The Council of Europe - 23rd Colloquy on European Law - 14-16 April, 1993.
Transsexualism, medicine and law.Closing speech by Professor L.J.G.
Gooren, University Hospital, Amsterdam.
The transcript of this speech (delivered to an international audience
of government representatives, lawyers, doctors and transsexuals at the end of
the three day conference) is taken from the official proceedings, published by
the Council of Europe. (ISBN 92-871-2805-7). Professor Gooren is an endocrinologist
and holds the world's only chair in transsexuality, at the Vrije Universiteit,
Amsterdam (Netherlands).
Ladies and Gentlemen
When I address this audience as ladies and gentlemen, it is not my first association that I am addressing a group of human beings with vulvas and vaginas on the one hand, and a group with penises on the other hand. This introduction, this approach might sound abrupt, or even odd to you, but it brings us right to the core of the matter.
When I address you as ladies and gentlemen, I am referring to the kind of
person - woman or man - that you became after your birth, when your sex was
determined by the criterion of the external genitalia. This being established,
your boyhood or girlhood, your manhood or womanhood, became a matter of indirect
evidence. Your genitalia are normally not apparent or obvious in your social
environment. Clues as to your being a man or a woman come from indirect sources.
When we group up, we develop a sense of being a man or a woman, on which we
hardly ever reflect. We are what we are, either a man or a woman. For this sense
of belonging to one sex of the other the term gender identity has been coined.
We communicate this sense of belonging to the one sex and not to the other to
the outside world in our gender role. At the roots of this gender identity/role
development lies the criterion of the external genitalia, as determined
immediately after birth, but along the course of development of the gender
identity/role, the genital criterion is not the first association when we talk
about men and women in daily life. The reason why I am so elaborate on this
subject is that most legal systems pertaining to the determination of sex pay
absolute reverence to this one criterion of external genitalia, while there are
several criteria or characteristics of sex, such as the genetic and the gonadal
ones, the criteria of the internal and external genitals and of the sexual
differentiation of the brain. The latter one, the sexual differentiation of the
brain, is a rather new issue. I cannot say we have a complete picture, but the
scientific information can no longer be ignored, and it goes without saying that
it has relevance for the subject of transsexualism.
What I said earlier about the relatively loose connection between the genital
criterion of sex on the one hand and the gender identity on the other, is not at
all new information. Let us have a look at a very nice piece of tapestry made in
Alsace (presently France) in the 16th century. It is now in The Cloisters Museum
in New York City. It depicts the wise King Solomon. The lady in the picture has
decided to put his wisdom to the test. She has two flowers in her hand, one a
false, artificial one, the other a true flower. They look very much alike. The
King is asked whether he is able to tell which is the true one and which is the
false one. He says: "Wait and see to which one a bee will go. That is the true
one". The next question pertains to the sex of two children, a pair of twins,
one male, one female. They are dressed exactly the same. Can the King
distinguish the male twin from the female twin? He can, he throws an apple at
each of them. The girl twin will catch the apple with her knees together leaning
slightly backwards, whereas the boy twin will move his knees apart, and move
slightly forward to the King. Next they are asked to throw the apple back to the
King. The girl twin will throw the apple back moving her arm in the lower half
of a circle, whereas the boy will hurl the apple back moving his arm in the
upper half of a circle. The lesson to be learnt here is that the wise King
Solomon, in order to determine the sex of the two twins, did not use the
criterion of the genitalia. He could easily have asked the children to lift
their skirts. He did not! He relied on the indirect information of the body
language of both twins. Which is what we do in our daily lives. Nothing new
under the sun.
Let us now pay some attention to the biology of becoming a man or a woman, or
sometimes, and this is unfortunate, becoming something in between. This slide
shows the entrance of the cathedral of San Gimignaiano in Tuscany (Italy), and
God taking a rib out of Adam, this creating Eve. This story undoubtedly applies
to the first lady on earth, but you in the audience have a different history of
becoming men or women.
At conception it was decided - let us assume by the laws of chance - that
your chromosomal pattern was 46,XY or 46,XX. Except for the chromosomes, there
is no distinguishable difference between a future boy and a girl in the first 6
weeks of development. After the first 6 weeks, the indifferent gonad becomes a
testis in the case of a 46, XY pattern, and an ovary in case of a 46, XX
pattern. All the following steps in the differentiation process are dependent on
the hormones produced by the testis before birth. The next step in the
differentiation process is that of the formation of the internal genitalia.
These are completely identical ducts in boys and girls. In the presence of
testicular hormones produced by the boy foetus, one pair of ducts will become
prostate and deferential duct, while the other pair goes into regression. In a
girl foetus, the development is the contrary: there are no testicular hormones,
so one pair does not develop, the other pair becomes the uterus and oviducts. A
couple of weeks later, the external genitalia develop from a common principle.
In the presence of testosterone, as is normal in a boy, the external genitalia
become a penis and a scrotum in a boy. In girls there is no testosterone around,
and the external genitalia develop into a vulva and vagina.
