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An Update on Gender Diagnoses, as the DSM-5 Goes to Press

Started by Shana A, December 05, 2012, 09:05:14 AM

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Shana A

An Update on Gender Diagnoses, as the DSM-5 Goes to Press.
Kelley Winters, Ph.D., GID Reform Advocates
December 5, 2012

http://gidreform.wordpress.com/2012/12/05/an-update-on-gender-diagnoses-as-the-dsm-5-goes-to-press/

ImageOn December 1, the Board of Trustees for the American Psychiatric Association approved the final draft of the fifth edition of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5). The most controversial DSM revision in more than three decades, the DSM-5 has drawn strong concerns, ranging from overdiagnosis and overmedication of ordinary everyday behaviors to poor diagnostic reliability in field trials. The transgender-specific categories of Gender Identity Disorder (GID) and Transvestic Fetishism (TF) have been especially contentious, beginning with the 2008 appointment of Drs. Kenneth Zucker and Raymond Blanchard of the Toronto Centre for Addiction and Mental Illness (CAMH) to lead the workgroup for sexual and gender identity disorders. They were key authors of the prior DSM-IV gender diagnoses and leading proponents of punitive gender conversion/reparative psychotherapies (no longer considered ethical practice in the current WPATH Standards of Care).

There are two major issues in transgender diagnostic policy. The first is a false stereotype that stigmatizes gender identities or expressions that differ from birth sex assignment with mental disease and sexual deviance. The second is access to medically necessary hormonal and/or surgical transition care, for those trans and transsexual people who need them. This access requires some kind of diagnostic coding, but not the current "disordered gender identity" label, which actually contradicts rather than supports medical transition care. It is necessary to address both issues together, to avoid harming one part of the trans community to benefit another.

Some of the proposed gender-related revisions in the DSM-5 are positive, however they do not go nearly far enough.
"Be yourself; everyone else is already taken." Oscar Wilde


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peky

Hi, Zythyra,

Thank you for the wonderful article, it is chuckfull of good information and links.

P
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Dorothy

Personally, I wouldn't want the diagnosis of Transvestic fetishism to be removed.  There are people who ARE indeed fetishistic ->-bleeped-<-s, and they need to be diagnosed as such.  If a person gets sexually aroused by wearing female clothing (panties, dresses, lingerie, high heels, etc) then that person is a fetishistic ->-bleeped-<-.  No rocket science here. 
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Padma

I think someone only warrants a diagnosis of FT if they identify as male but can *only* get aroused by wearing women's clothing. I don't see that just being male and finding wearing women's clothing a turn-on needs to be pathologised per se, my impression is lots of men fall into that spectrum without it being a "condition".
Womandrogyneâ„¢
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