170) Obviously an emergency response does not always take into account consideration of the long-term well being of the child. (171) The assumption of trauma for the individual born with ambiguous genitalia is clear from the opinions of the professionals: boys must have a penis--"cannot be a boy without this insignificant organ.... They must be raised as females.... They are doomed to life as a male without a penis." (172) David Reimer was a victim of this particular assumption. The consultant from the Winnipeg Clinic, the head of the Department of Neurology and Psychiatry, Dr. G.L. Adamson evaluated David (then Bruce) Reimer's future: One can predict that he will be unable to live a normal sexual life from the time of adolescence: that he will be unable to consummate marriage or have normal sexual relations; in that he will have to recognize that he is incomplete, physically defective, and that he must live apart. (173) This damning diagnosis in 1967 pushed the parents of David Reimer to Dr. Money, who seemed to be the only voice offering them hope in a dark period. (174) Today the treatment is more varied and less uniform, and some physicians have expressed concern that the "successes" from the 1950s-1990s may rebound as failures. (175) Generally, physicians believe that the condition should be corrected immediately, but actual medical practice depends on the decisions made by individual surgeons, which is often based on their training or beliefs. (176) The next section discusses the movements toward change. VI. SEX-CHANGERS, CHANGES IN THE MAKING AND THE CHANGE-MAKERS The last decade of the twentieth century was a time of great change for the intersexed. Not only were conventional standards of care Standards of care are medical or psychological treatment guidelines, and can be general or specific. They specify appropriate treatment protocols based on scientific evidence, and collaboration between medical and/or psychological professionals involved in the treatment of a given and treatment challenged, but those making the sex changes were challenged. (177) Those whose sex had been changed formed groups, coalitions and grass roots grass roots pl.n. (used with a sing. or pl. verb) 1. People or society at a local level rather than at the center of major political activity. Often used with the. 2. The groundwork or source of something. movements, and a change of procedures, perspectives and medical care and societal perceptions has become a priority of these groups. This section briefly discusses why and how these rapid changes have come about. A. The Growth of the Intersexed as a Voice for Change 1. Connections and Coalitions: The ISNA Isna (ĭs`nə) or Esna (ĕs`–), town (1986 pop. 43,055), central Egypt, on the Nile River. It is the center for an agricultural area that is irrigated by the Nile. , Intersexed Society of North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. The intersexed found a face when David Reimer revealed his life story to John Colapinto. They achieved a voice through the efforts of the Intersex Society of North America (ISNA) and its founder Cheryl Chase
Cheryl Chase is an American voice actress best known as the voice of Angelica Pickles on Rugrats, All Grown Up and , and other support group and activist networks. In seven short years, Chase's group of activists and coalition of groups devoted to addressing and supporting the problems, concerns, and issues of the intersexed have "forced many prominent medical specialists to reconsider the prevailing model of treatment, to question whether the well-intentioned practice of surgically removing or altering the genitals of newborns so they appear `normal' creates the very emotional, sexual and physical trauma
Physical trauma refers to a physical injury. it is designed to avoid." (178) Chase's motivations in forming the ISNA arose from personal traumatic experiences as an intersexual. (179) Labeled a boy at birth, but with both male and female sexual organs, Chase was raised a girl after surgery at eighteen months of age. (180) Driven to a point of contemplating suicide, with no idea as to why she had mutilated mu·ti·late tr.v. mu·ti·lat·ed, mu·ti·lat·ing, mu·ti·lates 1. To deprive of a limb or an essential part; cripple. 2. To disfigure by damaging irreparably: mutilate a statue. and numb genitals, Chase instead vowed to make a difference in the lives of other intersexuals. (181) Chase has made a difference more and more intersexed individuals are speaking out on the Internet, in videos, news programs and in medical, psychological and popular media. (182) Activities of the ISNA have included applying for association with the National Organization for Rare Disorders; responding to medical journal articles on areas related to treatment of intersexuals; offering to provide a panel of intersex patients as part of a symposium on genital pediatric surgery Pediatric surgery (sometimes spelled paediatric surgery) is a subspecialty of surgery involving the surgery of fetuses, infants, children, adolescents, and young adults. Many pediatric surgeons practice at children's hospitals. ; and, ultimately, some members demonstrating at the 1996 American Association American Association refers to one of the following professional baseball leagues:
n information obtained from personal accounts, examples, and observations. Usually not considered scientifically valid but may indicate areas for further investigation and research. of sex reassignment issues. (187) Significantly the ISNA wrote an amicus brief to the Constitutional Court of Colombia The Constitutional Court of Colombia is the highest entity in the judicial branch of government in the Republic of Colombia in charge of safeguarding the integrity and supremacy of the Colombian Constitution of 1991 within the Constitutional laws. regarding intersex surgery Intersex surgery is one of several terms referring to surgery performed to correct birth defects or early injuries of the genitalia, primarily for the purposes of making the appearance more normal and to reduce the likelihood of future problems. on two infants, which was influential in the court ruling against intersex infant surgery. (188) Chase has contributed to the medical literature as well by arguing against early genital (189) surgery. 2. International Intersexuality As mentioned earlier, intersexuality is not only a North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. issue. Chase's networking with other organizations reveal worldwide phenomena of growth of the voice of the intersexed. The courage and revelations of other intersexed have led to the growth of support groups and activist organizations circling the globe, including Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, Germany, and Holland. (190) However, since the United States is the provider of some of the best medical care in the world, groups such as the ISNA and the American medical community may well take the lead in changing the standards of care on this issue. B. Medical Studies The standard of care for intersexed individuals is changing not only because of the David Reimer story and the influence of the ISNA and other support groups for intersexuals, but also because of the new research and surgical techniques in the medical field which are coming to light. Indeed, "the paradigm for sex assignment in newborns is in transition," says a study by psychiatrist W.G. Reiner of Johns Hopkins. (191) Not only have intersexual groups lobbied their doctors and clamored for change in the treatment of the intersexual, but the thinking and hypotheses of specialists in surgery, endocrinology, psychology, ethics, psychiatry, genetics, and public health have begun to reflect the clinical responses to genital ambiguity. (192) The major specialties involved in treatment of the intersexed are re-evaluating their presumptions about sexual assignment, and long term studies are being initiated to add to this new body of research. This will impact not only surgical treatment, but also long-term psychological, hormonal, urological and sociological treatment of the intersexed. (193) Most significantly and recently, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) reported in July 2000 a new standard of care for the treatment of individuals with ambiguous genitalia. (194) Much of this report was formulated before the recent publicity and "widely publicized cases" of David Reimer and others. (195) The AAP report stated the approach, care and follow-up for the intersexed patient, beginning with the explanation for the genetic and hormonal factors creating sexual orientation sexual orientation n. The direction of one's sexual interest toward members of the same, opposite, or both sexes, especially a direction seen to be dictated by physiologic rather than sociologic forces. . (196) Written for pediatricians, the article emphasized the "team" approach in treatment of these individuals, a team which includes pediatricians, pediatric endocrinologists, urologists, plastic surgeons and a psychiatrists. (197) In addition to this study, a task force has been formed to study the long-term clinical responses to genital ambiguity. (198) The North American Task Force on Intersexuality (NATFI) first met in October 1999, and it will utilize its research outcomes to analyze and evaluate the AAP report with the purpose of "formulat[ing] optimum guidelines for care of children with intersex disorders." (199) NATFI is endorsed by a number of organizations, and its mission is to suggest a new nomenclature nomenclature /no·men·cla·ture/ (no´men-kla?cher) a classified system of names, as of anatomical structures, organisms, etc. binomial nomenclature for the intersexed and sex classifications. (200) The AAP report was formulated around January of 1999 and at that time the AAP still favored early surgical intervention. (201) NATFI may recommend a modification of those guidelines. (202) The task force, chaired by Dr. Ian Aaronson, M.D., Professor of Urology urology Medical specialty dealing with the urinary system and male reproductive organs. It traces its origin to medieval lithologists, itinerant healers who specialized in surgical removal of bladder stones. and Pediatrics, and Director of Pediatric Urology Pediatric urology is a surgical subspecialty of medicine dealing with the disorders of children's genitourinary systems. Pediatric urologists provide care for both boys and girls ranging from birth to early adult age. at the Medical University of South Carolina “MUSC” redirects here. For Abel Santa María airport in Santa Clara, Cuba (ICAO code MUSC), see Abel Santa María Airport. The Medical University of South Carolina , will publish its management guidelines in 2004, after identifying patients in its first year, interviewing and evaluating the intersexed above age sixteen in years two and three, and analyzing and interpreting this data for its report in year four. (203) 1. Diamond's Opposition and A Second Study Clearly a major factor producing change was the revelation of John/Joan (David Reimer), following Milton Diamond's and Keith Sigmundson's article reporting on David's (John/Joan's) rejection of his female identity, and questioning the recommendation that those individuals presenting XY ablatio penis be raised as a girl. (204) Diamond, who had been continuing his work on hormonal influences during gestation, followed the progress of John/Joan and contacted Sigmundson through a notice in an American Psychiatric Society newsletter. (205) Sigmundson was Reimer's treating psychiatrist and had anonymously revealed the unsuccessful aspects of the experiment to the BBC. Diamond and Sigmundson collaborated on an article that revealed the failure of the experiment, after visiting extensively with David Reimer. (206) The final paper, which "went against three decades of dogma ... set off shock waves in medical circles around the world, generating furious debate about the ongoing practice of infant sex reassignment." (207) The article documented the outcome of the John/Joan experiment and debunked Money's theories of successful sex reassignment based only on a theory of nurture and environment and early and unambiguous reassignment. (208) Diamond and Sigmundson then proposed "alternative principles for the management of intersexual children and of boys suffering from penile penile /pe·nile/ (pe´nil) of or pertaining to the penis. pe·nile adj. Of or relating to the penis. penile of or pertaining to the penis. trauma." (209) 2. Assignment at 7 Months, Reiner, and Baby G Similarly, a second study on an ablated penis case in Canada compared this child's experience