Current:Home > StocksWhere gender-affirming care for youth is banned, intersex surgery may be allowed -Wealth Legacy Solutions
Where gender-affirming care for youth is banned, intersex surgery may be allowed
View
Date:2025-04-18 01:12:26
Multiple U.S. states have banned gender-affirming care for transgender people under the age of 18 this year alone. Indiana and Idaho are the latest to do so.
But in some states, "gender-normalizing surgeries" are allowed on intersex infants with "ambiguous sex characteristics." (That's the case in Georgia, Kentucky, and South Carolina.)
Those "ambiguous" characteristics apply to an estimated 1.7% of the world's population who are born intersex.
External characteristics of intersex may include underdeveloped genitals, which is a symptom of partial androgen insensitivity syndrome.
Sean Saifa Wall knows intimately the impact of this syndrome, and of the surgery he says he did not approve. Wall was 13 years old when doctors alerted his mother that his undescended testicles were cancerous. His mother opted to have them removed. But he did not have cancer.
"I received my medical record at 25. They were not cancerous," he told NPR's Leila Fadel in an interview.
Even in 2013, the United Nations called for an end to "genital-normalizing" surgeries like the one performed on Wall. Six years later, the organization continues to condemn operations on intersex youth, calling them "coercive" and "medically unnecessary."
Wall says of his operation: "Essentially, I referred to it as a castration... I wish that someone would have asked me what I wanted to do. I wish someone would have explained to me in the language that I can understand at the time of being a 13-year-old child. This is what's happening with your body."
The language he uses to condemn coercive "gender-normalizing" surgeries and the "talking points of the intersex movement," Wall says, have been used against young people who are transgender.
"This is so bizarre, right?" Wall said. "You have these trans young people who are very confident in who they are ... and they're being actively denied affirming health care. Whereas intersex children do not get to consent about the surgeries that they have."
The Societies for Pediatric Urology's most updated stance on the topic does not advocate for a ban on all surgery on intersex children: "A moratorium on all surgery would be as harmful as recommending surgery for all," it says.
Sean Saifa Wall spoke to NPR's Leila Fadel about how laws banning gender-affirming care for transgender youth have impacted young people with intersex characteristics.
This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.
Interview highlights
On the language in bills banning gender-affirming care for transgender youth
A lot of the language that's in the bills that de-transitioners are using: saying that they were mutilated, saying that these were medically unnecessary. I'm just like – medically unnecessary surgeries are actually happening to intersex young people. ... That's very compelling language that conservatives are actually using to describe ... these gender affirming procedures that trans young people are getting. And that's just not true.
On the difference between transgender and intersex individuals
I think the biggest difference is consent. They're trans young people who are like, "these experiences during puberty are making me feel uncomfortable, and I want to be able to stop that." Intersex young people don't get to make those decisions about their bodies. It's more so, we're told that these procedures need to be done for our wellness. But what is underlying that, is that we're actually abnormal, that we actually need to be fixed to be normal. And those are just lies, and it's paranoia.
On regulating care for transgender and intersex children
Every case is very unique, and I think what's happening now is that there is a broad stroke applied to all people with intersex variations. I do feel like there should be ... a case by case basis as opposed to just doctors being the arbiters of a person's gender identity — a person's body. I think doctors should ... be accountable for why these procedures are being done.
What's often happening is that parents are seeing surgeons before they're actually getting psychological support, affirming health care for intersex children as actually being compassionate, and actually treating each case differently. And that is not what's happening.
Taylor Haney produced the audio version of this story. Miranda Kennedy edited the digital version.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Michigan makes college football history in win over Maryland
- How do you make peace with your shortcomings? This man has an answer
- Florida State QB Jordan Travis out with leg injury, No. 4 Seminoles rout North Alabama 58-13
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Cook drives No. 11 Missouri to winning field goal with 5 seconds left for 33-31 victory over Florida
- More than a foot of snow, 100 mph wind gusts possible as storm approaches Sierra Nevada
- Hungary’s Orbán says Ukraine is ‘light years away’ from joining the EU
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Romania clinches Euro 2024 spot with 2-1 victory over Israel
Ranking
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- Century-overdue library book is finally returned in Minnesota
- Memphis police search for suspect after 4 female victims killed and 1 wounded in 3 linked shootings
- You'll L.O.V.E. What Ashlee Simpson Says Is the Key to Her and Evan Ross' Marriage
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Residents battling a new train line in northern Mexico face a wall of government secrecy
- Israel shows photos of weapons and a tunnel shaft at Gaza's Al-Shifa hospital as search for Hamas command center continues
- COMIC: What it's like living with an underactive thyroid
Recommendation
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
A Chinese man is extradited from Morocco to face embezzlement charges in Shanghai
Shedeur Sanders battered, knocked out of Colorado football game against Washington State
One woman's controversial fight to make America accept drug users for who they are
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
Amazon Has Thousands of Black Friday 2023 Deals, These Are the 50 You Can’t Miss
Arkansas man used losing $20 scratch-off ticket to win $500,000 in play-it-again game
Inside the Surreal Final Months of Princess Diana's Life