It has always been assumed that the sexual differentiation was completed with
the formation of the external genitalia. But it is NOT. Since the beginning of
this century we have known that the brain, too, undergoes a sexual
differentiation. This has been firmly established scientifically in lower
animals, and it occurs relatively late in development, in most species just
before or shortly after birth. Let us take the example of a rat. If a normally
developed male rat is castrated on the first day after his birth, his brain will
have a female sexual differentiation; if, by contrast, a female rat is given
testosterone immediately after birth, she will have a male sexual
differentiation of her brain. This implies that the female rat with her female
genitalia will copulate in the pattern of a male rat, and conversely, the male
rat, deprived of testosterone after birth, will assume the typical copulation
position.
What we see here is that male animals, through hormonal manipulation, can be
led towards female sexual patterns, and conversely, female animals towards male
sexual patterns. Again, this is firmly established sexology of lower mammals
such as the rat and the guinea pig.
What do we know about man, the human species? We know that the human brain,
too, undergoes a degree of sexual differentiation. Three areas of the brain have
now been documented as being sex-dimorphic. One of them is the so-called
sex-dimorphic nucleus in the lower part of the brain, the hypothalamus.
Surprisingly, the sex difference becomes manifest only 3 to 4 years after birth.
This is amazing information. Long after you were born and after your sex had
been determined by the criterion of the external genitalia, your brain still had
a long way to go to become sexually differentiated; it does not do so not before
the age of 3 to 4 years. These scientific findings may shed light on the problem
of transsexualism where we find a contradiction between the genital sex on the
one hand and the gender identity on the other hand.
The process of sexual differentiation is characterised by the following:
- Sexual differentiation is a multi-step process, not a one point decision
- Each step is characterised by a bi-potentiality; each time the developing
organism is at a bifurcation of the male or female development
- Each step has a critical period in the course of development. Only during
a window of time can this particular step take place. No backtracking
- The sexual differentiation process has not been completed at birth: the
sexual differentiation of the brain occurs between the age of 3 to 4
years.
So far I have described the orderly normal sexual differentiation of
becoming a boy or a girl, a man or a woman. It is unfortunate that this process
is liable to errors. In about 5 in every 1000 individuals this process has shown
some errors. It is also a bit of an admonition to those who always state: so God
created man in His own image: male and female created He them. Doctors can
testify: in the vast majority of cases with impeccable result, in about 5 in
every 1000 individuals there are sex errors. The sexual differentiation has not
followed its normal course.
I will now show some of these sex errors, and the list is by no means
exhaustive. It can be concluded that there may be contradictions between the
genetic sex on the one hand and the other criteria of sex on the other hand.
In the clinical syndrome of androgen insensitivity, for instance, all the
cells of the body are intense to the action of testosterone. While the first two
steps of sexual differentiation are normal (the chromosomes, the formation of
the gonads) the other steps follow the path of the other sex. These subjects are
identified as girls at birth and are raised as girls. They are infertile, they
have no ovaries, they have no uterus; but they do have testes. They are legally
registered as female and almost always engage in a marriage with a man.
Another example is the clinical syndrome of the congenital virilising adrenal
hyperplasia. If this occurs, the first steps of sexual differentiation follow
the pattern of a girl: a 46,XX chromosomal pattern and ovaries, but due to
abnormal production of androgens by the adrenal, the external genitalia
virilise, become more or less male, depending on the degree of the severity of
the disease. In severe cases, these children are taken for boys at birth and
raised as boys. They marry women, but cannot become fathers because they have no
testes. Instead, they have ovaries.
Whereas the above clinical syndromes are relatively easy to comprehend, some
cases of hermaphroditism are difficult to interpret. What can be done with these
children at birth? A person cannot grow up without a sex. What decision should
be taken? A decision must be taken! The social environment requires it, and the
law requires it. What criterion of sex must take precedence, certain
predominances over others? Would it be the genetic, the gonadal, or the external
or internal genitals? It has become accepted clinical practice to assign the
baby to that sex in which it will in all likelihood function best in childhood
and adulthood, so in general the criterion of the external genitalia prevails.
It is medically assessed to what sex the function of the external genitalia will
lend themselves best, sometimes after surgical corrections. It has particularly
been Dr. John Money who has built up a vast experience with this category of
children, and the policy described above has proved successful. It can be
summarised as follows: In a follow up of children with ambiguous genitalia at
birth for whom decisions had to be made as to sex assignment, sex of assignment
and rearing was more accurate than any other variable as a prognosticator of the
gender identity/role established in life. The other variables were chromosomal
and gonadal sex, sex hormones, and genital anatomy.