with that of David Reimer. (210) In this second case, after an electrocautery electrocautery /elec·tro·cau·tery/ (-kaw´ter-e) an apparatus for surgical dissection and hemostasis, using heat generated by a high-voltage, high-frequency alternating current passed through an electrode. circumcision, the XY male was assigned to the female gender at age seven months. Although this patient more clearly identified with the female sex, at the age of twenty-sex the patient was a bisexual and living with a woman. The patient experienced ambivalent partner preferences. (211) This Canadian study questioned Money's theories, and advocated additional studies in order to create a different management model for these cases. (212) Dr. William Reiner, trained as a pediatric urologist Urologist A physician who deals with the study and treatment of disorders of the urinary tract in women and the urogenital system in men. Mentioned in: Congenital Bladder Anomalies, Lithotripsy, Men's Health, Overactive Bladder urologist , was supportive of Diamond and Sigmundson's paper. He had spent much of his medical career re-assigning sex, but after an encounter with "Baby G," a 46XY male raised as a girl, Reiner began warning other physicians against the idea that nurture could overcome biological theory. (213) Baby G was born with ambiguous genitalia, the distinguishing feature of which was a "micropenis," or enlarged clitoris. (214) Based on phallus size, doctors assigned Baby G a female gender on day four of life. (215) Chromosome history revealed a 46 XY karyotype. (216) The parents agreed to the sex assignment as a female and removal of the testes to avoid possible malignancy malignancy: see cancer. . (217) Later the mother stated that she was not informed of or did not remember the chromosome test results. (218) At about age sixteen, the patient questioned her diagnosis, and after discussions with physicians, declared herself male. (219) He was then started on testosterone replacement and had to undergo a mammoplasty mammoplasty /mam·mo·plas·ty/ (mam´ah-plas?te) mammaplasty. mam·mo·plas·ty n. Variant of mammaplasty. . (220) The mother was supportive during this period, but the father was not, and a divorce resulted. (221) This report, "taken together" with Diamond's work and that of others suggest "that early sex assignment as female does not ensure female gender self-identification in XY infants with female external genitalia. (222) 3. Changes in Surgical Techniques and Procedures The intersexed face both functional and cosmetic surgery cosmetic surgery, plastic surgery for cosmetic purposes, such as the improvement of the appearance of the face by removing wrinkles or reshaping the nose. . Surgical techniques and procedures over the last several years produced unprecedented refinements and results. Transgender surgeries, which are distinguishable from intersex surgery in infancy, are considered an established procedure in most countries. (223) Current techniques that were not possible 30-35 years ago now can maintain nerves and sensitivity of the organs, and some experimental evidence shows that sensitivity may be preserved. (224) However, these techniques are new and the patients on whom such techniques have been performed are not yet adults. Thus, the long-term effects of such surgical procedures Surgical procedures have long and possibly daunting names. The meaning of many surgical procedure names can often be understood if the name is broken into parts. For example in splenectomy, "ectomy" is a suffix meaning the removal of a part of the body. "Splene-" means spleen. are still unknown. Technology to reconstruct a penis has also improved. (225) Still "only 2-3 centers in the United States have experience creating penises `out of nothing'" and "[t]he surgical results are not perfect." (226) Generally, doctors do not perform a clitorectomy clitorectomy see clitoridectomy. (complete removal of the clitoris), instead creating a clitoral clitoral pertaining to or emanating from the clitoris. clitoral hypertrophy may occur in Cushing's syndrome as a result of increased androgens produced by a hyperplastic or neoplastic adrenal cortex. recession, which reduces the length but maintains the nerve supply. (227) Scarring is often inevitable, especially in male-to-female surgeries. (228) Studies that address the psychological effects between cosmetic successes, late sexual gratification, and "general psychological adjustment" are not yet available. (229) For this reason, the debate in the pediatric endocrinology Pediatric endocrinology (British: Paediatric) is a medical subspecialty dealing with variations of physical growth and sexual development in childhood, as well as diabetes and other disorders of the endocrine glands. community over the proper treatment of intersexed individuals continues to rage. (230) The results of purely cosmetic surgeries however are also unproven and physicians must report that the results of cosmetic surgery have not been proven when asking parents to give consent for such surgery. (231) Even after distinguishing between cosmetic and corrective surgery, doctors have difference of opinion and thus a differing standard of care. (232) In a "watershed" moment this year, Claude Migeon, another Johns Hopkins surgeon, "stood before the pediatric endocrine society and announced that follow-up studies on his intersexed patients led him to conclude that genital surgeries never produce perfect results." (233) 4. Long-term Problems are Surfacing Anecdotal reports from the intersexed are revealing the following long-term difficulties, including: (1) A failure to convince parents that the gender of the child was changed as a result of surgery; (234) (2) A sense of betrayal felt by the intersex, that parents, doctors, and therapists "deceived" the individual regarding the original of gender; (235) (3) Damaged sexual function and feelings of "shame and freakishness; (236) (4) Manifestation of a gender identity contrary to sex assigned by doctors; (237) (5) Low self-esteem and depression directly attributable to early surgery (infant surgery conveys a strong message that "baby was not acceptable" as he or she was born); (238) (6) Vaginal stenosis Vaginal stenosis Narrowing of the vagina due to a build-up of scar tissue. Mentioned in: Cervical Cancer in females who had CAH CAH congenital adrenal hyperplasia. CAH Congenital adrenal hyperplasia, see there and underwent vaginal reconstruction in infancy and childhood; (239) (7) A reportedly high incidence of homosexuality and bisexuality in genotypic genotypic emanating from or pertaining to genotype. genotypic selection selection of breeding stock on the basis of known inherited characteristics. males reassigned as females; (240) and (8) Bitterness and silent despair. (241) Furthermore, repeated surgeries are the norm. A study in Australia showed that 90 percent would require further surgery because the early intervention ear·ly intervention n. Abbr. EI A process of assessment and therapy provided to children, especially those younger than age 6, to facilitate normal cognitive and emotional development and to prevent developmental disability or delay. was inadequate. (242) Many of the intersex surgeries permanently destroy fertility and negatively affect sexual sensation. (243) 5. Problems with Hormonal Therapy The corollary treatment for the intersexed, after a sexual determination has been made, is hormonal therapy. Depending on the underlying condition, the treatment varies depending on sex, but ranges from steroids and birth control pills birth control pill n. See oral contraceptive. birth control pill Oral contraceptive, see there to testosterone injections. Often this treatment cannot be started until puberty. Pediatric endocrinologists try to create a "normal" puberty, sometimes with estrogen or progesterone progesterone (prōjĕs`tərōn'), female sex hormone that induces secretory changes in the lining of the uterus essential for successful implantation of a fertilized egg. or birth control pills. Testosterone injections or patches are also prescribed. (244) 6. Lack of Long-Term Studies One of the major hurdles to insuring informed consent for parents and patients is the lack of long-term studies and follow-up of individuals with ambiguous genitalia (145) As mentioned earlier, changes are taking place with the formation of a task force, (246) and as more intersexed individuals make themselves known and submit to questioning and information gathering, more information may become available. To contribute to research on the nature/nurture issue, Dr. William Reiner at Hopkins is studying children with cloacal exstrophy Cloacal exstrophy is a severe birth defect wherein much of the abdominal organs (the bladder and intestines) are exposed. It often causes the splitting of both male and female genitalia (specifically, the penis and clitoris respectively), and the anus is occasionally sealed. , (247) which is a condition of major trunk abnormalities and severely deformed genitalia. (248) One of Reiner's conclusions is that "changing the sex at birth in these children may not be in their best interests...and I think they will have a lot of trouble [when told the truth] with that psychologically." (249) Reiner also reported that normal male gender identification can develop without a penis and even after testicles Testicles Also called testes or gonads, they are part of the male reproductive system, and are located beneath the penis in the scrotum. Mentioned in: Testicular Cancer, Testicular Surgery, Vasectomy are removed. (250) The AAP report is also concerned with the lack of long-term studies, stating, "caution should be exercised when a recommendation is made that the sex of rearing should differ from the chromosomal sex." (251) Few studies have addressed the non-physical/medical outcomes: the social, psychological and sexual outcomes. (252) Most of the data on the intersexed surgeries focus on short-term cosmetic results. (253) Those studies that address the problem are showing a "psychopathology psychopathology /psy·cho·pa·thol·o·gy/ (-pah-thol´ah-je) 1. the branch of medicine dealing with the causes and processes of mental disorders. 2. abnormal, maladaptive behavior or mental activity. developing in about 40 percent of people treated" by the Money model of sex assignment and surgery before 24 months. (254) Others outside of medicine, in the fields of medical history, bioethics bioethics, in philosophy, a branch of ethics concerned with issues surrounding health care and the biological sciences. These issues include the morality of abortion, euthanasia, in vitro fertilization, and organ transplants (see transplantation, medical). , social psychology, sociology, and anthropology, also believe there has been a lack of adequate studies and follow-up on the issue of early surgery for individuals with ambiguous genitalia. (255) D. Legal Changes 1. Colombia Constitutional Court Decision The Colombia Constitutional Court was charged with deciding whether parents had the right to authorize genital surgery on their child, in two cases, one involving a two-year-old child and the other involving an eight-year-old child. In a 1995 decision, the court had ruled on a case similar to John/Joan, in which a boy was assigned as female following a traumatic accident that destroyed his penis. (256) The boy "never developed a female gender identity." (257) He brought suit for redress to the Constitutional Court and won when the court held that "parents cannot give consent on a child's behalf to determine sexual identity." (258) This court's latest decision built on the 1995 standard and, in addition, designed new informed consent guidelines for legal and medical professionals to incorporate into their practices. (259) The court in its findings relied heavily on the Amicus Brief of the ISNA, opinions by the European Court of Human Rights European Court of Human Rights: see Council of Europe. , and opinions on discrimination/protection for homosexuals and transsexuals, as well as Colombian medical experts, and videotapes of intersexuals speaking out on the issue of surgery on infants. (260) The Colombian court could find "no case in which any other high court in the world had considered the issue" and thus was "unable to rely on legal precedent." (261) Two implications for the North American legal and medical communities come to mind as a result of this decision. First, the Colombian Court decision is representative of how a well-organized and persuasive argument, presented effectively, can affect the judiciary and create new law. The ISNA, the American Academy of