Quote from: Julie Marie on October 25, 2009, 07:48:50 PMImagine this...
GID is removed from the DSM.
The "professionals" realize it's just a natural variation and not a mental disorder.
The public accepts this and gender is no longer considered unchangeable.
This is a very idealistic ("in a perfect world...") proposition.
Quote from: Julie Marie on October 25, 2009, 07:48:50 PMEarly recognition means early intervention. Hormonal treatments started around puberty...
Not even countries that
do allow some kind of hormonal intervention for TS pminors allow full-blown HRT on pubescent children who are
not IS -- the most that Germany, for instance,
consistently allows for TS minors is regime of hormonal suppressives. The TS girl from Germany who had GRS (genital reconstruction surgery) at sixteen is widely acknowledged as a "special case", and I think she may technically have a sort of IS diagnosis that would allow for that in the first place (but seeing as Germany also has doctor-patient confidentiality, it's likely that this was kept out of the press). But even in Germany, TS persons are still classified as having a "mental disorder" -- it's just that the standards of care for German TS persons is far superior to TS persons in the U$.
Quote from: Julie Marie on October 25, 2009, 07:48:50 PM... no mastectomy and maybe even no phalloplasty.
No mastectomy for FTM TS persons having puberty intervened? Quite probable, but not a guarantee -- at the age of twelve, I was already wearing a DDD bra and I had distinctly noticeable breasts at the age of nine (it's called "macromastia" and my paediatrician also considered me to have "precocious puberty", by all means, look 'em up); and I'm just one example of how your idealist suggestion is not a realistic one. But "no phalloplasties"? Are you seriously that ignorant of what TS men's GRS actually entails? Neither the clitoris nor the penis grow exponentially with age and prolonged exposure to extra testosterone (and I use these words because minute degrees of testosterone are produced in the pituitary gland and, in females, within the ovaries).
Quote from: Julie Marie on October 25, 2009, 07:48:50 PMAs long as there's a book that says it's a mental disorder, it will be treated as such.
I'm really tempted to take this statent to an illogical extreme, but I will refrain because I know(nay, hope) that's not
really how you meant it.
But as I've said numerous times already -- treating certain ailments as "mental disorders", like bipolar disorder, is not what causes the stigma in the mainstream medical community.
I keep using bipolar disorder because that's a condition with DSM criteria that has a very real and well-documented physical component: It is almost always caused by a neurochemical imbalance of seratonin within the brain. Bipolar disorder is still treated as a "mental disorder" in that it has DSM criteria, and it has DSM criteria because the symptoms affect the person's quality of live by putting the person in severe mental/emotional distress, and also because bipolar disorder has a far greater room for variation than most other physical ailments (like spina bifidia). A severely bipolar person like my best friend literally
needs a lifelong regime of medication to keep her mental state balanced enough to live her life to her fullest potential. On the other hand, my room-mate is also bipolar, but much more mildly; all he really needs is the occasional Zoloft under periods of extreme stress to help balance himself out. Both my friends have a proved seratonin imbalance that has resulted in their bipolar disorder; which is slightly more than what I have, in physical evidence, to back up my transsexualism -- my physician did a baseline hormone check and chromosomal analysis to see if I met any IS diagnostic criteria, and nope, I'm just a regular XX and with "high, but not uncommonly so for females" natural testosterone levels.
Basically, I have nothing byt DSM criteria validating my transsexual status. I never had any sort of brain-scan prior to HRT, so any supposition that I may have had "male brainwave patterns" is purely speculation. I highly doubt that more than
maybe a handful of people in this thread, at best, have anything more than speculation (aside from DSM criteria, that is) to validate their ostensibly hard-wired gender identities. Any supposition that gender identity is pre-natally determined is, even in the biomedical community, still in the realm of hypothesis -- it's an educated guess, on the part of a vocal population of doctors, based on intriguing evidence, but it's as-of-yet untested.
All we have is the DSM. While I have a problem with the standards of care for TS persons as pushed by many people in the psychological communities, I see no reason to take GID off the DSM; it's the only way to guarantee that TS persons will receive care.