Now back to transsexualism. It is likely from the available evidence that in
transsexuals the pattern of sexual differentiation of the brain has not followed
the pattern typical of that sex: in other words, the nature of the chromosomes,
the gonadal and genital development are in contradiction with the brain sex; at
least with the sexual self-image of which we assume the substrate to be in the
brain. There is some evidence to confirm this assumption. In a collaborative
study with the Dutch Brain Research Institute, Professor Swaab could demonstrate
in postmortem investigations that in two male-to-female transsexuals the
sexual-dimorphic nucleus of the brain showed a similarity with the female
pattern. This was not the case in a third transsexual. The suprachiasmatic
nucleus was unusually large and showed a similarity with the pattern found in
homosexual men.
There are some interesting findings with regards to brain functions. Women do
better on verbal tasks than men; and men, by contrast, do better than women on
spatial ability. Men are better at findng the way than the average women.
Several studies indicate that transsexuals show similarities in verbal and
spatial performance with the sex they view as their own.
In conclusion, there is now evidence which needs further corroboration that
in male-to-female transsexuals the sexual differentiation of the brain is
cross-sex to the other characteristics of sex, and vice versa in female-to-male
transsexuals.
Transsexualism manifests itself early in life. On this slide you see two
brothers of the same family. The younger boy feels and presents himself to the
world as a young man. His brother, a future candidate for a sex change, is
showing clear signs of cross sex behaviour, look at the body angle. The next
slide shows that this cross-sex behaviour persists in time. Here you see the
same person a couple of years later, persisting in cross-sex behaviour.
I come to the end of my talk. As a biomedical expert I arrive at certain
conclusions and I arrive at certain recommendations for legislators. In summary,
legal and sex assignment by the criterion of the morphology of the external
genitalia:
- Is based on only one of the five criteria of sex presently known; the
other criteria are gonadal, genital and brain sex
- The criterion of the external genitalia does not imply that chromosomal
sex or the sex of the internal genitalia are concordant
- Sexual differentiation of the brain is not completed at the moment of
birth. This takes place between the ages of 3 to 4 years, well after birth
- Assignment to sex on the criterion of external genitalia is an act of
faith, but well founded and time-honoured. Only 1 in 10,000-30,000 will be a
false prognostication
- Such an expedient practise does not require a change
- It works extremely well in daily life
- In order to do justice to the rare individuals in whom sexual
differentiation of the brain postnatally has not followed the path
prognosticated, for example, by the external genitalia, the law must make
provisions. If we have the constitutional right to be treated equally and the
same by the law, the law must do justice to the rare individuals in whom sex
errors of the body occur. This is a personal misfortune, but no ground for
unfair treatment.
Ladies and Gentlemen.
I hope I have been able to communicate to you that transsexualism is not an
isolated phenomenon in the area of sex errors of the body. It is one on a
sliding scale. In some people you will find contradiction between their genetic
sex and the other variables of sex. In other people between their genetic sex
and gonadal sex on the one hand, and their genital and brain sex on the other.
Finally in transsexuals there is a contradiction between the genetic, gonadal
and genital sex on the one hand, and the brain sex on the other. For all these
people who have had the misfortune to incur a sex error of the body in their
development, solutions have to be found. It is part of our anthropology, and of
our human existence, that we recognise only men and women in our social system,
which reflects on our personal status. In other words, there is no room for
intersexes, socially, legally and psychologically. Medical experience teaches
that being intersex makes a person subject to social abuse; such a person
becomes a freak. It would be absolute medical ignorance, medical incompetence,
even abuse NOT to rehabilitate a person with a sex error of the body. Sex errors
of the body cannot be corrected in the true sense of the word. The only option
is a rehabilitation to one sex or the other. Rehabilitation does not pretend to
be a cure. It is exactly what the word says: rehabilitation makes the bestof a
condition that cannot be corrected essentially and fundamentally.
The guiding principle in this rehabilitation process is to assign a person with sex errors
of the body to the sex in which he/she will function best, psychologically,
socially, erotically, sexually. Again, I want to stress that reassignment of
transsexuals is a medical intervention on a sliding scale. It is not essentially
different from procedures in other sex errors of the body. The same
interventions including genital surgery are done in other cases of sex errors of
the body. This brings me to the issue raised in some of the legal material I
have been reading in this context: Can it really be done? Sex reassignment in
transsexuals? In other words: is the feminisation of the body by hormones and
the construction of a neovagina, a true authentic sex change or is it a
construct, an artefact, a modification only of the body? My answer would be that
it is as much a sex change as it is in other cases of intersex. Many of the
intersex cases will have contradictions between the variable, the criteria of
sex. Many will be unable to produce children; it is a rehabilitation to the best
of our ability, not a cure.
There can be no psychomedical ground not to treat these people respectfully;
we must provide them with reassignment treatment which meets their needs. In the
cases of intersex, and this is particularly true of transsexualism, medical
treatment does not bring resurrection from one's ashes; it is not a cure. It is
not a completely new start, it is a rehabilitation process. We must accept the
given fact of sex errors of the body and continue from there. We must create the
conditions for successful rehabilitation to the male or female sex as much in
cases of transsexualism as in other cases of intersex subject.
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