Pediatrics, Milton Diamond and many other scientists and experts now believe that this surgery on infants is wrong. Although no reported cases similar to those in Colombia have appeared yet in the United States, it is conceivable that an informed consent action or an injunction requesting a prevention of surgery could be brought in the near future. The ISNA is clearly geared up to present evidence supporting a moratorium on this type of surgery, as evidenced by the Colombia case. Secondly, the Colombian decision, although not binding authority, may be persuasive to a court hearing a similar case of first impression in the U.S. 2. Violations of World-Wide Conventions and Medical Ethics medical ethics The moral construct focused on the medical issues of individual Pts and medical practitioners. See Baby Doe, Brouphy, Conran, Jefferson, Kevorkian, Quinlan, Roe v Wade, Webster decision. Standards The amicus brief written to the Constitutional Court of Colombia by the ISNA identifies several world standards that might be violated by the practice of cosmetic or correctional genital surgery on infants or children unable to consent. First, the ISNA equates the surgery with medical experimentation, because of the lack of long-term studies on outcomes. (262) The Nuremberg Code The Nuremberg Code is a set of principles for human experimentation set as a result of the Subsequent Nuremberg Trials at the end of the Second World War. Specifically, they were in response to the inhumane Nazi human experimentation carried out during the war by individuals such specifically states the primary requirement of experimentation as: "The voluntary consent of the human subject is absolutely essential." (263) Following the reasoning of the ISNA, allowing genital surgery that is experimental on nonconsenting minors is a prima facie [Latin, On the first appearance.] A fact presumed to be true unless it is disproved. In common parlance the term prima facie is used to describe the apparent nature of something upon initial observation. violation of the Nuremberg code of medical ethics, and that is a "moral[ly] and legally repugnant REPUGNANT. That which is contrary to something else; a repugnant condition is one contrary to the contract itself; as, if I grant you a house and lot in fee, upon condition that you shall not aliens, the condition is repugnant and void. Bac. Ab. Conditions, L. " practice. (264) The ISNA argues that this particular infant surgery also violates the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, often referred to as CRC or UNCRC, is an international convention setting out the civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights of children. , which requires all parties to the Convention "to protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse, neglect or negligent treatment, maltreatment maltreatment Social medicine Any of a number of types of unreasonable interactions with another adult. See Child maltreatment, Cf Child abuse. or exploitation ... while in the care of parent(s), legal guardian(s) or any other person who has the care of the child" (265) and "no child shall be subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment." (266) Female Genital Circumcision (FGC FGC Female Genital Cutting (Africa) FGC Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya (Catalan Railway system) FGC Friends General Conference (Quakers) FGC Family Group Conference , also referred to as Female Genital Mutilation female genital mutilation: see circumcision. or FGM FGM abbr. female genital mutilation ) is also analogized to infant genital surgery in the ISNA amicus brief, stating that a "wide variety of human rights authorities and organizations have determined that involuntary genital surgery performed on female children violates basic human rights to bodily integrity and personal dignity and autonomy." (267) FGC, which is the "removal of all or part of the clitoris, inner labia or outer labia" (268) has been condemned by a long list of international organizations, including the United Nations Commission on Human Rights The United Nations Commission on Human Rights (UNCHR) was a functional commission within the overall framework of the United Nations. It was a subsidiary body of the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), and was also assisted in its work by the Office of the United , UNICEF UNICEF (y `nĭsĕf'), the United Nations Children's Fund, an affiliated agency of the United Nations. , the World Medical Association, the World Health
Organization, the 1993 United Nations World Conference on Human Rights
and has been labeled "barbaric" and a "violat[ion] of
human rights" in the U.S. (269)
This inconsistency in how FGC is treated as compared to how intersex surgery is treated may be a basis for legal challenges to intersex surgery in the U.S. (270) Milton Diamond points out that "medicine has been vocal in its condemnation of [FGM] even as it continues to recommend [normalizing genital surgery]." (271) 4. Legal Ethical Conflicts Briefly, the ethical considerations are many and have been discussed and developed by Alice Dreger, (272) and Milton Diamond, among others. (273) Dreger states that the treatment of the intersex "hit all the buttons [in bio-ethics], paternalism paternalism (p ethical code of medicine. [Western Culture: EB, 11: 827] See : Medicine to `do no harm.'" (274) Dreger thinks that the treatment of the intersexed and especially John Money's work will one day rank with Tuskegee as a long-term (40 plus years) unethical unethical said of conduct not conforming with professional ethics. experiment. (275) The practice also raises the bio-ethicaltechnology question: just because we know how to do it, should we do it?" Is this another area where medical technology has outpaced our moral, ethical and another area where medical technology has outpaced our moral, ethical and psychological reactions? (276) VII. WHAT THE STANDARD OF CARE AND INFORMED CONSENT SHOULD BE TODAY A. An Emerging Standard of Care Although "the medical community is still debating the appropriate standard of care," (277) based on this most recent literature and studies, the standard of care for those with ambiguous genitalia in the United States may begin to look like the following: (1) Care should be taken in the delivery room and with conversations with parents not to suggest a diagnosis or offer a gender assignment." (278) Doctors and nurses in the delivery area should call the child "your baby," "your child," not "it," she, or he. (279) (2) Specialized care and counseling should be provided for parents and child, during diagnosis period and as follow-up care. (280) This includes a "positive atmosphere" and emotional tone established by the health professionals. (281) (3) Accurate recurrence risk recurrence risk n. Risk that a disease will occur elsewhere in a pedigree, given that at least one member of the pedigree exhibits the disease. counseling should be communicated. (282) (4) Sex should be based on the most likely outcome. (283) Deciding the sex should be based on these criteria: fertility potential, capacity for normal sexual function, endocrine function, malignant change, testosterone imprinting imprinting, acquisition of behavior in many animal species, in which, at a critical period early in life, the animals form strong and lasting attachments. Imprinting is important for normal social development. and timing of surgery. (5) Terms such as "typical," "usual," "most frequent" should be used rather than "normal" when describing the sex characteristics of the newborn. (284) (6) "Reconstructive surgery reconstructive surgery n. Plastic surgery. reconstructive surgery, n surgery to rebuild a structure for functional or esthetic reasons. should be delayed until the patient's gender identity can be incorporated into the decision-making process." (285) (This is the most controversial point and has not yet been adopted by the AAP). (7) Current reports indicate that diagnosis of micropenis (in infancy) should result in the assignment of the male gender. (286) (8) "Immediate and extensive medical workup work·up n. Abbr. w/u A thorough medical examination for diagnostic purposes. " is required to determine the Underlying diagnosis and any life-threatening hormonal blockages. (287) (9) Testosterone injections should be given only in equivocal EQUIVOCAL. What has a double sense. 2. In the construction of contracts, it is a general rule that when an expression may be taken in two senses, that shall be preferred which gives it effect. Vide Ambiguity; Construction; Interpretation; and Dig. cases, and the child should be "raised as a boy only when there is a very good response." (288) (10) Medical professionals should recognize that while a child born with ambiguous genitalia may constitute a "social emergency," this is not a "medical emergency" in the sense that intervention is not necessary immediately in order to save the child's life (except in the cases of congenital adrenal hyperplasia Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia Definition CAH is a genetic disorder characterized by a deficiency in the hormones cortisol and aldosterone and an over-production of the hormone androgen, which is present at birth and affects sexual development. (CAH)). (289) (11) A step-by-step approach leading to a speedy diagnosis is essential. (290) Recognizing the potential changes in the standard of care and incorporating them into practice may prepare physicians who encounter a child with ambiguous genitalia to treat the child appropriately. The physician may then properly fulfill her duty to obtain full and informed consent from the parents and the child, if the child is old enough. B. New Informed Consent Those promoting informed consent laws based on the new information, medical studies and legal landscape should consider the following: 1. Colombia Court Model The 1999 Colombia Constitutional Court decisions (291) on intersex surgery (292)--for a two year old and an eight year old child--both found that the "consent given by the parents for genital surgery was invalid." (293) In making this decision, the court required that the legal and medical communities establish a new category of consent. The court said there must be "qualified, persistent informed consent" with the following elements: (1) Parental authority depends on the "exigency and urgency" of the procedure, the invasiveness, and the "age and autonomy" of the child. (2) Parents may consent only if they have been given accurate information about risks and alternate treatment alternate treatment, n the contract provisions that authorize the insurance carrier to determine the amount of benefits payable, giving consideration to alternate procedures, services, or courses of treatment that may be performed to accomplish the protocols. (3) Consent must be written, and must be given over an extended period of time, not just at the initial surgery. (4) Parents cannot consent for children over age five. These children are autonomous, and have identified with a gender. (294) The Colombian Court held in a similar John/Joan case, in 1995, that "[P]arents cannot give consent on a child's behalf to surgeries intended to determine sexual identity." (295) In response to the 1995 ruling, surgeons began to recommend surgery, but refused to perform it, resulting in the 1999 cases, requesting surgery for two children. (296) 2. ISNA Model The ISNA considers surgeries performed in infancy to be IGM--Intersex Genital Mutilation genital mutilation The destruction or removal of a portion or the entire external genitalia, which may occur in the context of a crime of passion or as part of a cultural rite. See Bobbittize, Cutter, Female circumcision, Self-mutilation. . (297) The ISNA has also stated that doctors should not be "insulated from any liability for harm caused by performing non-consensual genital surgery on children precisely at the moment when scholarly opinion is changing." (298) The ISNA might agree that parents need to be informed that: 1) "there is no medical reason to reduce the size of a large clitoris, no illness or pain is a side effect, and the main reason for reduction is cosmetic and a belief that it will enhance the psychological state of the child;" 2) "the reduction surgery is irreversible," because tissue cannot be reconstructed and scarring results, so psychological counseling should be substituted; 3) the surgery is actually less complicated in a larger child than in an infant; 4) the surgery itself can cause harm: scarring, chronic pain, irritation, reduced sexual sensation in addition to the inherent risks