Quote from: Starbuck on February 21, 2009, 11:22:19 PM
its 'giving the paitent quality of life' which is what so very many seemly 'vital' surgeries do... Hip replacements, pace makers, artificial synovial sacks, and arthritis surgeries are not 'life threatening' in the view of opponents. but they provide identical comfort to the recipiant, and allow them to live a functional life.... I'd love to see them challenge that tbh.... as there would be an uproar if they removed funding for say... Hip replacements and joint repair surgeries for those needing it.... well, they can have a wheelchair cant they? i think not.
It comes, at least in America, from an early theory put forth by a co-founder of the Gender Identity Clinic at Johns Hopkins, who had "tabula rasa" inclinations. He felt the mind of the infant comes into this world having no inherent personality characteristics.
He advocated treating intersexed babies with "corrective surgeries" converting their genitals so they resembled, well whatever was easier- usually vaginas, then raising the child accordingly. Eventually this became the accepted practice of the time.
This theory also would have suggested transsexualism must be a learned trait, which as such should be possible to unlearn. So surgeries to fix the bodies rather than the brain certainly didn't seem like the only option, and this gave insurance companies the ammunition to make exclusions for the treatment.
Unfortunately, the blank slate theories, especially pertaining to gender identity, have been proven completely wrong by now, as (among other things) this follow-up study on some of those children who were surgically turned into the wrong sex shows:
http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/conway/TS/HopkinsStudy.htmlNot surprisingly, the insurance companies haven't taken the initiative to remove the exceptions from their policies in spite of all the new evidence.