of any surgical procedure (infection, anesthetics Anesthetics Drugs or methodologies used to make a body area free of sensation or pain. Mentioned in: Appendectomy , etc.); 5) no long-term data are available on the outcomes of this type of surgery; and 6) a safer alternative is now available that would allow management of the intersexed condition and meet the criteria of informed consent. (299) 3. Diamond's Model Informed consent should consist of full and honest disclosure about the condition to the parents and the patient (depending on age). (300) The family should be informed that much of the influence genetically and through the endocrine system endocrine system (ĕn`dəkrĭn), body control system composed of a group of glands that maintain a stable internal environment by producing chemical regulatory substances called hormones. will manifest at puberty, and when pre-adult and secondary sex characteristics secondary sex characteristic n. Any of various characteristics specific to females or males but not directly concerned with reproduction. secondary sex characteristic and genitalia appear. (301) When surgery is an issue, informed consent should include a distinction between cosmetic surgery and that required for maintaining physical and mental health, emphasizing functionality over appearance. The parents and child (if this is done at puberty) should also be informed that such surgery could impair sexual/erotic function. (302) Parents should be informed at birth that true informed consent cannot be achieved before puberty, but should be warned about the repercussions repercussions npl → répercussions fpl repercussions npl → Auswirkungen pl of waiting until that time. (303) Patients should be informed of the effects and contraindications of "major prolonged steroid hormone steroid hormone n. See steroid. administration," (304) as a number of intersexed individuals have not been pleased with the outcomes of this treatment. (305) Furthermore, parents need to consider when the child should be told of the surgery. (306) Because it is such a drastic step, before removing the gonads, surgeons should obtain full consent from parents. (307) Parents should also know that untreated ambiguous genitalia may create problems for children when they attend school, resulting in serious psychological repercussions. (308) Informed consent should emphasize the alternate treatment option of therapy, which includes psychological counseling. (309) Of these models, Diamond's is most likely to be acceptable to the medical community in the United States. However, treating physicians should be keenly aware of, and should move towards, the other standards that are advocated by the ISNA, and the standard adopted by the Colombian Court. VII. CONCLUSIONS "Take this as a metaphor for the intersex life: a rich mystery afloat on the sea, unsure of the rules but still determined to make a way forward. (310) Information, intersexuality, the Internet, internationalization The support for monetary values, time and date for countries around the world. It also embraces the use of native characters and symbols in the different alphabets. See localization, i18n, Unicode and IDN. internationalization - internationalisation , and intersexual genital mutilation are all part of the new vocabulary of our 21st century world. Technology is moving more rapidly than we can adapt, and new studies and surgical techniques and inventions are changing both the way we look at the world and the way we look at and classify each other. The intersexed are part of that world, and face difficult issues in gender identification, choosing surgical procedures and lifestyles that may be difficult for many to understand. The medical community is an integral part of the intersexed life choices, whether it is providing surgery or continued counseling to manage the issues caused by the physical condition. Health professionals and providers face changes and challenges in treating the intersexed, as the issues are not only medical, but legal and ethical as well. Informed consent is an essential element of medical treatment of the intersexed. Knowing the choices, knowing the chances, and knowing the children involved will equip health professionals and others treating the intersexed to treat the patient first, by doing what is best for the patient, and by avoiding (and avoiding potential liability from) drastic, morally wrong and irreversible mistakes. Health professionals and patients alike need to be informed of the recent changes in the gender landscape. At this juncture, given divided opinion in the medical community, the lack of long-term studies, and the traumatic revelations made by David Reimer and the intersexual community, the new treatment protocol should include a "time out:" a time to slow down, a time to think, and a time to listen to the voices of the intersexed. (1.) VIRGINIA WOOLF Noun 1. Virginia Woolf - English author whose work used such techniques as stream of consciousness and the interior monologue; prominent member of the Bloomsbury Group (1882-1941) Adeline Virginia Stephen Woolf, Woolf , ORLANDO: A BIOGRAPHY 28 (Harvest Books 1993) (1928). (2.) JOHN COLAPINTO, AS NATURE MADE HIM: THE BOY WHO WAS RAISED AS A GIRL (2000). (3.) Id. at xi-xvii. (4.) See Susan J. Bradley et al., Experiment of Nurture: Ablatio Penis at 2 Months, Sex Reassignment at 7 Months, and a Psychosexual psychosexual /psy·cho·sex·u·al/ (-sek´shoo-al) pertaining to the mental or emotional aspects of sex. psy·cho·sex·u·al adj. Of or relating to the mental and emotional aspects of sexuality. Follow-up in Young Adulthood, 102 PEDIATRICS 9 (1998) (reporting on a case similar to David Reimer, a 46-chromosome XY male who sustained a burn of the skin of the penis during a circumcision and was assigned the female sex), available at http://www.pediatrics .org/cgi/content/full/102/1/e9. (5.) See infra [Latin, Below, under, beneath, underneath.] A term employed in legal writing to indicate that the matter designated will appear beneath or in the pages following the reference. infra prep. Part III. (6.) COLAPINTO, supra A relational DBMS from Cincom Systems, Inc., Cincinnati, OH (www.cincom.com) that runs on IBM mainframes and VAXs. It includes a query language and a program that automates the database design process. note 2; see, e.g., Intersex Soc'y of North America, Hermaphrodites with Attitude (Fall/Winter 1995-1996) [hereinafter here·in·af·ter adv. In a following part of this document, statement, or book. hereinafter Adverb Formal or law from this point on in this document, matter, or case Adv. 1. Hermaphrodites], at http://www.isna.org/newsletter/winter95-96/winter95-96.html. (7.) See Anthony Hubbard, Mistaken Identity mistaken identity n → erreur f d'identité mistaken identity mistake n → Verwechslung f mistaken identity n , THE SUNDAY STAR TIMES, New Zealand, Nov. 5, 2000. (8.) See generally Hazel Glenn Beh & Milton Diamond, An Emerging Ethical and Medical Dilemma: Should Physicians Perform Sex Assignment Surgery on Infants with Ambiguous Genitalia?, 7 MICH v. i. 1. To lie hid; to skulk; to act, or carry one's self, sneakingly. . J. GENDER & L. 1 (2000). (9.) See Amicus Brief from the Intersex Society of North America to the Constitutional Court of Colombia (Feb. 7, 1998) [hereinafter Amicus Brief], available at http://www.isna.org/colombia/ brief.htm. (10.) A major theme of Colapinto's book deals with Money's personality, forceful and autocratic behavior and his unwillingness to be challenged or questioned. See COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 38-40. (11.) See id. at 49-51. (12.) See id. at 52. (13.) Id. at 53. The actual procedure was a bilateral orchidectomy orchidectomy /or·chi·dec·to·my/ (or?ki-dek´tah-me) orchiectomy. orchidectomy see orchiectomy. , or removal of the testicles, and a surgically fashioned "rudimentary vagina." (14.) COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 67. Money first unveiled his "twins study" on December 28, 1972 at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), private organization devoted to furthering the work of scientists and improving the effectiveness of science in the promotion of human welfare. in Washington, D.C. Id. at 65. (15.) See id. at 71. (16.) See id. at 175. (17.) Id. at 62-63. (18.) COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 79. (19.) Id. at 80-96 for details of the other activities and evaluations that took place during these annual visits. (20.) Id. at 112. (21.) Id. at 113. (22.) Id. (23.) See COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 123. (24.) See id. at 130-31. (25.) Id. at 131. (26.) See id. (27.) Id. at 136. (28.) COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 164. (29.) See id. at 166-67. (30.) Id. at 169-70. (31.) Id. at 179-80. (32.) Id. at 181. (33.) COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 183-84. (34.) Id. at 195. (35.) It is beyond the scope of this article to delve into all of the sociological-medical-gender studies that have been written in recent years on the topic of intersexuality. The intent here is to give a basic background so that the legal arguments can be put into their proper context and the issues identified appropriately. For excellent background and detailed descriptions of the life of the intersexed and the issue of gender identification, see SUZANNE J. KESSLER, LESSONS FROM THE INTERSEXED (1998); see also ANNE FAUSTO-STERLING, SEXING THE BODY: GENDER POLITICS AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF SEXUALITY (2000). (36.) Intersex Soc'y of North America, Frequency: How Common Are Intersex People The people on this list have been selected because they have identified as intersexed. Individuals on this list are not necessarily transgendered. With respect to people who lived before the 20th century, it is often difficult to construe the sex, gender and sexual identity of ? [hereinafter Frequency], at http://www.isna.org/faq/frequency.html (last visited May 22, 2002). (37.) See John Cloud, .His Name is Aurora, TIME, Sept. 25, 2000, at 90 (using the word "transgender" when referring to a support group that is assisting a boy raised as a girl); see also Encarnacion Pyle & Misti Crane, Couple Fights for Son, 6, They Say is Girl at Heart, THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH, Aug. 26, 2000, at 1G. (38.) See, e.g., Hermaphrodites, supra note 6; see also Fausto-Sterling, The Five Sexes, Revisited, THE SCI (Scalable Coherent Interface) An IEEE standard for a high-speed bus that uses wire or fiber-optic cable. It can transfer data up to 1GBytes/sec. (hardware) SCI - 1. Scalable Coherent Interface. 2. UART. ., Jul./Aug. 2000, at 22; FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 31 ("Hermaphrodite" comes from the names of the Greek god Hermes, and the Goddess Aphrodite Aphrodite (ăfrədī`tē), in Greek religion and mythology, goddess of fertility, love, and beauty. Homer designated her the child of Zeus and Dione. , who produce a child. One myth describes the child as "so thoroughly endowed en·dow tr.v. en·dowed, en·dow·ing, en·dows 1. To provide with property, income, or a source of income. 2. a. with the attributes of both" that the parents were unable to determine its sex.). (39.) FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 32-36. (40.) Id. at 33. (41.) Id. (42.) See id. at 40. (43.) Id. (44.) FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 44. (45.) Id. (46.) Id. at 78. (47.) Id. at 78-79. (48.) The "spectrum idea" is particularly relevant to the intersexual issue. Because we are talking about a wide range of variations in genitalia, sexual identity, size and appearance, the fact that there is no one "normal" appearance is important. It is helpful to think in terms of range, spectrum or continuum in dealing with this subject. (49.) See Julie A. Greenberg, Defining Male and Female: Intersexuality and the Collision Between Law and Biology, 41 ARIZ ARIZ Arizona (old style) . L. REV. 265, 267, 276-78 (1999) (noting that, from an anthropological perspective, many cultures recognize, and even deify de·i·fy tr.v. dei·fied, dei·fy·ing, dei·fies 1. To make a god of; raise to the condition of a god. 2. To worship or revere as a god: deify a leader. 3. a third or alternate sex--the Dominican Republic Dominican Republic (dəmĭn`ĭkən), republic (2005 est. pop. 8,950,000), 18,700 sq mi (48,442 sq km), West Indies, on the eastern two thirds of the island of Hispaniola. The capital and largest city is Santo Domingo. , Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea (păp` ə, –y , Native
Americans, India, and ancient cultures such as Greece).
(50.) Greenberg distinguishes between gender and sex: Gender is "cultural or attitudinal qualities that are characteristic of a particular sex. Sex is one's status as a man or woman based upon biological factors "such as external genitalia or chromosomal test." Id. at 271, 274, 278, 281-82. (51.) Id. at 281. (52.) Alice Domurat Dreger, "Ambiguous Sex" or Ambivalent Medicine?, 28 THE HASTINGS CENTER The Hastings Center, founded in 1969, is an independent, nonpartisan, non-profit bioethics research institute dedicated to examination of essential questions in health care, biotechnology, and the environment. REP. 24 (1998), available at http://www.isna.org/library/dreger-ambivalent.htm. (53.) Anna J. Catlin, Ethical Commentary on Gender, Reassignment: A Complex and Proactive Modern Issue; Response to Article in this Issue, 24 PEDIATRIC NURSING 63 (1998); see also Cheryl Chase, Rethinking Treatment for Ambiguous Genitalia, 25 PEDIATRIC NURSING 451 (1999). (54.) COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 25. (55.) Id. at 37 (Although he was not a medical doctor, Money was skilled at influencing those around him. He convinced key surgeons, endocrinologists and Johns Hopkins administrators that the United States needed a clinic to perform these surgeries. Money influenced the public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most policies about the procedures and the publicity that surrounded them.). (56.) FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 20. (57.) COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 37 (Colapinto makes the point that many of these theories seem ludicrous today in light of recent medical and social research. In his book he sets the stage for Money's dominance in this field, including the atmosphere at universities towards research, the politics of receiving grant money, and the broader social picture of the fledgling women's movement women's movement: see feminism; woman suffrage. women's movement Diverse social movement, largely based in the U.S., seeking equal rights and opportunities for women in their economic activities, personal lives, and politics. and the rising influence of the behaviorist Behaviorist 1. One who accepts or assumes the theory of behaviorism (behavioral finance in investing.) 2. A psychologist who subscribes to behaviorism. Notes: When it comes to investing, people may not be as rational as they think. school of psychology.). (58.) Catlin, supra note 53. (59.) Id. Looking at this same set of characteristics, Money's audacity au·dac·i·ty n. pl. au·dac·i·ties 1. Fearless daring; intrepidity. 2. Bold or insolent heedlessness of restraints, as of those imposed by prudence, propriety, or convention. 3. in reassigning David Reimer's sex becomes even more absurd: Reimer exhibited all of the male characteristics in each of the categories, and only became "ambiguous" after a bad circumcision. Reimer became, in a sense, the ultimate travesty of the nurture versus nature argument: born unambiguously male, yet raised as a girl. (60.) COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 40-42. (61.) See id. at 212-13. (62.) Cheryl Guttman, Task Force to Draft Guidelines on Intersex Disorders, UROLOGY TIMES, Sept. 2000, (quoting Dr. Aaronson). (63.) Frequency, supra note 36. (64.) See infra note 74. (65.) Id.; see also FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 20 (estimating 1.7% of people are intersexual in some form). (66.) Frequency, supra note 36, at 1-2. (67.) Louise D. Palmer, Hermaphrodite Activists Urge Medical Reforms; Doctors Rethink Practice of Choosing Sex for Baby, THE TIMES-PICAYUNE, Dec. 12, 1999, at A28. (68.) Doctors Told of Intersex Ordeal, THE DOMINION (Wellington), Oct. 23, 2000, at 3. (69.) Greenberg, supra note 49, at 281. (70.) See Palmer, supra note 67. (71.) E-mail from Philip Gruppuso, M.D., Department of Pediatrics, Brown University, to author (Nov. 17, 2000) (on file with author). Those conditions that have received attention in the medical literature, such as classical congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) and Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome Androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS, or "Androgen resistance syndrome") is a set of disorders of sexual differentiation that results from mutations of the gene encoding the androgen receptor. It has also been called androgen resistance in the medical literature. (AIS), occur much less frequently, one in 13,000 births. (72.) See Anjana Ahuja Anjana Ahuja is a British Indian science journalist and columnist for The Times. Ahuja read physics at Imperial College London, followed by a postgraduate course in space physics during which she worked on data about the Sun's magnetic field from the Ulysses probe. , Chemical fear over `Joella' babies, THE TIMES (London), Dec. 5, 1998. The argument about estrogen creating environmental problems was a factor in Japan when the birth control pill was in the approval process. Publicity over studies of feminized fish created fears of the effects of estrogen on the water supply in Japan, and may have slowed the approval of the Pill. Patricia L. Martin, Potency and Pregnancy in Japan: Did Viagra Push the Pill?, 35 TULSA L.J. 651, 656 (2000). (73.) See Ahuja, supra note 72. Professor Hughes describes the effects of estrogen as follows: [E]strogen compounds get deposited in fat and stick there ... It then leeches out over a long time. During pregnancy the mother acquires large fat deposits to see the baby through. At 8-12 weeks, exposure to hormones determines which tissues are formed for internal and external genitals. This is a critical time for male babies. If oestrogens in the environment interfere with exposure to androgens (male hormones) it's possible that androgens can't do their job as efficiently. Id.; see also FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 54. (74.) See Greenberg, supra note 49, at 283-288 (As discussed in the previous section on common occurrence of intersexuality, intersexuality can be caused by disorders such as Klinefelter's Syndrome--a syndrome in which a male has two more X chromosomes and a testes and penis that are smaller than average. Turner Syndrome Turner syndrome Chromosomal disorder (from the presence of only one sex chromosome, X, in all or some of the body's cells) that causes abnormal sexual development in females. affects females, and they have an XO chromosome and may not have complete ovaries or testes. Swyer Syndrome Swyer syndrome, or XY gonadal dysgenesis, is a type of female hypogonadism in which no functional gonads are present to induce puberty in an otherwise normal girl whose karyotype is then found to be XY. Her gonads are found to be nonfunctional streaks. manifests itself in streak gonads with XY chromosomes, but the sex-delineating chromosome segment may be missing, testes do not develop and masculizing hormones are absent. The child with Swyer Syndrome is often raised as a girl. A hermaphrodite comes in three forms: male pseudo-hermaphrodite, female pseudo-hermaphrodite, and true hermaphrodite. The true hermaphrodite has ambiguous external genitalia am·big·u·ous external genitalia n. External genitalia that physically do not appear to be either male or female in form. , often some ovarian ovarian /ovar·i·an/ (o-var´e-an) pertaining to an ovary or ovaries. ovarian pertaining to an ovary. ovarian agenesis and some testicular testicular /tes·tic·u·lar/ (tes-tik´u-lar) pertaining to a testis. tes·tic·u·lar adj. Of or relating to a testicle or testis. testicular pertaining to the testis. tissue. True hermaphrodites are very rare. Male pseudo exhibits testes, no ovaries, and some female genitalia. Female pseudo exhibit ovaries, not testes and some male genitalia. Intersexual conditions can be caused by Partial Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome (PAIS), Congenital Hyperplasia hyperplasia (hī'pərplā`zhə): see hypertrophy. (CAH). Hormonal disorders such as Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome (AIS) manifests itself in individuals with an XY chromosome test, who cannot process male hormones (androgens Androgens Male sex hormones produced by the adrenal glands and testes, the male sex glands. Mentioned in: Acne, Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia, Finasteride, Homocysteine, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome, Salpingo-Oophorectomy ). The result is that the body goes to the default path of development and develops as a female. The male with AIS cannot be externally distinguished from XX females at birth--usually this diagnosis occurs at puberty when male development does not take place. CAH females have an XX chromosome and ovaries but also an abundance of androgen during the fetal stage. Their genitals may be ambiguous and resemble male genitalia. Some CAH babies are identified as male at birth while others are surgically treated and given hormone therapy and classified as female.). Social factors can also contribute to genital identity disorders, and individuals affected by these social factors are often called transsexuals. A transsexual trans·sex·u·al n. A person who strongly identifies with the opposite gender and who chooses to live as a member of the opposite gender or to become one by surgery. adj. 1. Of or relating to such a person. 2. is someone whose physical anatomy does not correspond to the individual's sense of being or sense of gender. For a discussion of genital identity disorders in a legal context see Littleton v. Prange, 9 S.W.3d 223, 224 (Tex. App. 1999). (75.) Note that we have definitional problems even when narrowing the scope: as Dr. Alice Dreger points out, "How small should a baby's penis have to be before it counts as `ambiguous?'" Dreger, supra note 52. (76.) Littleton, 9 S.W.3d at 233 (holding that a surgically altered transsexual (man to woman) married to a man had an invalid marriage and could not institute a wrongful death The taking of the life of an individual resulting from the willful or negligent act of another person or persons. If a person is killed because of the wrongful conduct of a person or persons, the decedent's heirs and other beneficiaries may file a wrongful death action cause of action as a spouse. The dissent in this case noted that the birth certificate had been legally amended to indicate that Littleton was female and the court should have considered the original birth certificate a nullity nullity n. something which may be treated as nothing, as if it did not exist or never happened. This can occur by court ruling or enactment of a statute. The most common example is a nullity of a marriage by a court judgment. NULLITY. .). Texas law allows birth certificate inaccuracies to be corrected with an amended birth certificate. Id. at 223. (77.) Greenberg, supra note 49, at 317. (78.) See id. at 292; see also Pyle & Crane, supra note 37, (describing the legal issues confronting a couple who tried to enroll their "male" child, diagnosed with gender identity disorder Gender Identity Disorder Definition The psychological diagnosis gender identity disorder (GID) is used to describe a male or female that feels a strong identification with the opposite sex and experiences considerable distress because of their actual , in school as a girl. Legal ramifications include the child being put in a Children's Services foster home following an anonymous phone call and the parent's consideration of a lawsuit based on federal sex-discrimination against the school district.). (79.) See Neil Mackay, Tale of the Transsexual Baron Finally Laid to Rest, SUN. HERALD, Oct. 22, 2000, at 4 (Sir John Forbes John Forbes can refer to more than one person:
(80.) Colin Adamson, The Girls from Brazil who Share a Sydney Secret, EVENING STANDARD (London), Sept. 27, 2000, at 22 (Two Brazilian athletes, hermaphrodites--were allowed to compete, but not without controversy and cruel attacks. Past Olympic Committees have disallowed athletes based on various types of sex tests.). (81.) See BARRY R. FURROW furrow /fur·row/ (fur´o) a groove or sulcus. atrioventricular furrow the transverse groove marking off the atria of the heart from the ventricles. ET AL., HEALTH LAW 310-11 (2d ed. 2000). (82.) See id. at 311. (83.) Pennsylvania remains the only state that considers failure to obtain informed consent a battery. See Gouse v. Cassel, 561 A.2d 797, 798-99 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1989), aff'd in part, rev'd in part 615 A.2d 381 (Pa. 1992). (84.) FURROW ET AL., supra note 81, at 312; see also Wilson v. Landry, 748 So. 2d 655, 659 (La. Ct. App. 1999) (holding that recovery for lack of informed consent for a circumcision improperly brought under battery, but should have been brought under Louisiana's Medical Malpractice Act as a breach of duty of care by physician). (85.) FURROW ET AL., supra note 81, at 312. (86.) Id. at 313. (87.) Dreger recounts the story of Sherri Grovenam, a patient with AIS, who was told that she had "twisted ovaries" instead of the fact that her testes were removed. She discovered the truth on her own in a medical library. Consequently the relationship with her parents and her physicians soured due to the lack of truthfulness. See Dreger, supra note 52, at 9; see also Hermaphrodites, supra note 6, at 5. (88.) See Dreger, supra note 52, at 14; see also COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 50 (questioning whether Reimer's parents understood that the procedure was experimental, that early sex assignment had been done only on hermaphrodites, and that this had never been attempted on a child born with normal genital and nervous system. Money emphasized the possibilities of success.). (89.) See Dreger, supra note 52, at 10. (90.) Id. (91.) See id. (92.) See KESSLER, supra note 35, at 64-68. (93.) See Dreger, supra note 52, at 15. (94.) Id. (95.) See, e.g., Bourgeois v. McDonald, 622 So. 2d 684 (La. Ct. App. 1993); Robinson v. Bleicher, 559 N.W.2d 473, 478 (Neb. 1997); Wheeldon v. Madison, 374 N.W.2d 367, 374 (S.D. 1985); see also 61 AM. JUR JUR Juristisch (German: legal) JUR Collectie Jurisprudentieverzamelingen . 2D, Physicians, Surgeons and Other Healers [subsections] 187-196 (2002); John H. Derrick, Annotation 1. (programming, compiler) annotation - Extra information associated with a particular point in a document or program. Annotations may be added either by a compiler or by the programmer. , Medical Malpractice: Liability For Failure of Physician to Inform Patient of Alternative Modes of Diagnosis or Treatment, 38 A.L.R. 4th 900 (2001); W.M. Moldoff, Annotation, Malpractice: Physician's Duty to Inform patient of Nature and Hazards of Disease or Treatment, 79 A.L.R.2d 1028 (2001). (96.) Smith v. Weaver, 407 N.W.2d 174 (Neb. 1987). (97.) FURROW ET AL., supra note 81, at 314. (98.) 464 F.2d 772 (D.C. Cir. 1972). (99.) Savold v. Johnson, 443 N.W.2d 656 (S.D. 1989) (holding that when a factual dispute exists as to whether material risks were explained or given at all, expert testimony is not required). (100.) Bourgeois, 622 So. 2d at 689. (101.) FURROW ET AL., supra note 81, at 315. (102.) See, e.g., Hezeau v. Pendleton Methodist Mem'l Hosp., 715 So. 2d 756, 762 (La. Ct. App. 1998) (holding physician was liable when patient was not informed infection was risk of surgery). (103.) See, e.g., Keogan v. Holy Family Hosp., 622 P.2d 1246, 1254-55 (Wash. 1980) (holding that physician breached his duty to disclose when he failed to inform patient suffering from intermittent chest pains that alternative diagnostic procedures were available). (104.) Moore v. Regents of the Univ. of Cal., 793 P.2d 479 (1990); see also FURROW ET AL., supra note 81, at [subsections] 6.11, 313-331. (105.) Differences exist not only in the standard for informed consent, but also in the classification of the tort itself. In Colorado for example, the "claim for negligence based on lack of informed consent" is separate from medical malpractice and is based on the "information communicated by a physician to a patient before a particular procedure or treatment is commenced." Gorab v. Zook, 943 P.2d 423, 427 (Colo. 1997). In contrast, Louisiana provides that lack of informed consent cases should be tried as medical malpractice cases under the Medical Malpractice Act for breach of a physician's duty of care. Wilson, 748 So. 2d at 660, 666. (106.) See Schwartz v. United States, 230 F.Supp. 536, 540 (E.D.Pa. 1964) (holding that government physicians, veterans administration clinics and the U.S. government were liable for failing to seek out and warn patient of carcinogenic carcinogenic having a capacity for carcinogenesis. danger of radioactive dye after grave warnings appeared in medical journals and other publications). (107.) The general rule is that a physician may not treat a minor without parental consent. Danny E. Veilleux, J.D., Annotation, Medical Practitioner Liability for Treatment Given Child Without Parental Consent, 67 A.L.R. 4th 511 (2000). (108.) See Keogan, 622 P.2d at 1254-55. (109.) Kenneth Kipnis & Milton Diamond, Pediatric Ethics and the Surgical Assignment of Sex, J. CLINICAL ETHICS, Dec. 1998, at http://www.afn.org/~sfccommed/pedethics.htm (last visited Sept. 8, 2000). (110.) Id. (111.) Id. (112.) One intersexual's reaction was "to me [the discovery that I was an intersexual] was extraordinarily threatening. Instead of being a human being with rights and privileges, I was supposed to be a medical problem." Hubbard, supra note 7, at 4. (113.) 943 P.2d 423 (Colo. 1997) (giving an excellent history of the tort of lack of informed consent as a claim separate from general negligence); see also Thornwell v. U.S., 471 F. Supp. 344, 350 (D.D.C. 1979); Schwartz v. United States, 230 F. Supp. 536, 540 (E.D.Pa. 1964); Tresemer v. Burke, 86 Cal. App. 3d 656, 671-72 (1978). (114.) Gorab, 943 P.2d at 430. (115.) Id. (116.) Tresemer, 86 Cal. App. 3d at 672. (117.) Id. (118.) Katherine Rossiter & Shonna Diehl, Gender Reassignment of Children: Ethical Conflicts in Surrogate Decision Making, 24 PEDIATRIC NURSING 59 (1998). (119.) Veilleux, supra note 107. (120.) See Rogers v. Sells, 61 P.2d 1018, 1019 (Okla. 1936); see also Veilleux, supra note 107. (121.) Tabor v. Scobee, 254 S.W.2d 474 (Ky. 1951) (where a surgeon removed infected Fallopian tubes during an appendectomy Appendectomy Definition Appendectomy is the surgical removal of the appendix. The appendix is a worm-shaped hollow pouch attached to the cecum, the beginning of the large intestine. , the removal of the tubes was not considered an emergency). (122.) See Dreger, supra note 52, at 8. (123.) Catlin, supra note 53. (124.) Rossiter & Diehl, supra note 118. (125.) Id. (126.) Id. (127.) Catlin reviews the ethical considerations of this case in the same journal, and evaluates case law in this context. The state can supervene su·per·vene intr.v. su·per·vened, su·per·ven·ing, su·per·venes 1. To come or occur as something extraneous, additional, or unexpected. See Synonyms at follow. 2. To follow immediately after; ensue. parental authority only if: (a) the medical profession is in agreement about the treatment, (b) whether the expected outcome of the treatment is what society agrees to be right for any child, one which would give a chance for a normal healthy life or a life worth living and (c) the expected outcome of denial of that treatment would mean death for the child. Catlin, supra note 53 (citing J. Goldstein, Medical Care for the Child at Risk: On State Supervention su·per·vene intr.v. su·per·vened, su·per·ven·ing, su·per·venes 1. To come or occur as something extraneous, additional, or unexpected. See Synonyms at follow. 2. To follow immediately after; ensue. of Parental Autonomy, in WHO SPEAKS FOR THE CHILD?: THE PROBLEMS OF PROXY CONSENT 155 (W. Gaylin & R. Macklin eds. 1982)). (128.) See Catlin, supra note 53; see also Rossiter & Diehl, supra note 118. (129.) Veilleux, supra note 107. (130.) Id. (131.) The most common medical misrepresentation seems to concern surgery. See, e.g., Bloskas v. Murray, 646 P.2d 907, 914 (Colo. 1982); Huron v. Craighead, 530 So. 2d 101, 105 (La. Ct. App. 1988); Schendt v. Dewey, 520 N.W.2d 541, 548 (Neb. 1994). (132.) See Hutton, 530 So. 2d at 105. (133.) See Roberts v. Fleury, 987 F. Supp. 940, 941 (D. Md. 1997) (holding that physician fails to adhere to adhere to verb 1. follow, keep, maintain, respect, observe, be true, fulfil, obey, heed, keep to, abide by, be loyal, mind, be constant, be faithful 2. standard of care if she does not refer to specialist); see also Wozniak v. Lipoff, 750 P.2d 971 (Kan. 1988) (imposing liability for failure to refer patient to an endocrinologist when patient diagnosed with Graves disease Graves disease or toxic diffuse goitre or exophthalmic goitre Most common type of hyperthyroidism (oversecretion of thyroid hormone), usually with goitre and exophthalmos (eyeball protrusion). ). (134.) Committee on Genetics, Evaluation of the Newborn with Developmental Anomalies of the External Genitalia, 106 AM ACAD ACAD Academy ACAD Academic ACAD AutoCAD (design/drafting development software by Autodesk) ACAD Acadia National Park (US National Park Service) ACAD Atherosclerotic Coronary Artery Disease . PEDIATRICS 138 (2000) [hereinafter AAP Evaluation]. (135.) See Roberts, 987 F. Supp. at 940. (136.) See Harwell v. Pittman, 428 So. 2d 1049 (La. App. 1983) (holding that physician was liable when he failed to disclose feasible alternatives to surgery for removal of a gall bladder gall bladder, small pear-shaped sac that stores and concentrates bile. It is connected to the liver (which produces the bile) by the hepatic duct. When food containing fat reaches the small intestine, the hormone cholecystokinin is produced by cells in the intestinal ). (137.) FURROW ET AL., supra note 81, at 265. (138.) Id. at 265. (139.) Id. at 264-65 (citing Hall v. Hilbun, 466 So. 2d 856, 872-73 (Miss. 1985)). (140.) Id. at 265; see also Beh & Diamond, supra note 8, at 27 (arguing that a "jury's view of reasonable prudence reasonable prudence Forensic medicine A standard of care which derives from a legal doctrine expounded upon by Judge Learned Hand in 1932 which has become a founding principle of medical malpractice law. See Negligence. " can prevail over a deficient standard of care). (141.) See id. at 265 (citing Joseph Hiling Jr., In Search of a Standard of Care for the Medical Profession-the "Accepted Practice" Formula, 28 VAND. L. REV. 1213, 1236 (1975)). (142.) Id. at 266. (143.) Id. (144.) Id. at 266-67. (145.) Id. at 267. (146.) Id. (147.) See AAP Evaluation, supra note 134. (148.) Here, I am distinguishing between the standard of care for individuals born with ambiguous genitalia from those individuals with one of the other disorders such as severe gender dysphoria gender dysphoria n. A persistent unease with having the physical characteristics of one's gender, accompanied by strong identification with the opposite gender and a desire to live as or to become a member of the opposite gender. discussed supra Part III. For example, in California, the current standard of care legally recognized is that surgery is recognized as medical therapy only for gender dysphoria syndrome." J.D. v. Lackner, Cal. App. 3d 90, 93 (1978) (cases holding that the surgical procedure to remove male genitalia and construct female genitalia was an expense to be covered by Medi-Cal); G.B. v. Lackner, 80 Cal. App. 3d 64 (1978) (same); see also Diamond & Sigmundson, supra note 8. (149.) See FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 46 (stating that "by 1969, when Christopher Dewhurst and Ronald R. Gordon wrote their treatise on The Intersexual Disorders, medical and surgical approaches to intersexuality neared a state of hitherto unattained uniformity"). (150.) See Julia Greenberg & Cheryl Chase, Colombia High Court Limits Surgery on Intersexed Infants, at http//www.isna.org/Colombia/background.html (last visited Sept. 8, 2000). This was most often a surgical "feminizing' of intersexed infants in part because "it's easier to dig a hole, than to build a pole." Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome Support Group, Genital Plastic Surgery [hereinafter AIS Support Group], available at www.medhelp.org/www/ais/33_SURGERY.htm (last updated Apr. 16, 2002). (151.) Dr. Joycelyn Elders & David Chanoff, JOYCELYN ELDERS, M.D., FROM SHARECROPPER'S DAUGHTER TO SURGEON GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. The name of this country. The United States, now thirty-one in number, are Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, 151-53 (1997). (152.) See Chase, supra note 53. (153.) See Dreger, supra note 52. (154.) See Chase, supra note 53 (citing J. MONEY & A.A. ERHHARDT, MAN AND WOMAN, BOY AND GIRL (1972)). (155.) See COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 51; Chase, supra note 53 (citing the 1996 American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Urology Report). (156.) KESSLER, supra note 35, at 14-15. (157.) Palmer, supra note 67, at A28. (158.) See Chase, supra note 53; Dreger, supra note 52. (159.) See Rossiter & Diehl, supra note 118. (160.) Chase, supra note 53, at 451; see also KESSLER, supra note 35, at 46-51 for details of the surgical procedures. (161.) Chase, supra note 53, at 452. (162.) Id. (163.) Palmer, supra note 67, at A28. (164.) Id. (165.) W.G. Reiner, Abstract, Assignment of Sex in Neonates with Ambiguous Genitalia, in CURRENT OPINIONS ON PEDIATRICS 363-66 (1999). (166.) KESSLER, supra note 35, at 74. (167.) Id. at 75-76. (168.) See generally FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35; KESSLER, supra note 35. (169.) KESSLER, supra note 35, at 127. (170.) Id. at 91. (171.) Id. at 127. (172.) Id. at 37. (173.) COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 15-16. (174.) Id. at 23. (175.) See KESSLER, supra note 35, at 75. (176.) See FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 48. The training of physicians impacts the standard of care--should physicians be allowed to rely on the training received in medical school and continuing education continuing education: see adult education. continuing education or adult education Any form of learning provided for adults. In the U.S. the University of Wisconsin was the first academic institution to offer such programs (1904). , or can the standard of care be based on recent studies and newer research in this area? See discussion supra Parts IV and V. (177.) See COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 71-72. (178.) Palmer, supra note 67, at A28. (179.) Id. (180.) Id. (181.) Id. (182.) The evolution of the Internet has coincided with the rise of the ISNA and has greatly facilitated its reach and outreach. Individuals can contact the website to "chat," to exchange ideas and access information, all with anonymity if desired. See Sixty Minutes: A Crime Against Nature: Sexual Reassignment (CBS (Cell Broadcast Service) See cell broadcast. television broadcast June 25, 2000), available at http://sixtyminutes.ninemsn.com. au/60/stories/2000 06_25/story_185.asp (last visited Sept. 18, 2000). (183.) Chase, supra note 53, at 452. (184.) Id. (185.) Palmer, supra note 67, at A28; see also Doctors told of "intersex" ordeal, The Dominion (Wellington) Oct. 25, 2000. (186.) Palmer, supra note 67, at A28; see also Hubbard, supra note 7. A support network for New Zealand intersex people is found at www.circumstitions.com. (187.) Ricki Lewis, Reevaluating Sex Assignment, 14 THE SCIENTIST 6 (Jul. 10, 2000). (188.) See discussion infra Part VI.D.1. (189.) Chase, supra note 53, at 5. (190.) See Amicus Brief, supra note 9, at 13. (191.) William G. Reiner, Abstract, Assignment of Sex in Neonates with Ambiguous Genitalia, 11 CURRENT OPINIONS ON PEDIATRICS 363 (1999). (192.) Revelation of cases of failed reassignments and the emergence of intersex activism have led an increasing number of pediatric endocrinologists, urologists and psychologists to reexamine re·ex·am·ine also re-ex·am·ine tr.v. re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing, re·ex·am·ines 1. To examine again or anew; review. 2. Law To question (a witness) again after cross-examination. the wisdom of early genital surgery. See FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 21. (193.) Reiner, supra note 191. (194.) See AAP Evaluation, supra note 134. (195.) Guttman, supra note 62; see also Task Force is Studying Effects of Cross-Gender Surgery on Kids, SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER The Seattle Post-Intelligencer is one of two daily newspapers in Seattle, Washington, United States, the other being the Seattle Times. History The P-I, Seattle's first newspaper, was founded on December 10, 1863 as the Seattle Gazette , Mar. 13, 2000, at D2. (196.) AAP Evaluation, supra note 134, at 138. (197.) Id. (198.) See FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 22. (199.) Guttman, supra note 62. (200.) See FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 22. (201.) Guttman, supra note 62. (202.) FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 22. (203.) Guttman, supra note 62. (204.) Bradley et al., supra note 4. (205.) COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 199. The ad said: "Will whoever is treating the twins please report." Sigmundson was afraid to publish the outcome of the case, because of the Money connection and potential detrimental impact on his career. Id. (206.) Id. at 209-10. Diamond's paper was begun in 1994, but was not published until 1997 in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine adolescent medicine n. The branch of medicine concerned with the treatment of youth between 13 and 21 years of age. Also called ephebiatrics, hebiatrics. . (207.) Lewis, supra note 187, at 6; COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 220-222. (208.) Chanika Phornphutkul et al., Gender Self-Reassignment in an XY Adolescent Female Born With Ambiguous Genitalia, 106 PEDIATRICS 135 (2000). (209.) Id.; see also Beh & Diamond, supra note 8. (210.) See Bradley, supra note 4, at 9; see also COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 273-76 (reporting on some cases in progress). (211.) See Bradley, supra note 4, at 9. (212.) Id. at 9. (213.) COLAPINTO, supra note 2, at 212. (214.) Literature defines a penis that is less than 1.5 centimeters in size as a micropenis and it is considered inadequate for development of a "functional" penis--described as the ability to have intercourse Verb 1. have intercourse - have sexual intercourse with; "This student sleeps with everyone in her dorm"; "Adam knew Eve"; "Were you ever intimate with this man?" and to urinate standing up. See id. This is an issue in the ethics of intersexual treatment: an "adequate" penis is necessary for male sex assignment, but "adequate" and "acceptable" are subjective terms and measurements. See Dreger, supra note 52, at 5. Gender discrepancies arise in the assignment of sex: vaginas are "easier" to construct and have lower standards than for a penis. Id. at 6. Traditionally, if a newborn's stretched organ is about 1 inch, or longer, the baby is a he; if under 3/8 inch, the baby is a she. If between of 3/8 to 1 inch the organ is usually shortened, so the penis becomes a clitoris. Further surgery takes place during puberty, along with hormone treatments. See Lewis, supra note 187, at 2. (215.) See Phornphutkul et al., supra note 208, at 2. (216.) Id. (217.) Id. (218.) Id. (219.) Id. (220.) Phornphutkul et al., supra note 208, at 2. Mammoplasty is "plastic surgery on the breast to alter its shape, size, re-position, or all of these." ILLUSTRATED STEDMAN'S MEDICAL DICTIONARY A medical dictionary is a lexicon for words used in medicine. The three major English language medical dictionaries are Stedman's, Taber's, and Dorland's medical dictionaries. (24th ed., 1982). (221.) Phornphutkul, supra note 208, at 2. (222.) Id. at 3; see also M. Beshati et al., Gender Assignment in Male Pseudo-Hermaphrodite Children, 22 UROLOGY 604, 607 (1983) (reports a study of male pseudo hermaphrodites in Toronto that compares males who were assigned female gender and 12 who were not raised female). (223.) See The Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Clinic (formally known as the Cleveland Clinic Foundation) is a multispecialty academic medical center located in Cleveland, Ohio, USA. Cleveland Clinic was established in 1921 by four physicians for the purpose of providing patient care, research, and medical , Sex Reassignment Surgery For specialized articles on surgical procedures, see Sex reassignment surgery male-to-female and Sex reassignment surgery female-to-male. Sex reassignment surgery (SRS), gender reassignment surgery, or sex-change operation (Nov. 2001) [hereinafter Sex Reassignment Surgery], at mywebmd.com/content/article/2953.533 (last visited June 20, 2002). Although "transgender" and "intersex" are two distinct populations, the point here is that genital surgery has become refined and more common in the recent past as compared with the surgical techniques available at infancy to those who are now adults; see also B. Leidl, Sex Reassignment Surgery in Female to Male and Male to Female Transsexuals, FORTSCHRITTE DER DER - Distinguished Encoding Rules MEDIZIN (EMBASE 1999240401) (last visited Nov. 2, 2000). (224.) Lewis, supra note 187, at 3. (225.) Id. (226.) Task Force, supra note 195 (quoting Dr. Aaronson of the NATFI). (227.) AIS Support Group, supra note 150. (228.) Leidl, supra note 223, at 3. (229.) See Dreger, supra note 52, at 12. (230.) Point/counterpoint, PHYSICIAN'S WEEKLY, Aug. 16, 1999, at http://www.physiciansweekly. com (last visited Nov. 25, 2000). (231.) Dreger, supra note 52, at 12. (232.) Id. (233.) Palmer, supra note 67, at 6. (234.) See Chase, supra note 53, at 2. (235.) Id.; see also Dreger, supra note 52, at 9. (236.) Chase, supra note 53, at 2. (237.) See id. (238.) Id.; see also Hubbard, supra note 7, (stating that "one of the complications of medical intervention as a child is that you're not acceptable unless you're re-fashioned into some ideal. The message that you send a child is that they're not OK"); Dreger, supra note 52, at 8. (239.) Id. at 10. Vaginal stenosis is a narrowing of the vaginal opening vaginal opening n. The narrowest portion of the vaginal canal, located in the floor of the vestibule, behind the urethral orifice. . See Sex Reassignment Surgery, supra note 223. (240.) Rossiter & Diehl, supra note 118, at 3. (241.) Beh & Diamond, supra note 8, at 7. (242.) See AIS Support Group, supra note 150. (243.) See Lewis, supra note 187, at 6. (244.) See id. (245.) Chase, supra note 53, at 2; see also Dreger, supra note 52, at 9. (246.) AIS Support Group, supra note 150. (247.) A developmental anomaly in which an area of intestinal mucosa is interposed between two separate areas of the urinary bladder urinary bladder n. A musculomembranous elastic receptacle in the anterior part of the pelvic cavity serving as the temporary storage place for urine. . (248.) See Ed Susman, Boys Play Baseball, Girls Play House: Study of rare sex disorder, BIOTECHNOLOGY NEWSWATCH, Nov. 6,1995; see also Lewis, supra note 187. (249.) Susman, supra note 248, at 1. (250.) Lewis, supra note 187, at 1. (251.) AAP Evaluation, supra note 134, at 5. This report acknowledges the changes in the last decade from the "nurture" theory in medical studies, stating that "it has become apparent that testosterone imprinting and fetal brain may play a role in determining male sexual orientation." (252.) Id. at 6. (253.) See Chase, supra note 53, at 2. This reports long-term follow-up on vaginal replacement, suggesting the vagino plasty at or near puberty is more appropriate than at infancy. Id. at 5. (254.) Id. at 2. (255.) Id. at 6. (256.) See Greenberg, supra note 49; see also Chase, supra note 53. (257.) Chase, supra note 53. (258.) Id. (259.) See discussion infra Part VII.B.1. (260.) Greenberg & Chase, supra note 150, at 1. (261.) Id. (262.) See Amicus Brief, supra note 9, at 4. (263.) FURROW ET AL., supra note 81, at 378-79 (citing the Nuremberg Code, later incorporated in the Declaration of Helsinki For the political accords, see . . There is also another Declaration of Helsinki, dealing with the Information Society.[1] Introduction The Declaration of Helsinki,[2] was developed by the World Medical Association[3] ). (264.) Amicus Brief, supra note 9, at 4-5. (265.) Id. at 6 (citing Article 19 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, dated November 20, 1989 but not ratified by the United States). (266.) Id. (citing Article 37 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child). (267.) Id. at 5 (citing AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL Amnesty International (AI,) human-rights organization founded in 1961 by Englishman Peter Benenson; it campaigns internationally against the detention of prisoners of conscience, for the fair trial of political prisoners, to abolish the death penalty and torture of , WOMEN'S RIGHTS The effort to secure equal rights for women and to remove gender discrimination from laws, institutions, and behavioral patterns. The women's rights movement began in the nineteenth century with the demand by some women reformers for the right to vote, known as suffrage, and ARE HUMAN RIGHTS (1995)). (268.) Id. at 6. (269.) Amicus Brief, supra note 9, at 6. The ISNA also uses the arguments against Female Genital Circumcision in its brief. (270.) Dreger, supra note 52, at 12. Legislation passed in 1996 by the U.S. Congress called for penalties to anyone who "knowingly circumcises, excises, or infibulates the whole or any part the labia majora labia ma·jo·ra pl.n. The two outer rounded folds of adipose tissue that lie on either side of the vaginal opening and that form the external lateral boundaries of the vulva. or labia minor or clitoris of another person who has not attained the age of 18 years." The legislation creates an exception: A surgical operation is not a violation of this section if the operation is (1) necessary to the health of the person on whom it is performed, and is performed by a person licensed in the place of its performance as a medical practitioner; or (2) performed on a person in labor or who has just given birth and is performed for medical purposes connected with that labor or birth. Id. (271.) Kenneth Kipnis and Milton Diamond, Pediatric Ethics and the Surgical Assignment of Sex, J. CLINICAL ETHICS, at http://www.afn.org/~sfcommed/pedethics.htm. (last visited May 24, 2002). (272.) See Dreger, supra note 52. (273.) See Kipnis & Diamond, supra note 271. (274.) Lewis, supra note 187. (275.) Dreger is equating the treatment of the intersexed from the 1950s through the 1990s with the Public Health Service study of syphilis syphilis (sĭf`əlĭs), contagious sexually transmitted disease caused by the spirochete Treponema pallidum (described by Fritz Schaudinn and Erich Hoffmann in 1905). among African-American men in Tuskegee Alabama. See JAMES. H. JONES, BAD BLOOD: THE TUSKEGEE SYPHILIS EXPERIMENT (1993). (276.) Other ethical considerations, but not necessarily with legal implications are these: Should parents be making the decisions--are they able to make the best decision for the child at the early states? See Catlin, supra note 53, at 2. Is sexual intercourse sexual intercourse or coitus or copulation Act in which the male reproductive organ enters the female reproductive tract (see reproductive system). the most important thing a human does? Is the penis the most important sexual organ? (asks Dr. Reiner). See Lewis, supra note 187. Cafiin queries "is a functional, full size penis of essence to human male existence?" Cafiin, supra note 53, at 4. (277.) Carl T. Hall, Guidelines Created for Intersex Babies, S.F. CHRON CHRON Chronicles CHRON Chronology ., July 4, 2000, at A2 (quoting Dr. Christopher Dr. John R. Christopher, known popularly as "Dr. Christopher" was one of very few nationally prominent doctors of herbal medicine of the middle third of the 20th century, a "dark ages" of herbalism and was responsible for the herbal renaissance of the 1960s. Cuniff, co-author of the AAP Report). (278.) Id. (279.) Id. (280.) Id. (281.) Id. (282.) AAP Evaluation, supra note 134. (283.) Beh & Diamond, supra note 8, at 2. (284.) Id. at 1. (285.) Chanika, supra note 208; see also Beh & Diamond, supra note 8. The Journal recommends that the surgeon should be Board Certified board certified, adj the status of a dental specialist such as an orthodontist who has become a board diplomate by successfully completing the certification program of the recognized certification board in that area of practice. and either a urologist, gynecologist gynecologist /gy·ne·col·o·gist/ (-kol´ah-jist) a person skilled in gynecology. gy·ne·col·o·gist n. A physician specializing in gynecology. , plastic surgeon or general surgeon General surgeon A physician who has special training and expertise in performing a variety of operations. Mentioned in: Appendectomy . Id. at Part III Sec. XI. A surgeon should ideally have experience and knowledge with more than one technique in genital reconstruction in order to meet the specific needs of the patient. Id. (286.) Phornphutkul et al, supra note 208; see also Dreger, supra note 52, at 7. (287.) Rossiter & Diehl, supra note 118. (288.) AAP Evaluation, supra note 134, at 5. (289.) Id. at 1; see also FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 21. (290.) See AAP Evaluation, supra note 134, at 8 (History and exam should include obstetric ob·stet·ric or ob·stet·ri·cal adj. Of or relating to the profession of obstetrics or the care of women during and after pregnancy. obstetrical, obstetric pertaining to or emanating from obstetrics. history; the physical exam should look for malformation malformation /mal·for·ma·tion/ (-for-ma´shun) 1. a type of anomaly. 2. a morphologic defect of an organ or larger region of the body, resulting from an intrinsically abnormal developmental process. , external diagnosis, and palpitation palpitation (păl'pĭtā`shən), abnormal heartbeat that is often associated with a sensation of fluttering or thumping. The normal heartbeat is not noticeable to the individual. of gonads. Laboratory and Imaging Studies should be employed to discover placement and size of internal genital; blood, hormonal and chromosomal analysis is required.). (291.) Order Changing Guardianship (Identification of Minor Suppressed), Sentencia SU-337/99 (Corte Constitucional, May 12, 1999) (Colum.); In re. Guardianship XX, Sentencia T-551/99 (Corte Constitucional, Aug. 2, 1999) (Colum.). (292.) See Julie A. Greenberg and Cheryl Chase, Colombia High Court Restricts Intersex Genital Mutilation, available at www.isna.org/pr/pr10-25-99.html (last visited Sept. 9, 2000). (293.) Id. (294.) Id. (295.) Id. (296.) Id. (297.) Amicus Brief, supra note 9. (298.) Id. (299.) Id. at 1. (300.) Beh & Diamond, supra note 8, at 2; see also Kipnis & Diamond, supra note 109, at 8. (301.) Beh & Diamond, supra note 8, at 3. (302.) Id. (303.) Id. (304.) Id. (305.) Id. (306.) Kipnis & Diamond, supra note 109, at 8. (307.) See id. at 4. (308.) See Guttman, supra note 62. (309.) See FAUSTO-STERLING, supra note 35, at 21. (310.) Hubbard, supra note 7, at 6. PATRICIA L. MARTIN, Associate, Doerner, Saunders, Daniel & Anderson, L.L.P., Tulsa, Oklahoma Tulsa is the second-largest city in the state of Oklahoma and 45th-largest in the United States. With an estimated population of 382,872 in 2006,[1] it is the principal municipality of the Tulsa Metropolitan Statistical Area, a region of 897,752 residents projected to , J.D., May 2001, University of Tulsa College of Law University of Tulsa College of Law is a private law school in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The Dean of the College of Law is currently Robert Butkin, formerly the State Treasurer of Oklahoma. History The University of Tulsa College of Law was founded by local attorneys in 1923. . The author is indebted to Professor Marguerite Chapman Marguerite Chapman (March 9, 1918 - August 31, 1999) was an American actress. Born in Chatham, New York, she was working as a telephone switchboard operator in White Plains, New York when her good looks brought about the opportunity to pursue a career in modeling. , University of Tulsa, for inspiration and the topic suggestion for this paper which was submitted as a seminar requirement for the Fall Semester 2000 Law, Medicine and Ethics Seminar, for reading early drafts in October and November 2000, and endless encouragement; Professor Madeleine Plascencia, University of Tulsa, Professor Richard Ducey, University of Tulsa and Professor Larry Cata Backer, Dickinson School of Law In 2005 a dispute over whether or not to move the Dickinson School of Law to Penn State's University Park campus in State College, Pennsylvania led to a "dual campus" proposal being enacted. , for publishing advice in January 2001; Dr. Philip Gruppuso, Brown University School of Medicine, for a physician's insight on the intersexed, and as always, to Mike for enduring, unfailing support. |
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