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Volume 2, Number 2, April - June 1998 The Royal College of PsychiatristsGender Identity Disorders in Children and Adolescents
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© 1998 The Royal College of Psychiatrists. |
Citation: The Royal College of Psychiatrists, Council Report CR63, January 1998 (1998), Gender Identity Disorders in Children and Adolescents. IJT II,2, http://www.symposion.com/ijt/ijtc0402.htm
The authors are Domenico Di Ceghe, Claire Sturge and Adrian Sutton, and the guidance was drafted on behalf of the Executive Committee of the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Section of the Royal College of Psychiatrists.
The following professionals participated to an informal consultative meeting about this guidance following an international conference 'A Stranger In My Own Body - Atypical Gender Identity Development and Mental Health' in November 1996.
Domenico Di Ceglie (Chairman), GIDU Port:man Clinic, London
Susan Bradley, Clarke Institute, Toronto, Canada
Caroline Brain, St George's Hospital, London
Susan Coates, Columbia University, New York, USA
Peggy Cohen-Kettenis, University Hospital, Utrecht, The Netherlands
Richard Green, GIC Charing Cross Hospital, London
Peter Hül, St George's Hospital, London
Bern Meyenburg, Frankfurt University, Germany
Don Montgomery, GIC Charing Cross Hospital, London
Friedemann Pfafflin, Ulm University, Germany
Claire Sturge, Northwick Park Hospital, London
Katherine Weinberg, Harvard Medical School and Children's Hospital, Boston, USA
Peter Wilson, Young Minds, London
Gender identity disorders in children and
adolescents are rare and complex conditions. They are often associated with emotional and
behavioural difficulties. Intense distress is often experienced, particularly in
adolescence.
Gender identity disorders can be seen as states in which, in the course of the young
person's psychosexual development, there is an atypical gender identity organisation. The
young person experiences their phenotypic sex as incongruous with his or her own sense of
gender identity.
This predicament which is commoner in boys, is characterised by:
It is important to consider these states as different from those seen in adults because:
(a) A developmental process is involved (physical, psychological and sexual).
(b) There is greater fluidity and variability in the outcome, with only a small proportion becoming transsexuals or transvestites, the majority of affected. children eventually developing a homosexual orientation and some a heterosexual orientation without transvestism or transsexualism.
Similarly, pre-pubertal and post-pubertal groups need to
be differentiated.
There is greater fluidity and fikelihood of change in the former.
Phenomenologically there is a qualitative difference between the way such children and
young people present their predicament from presentations involving delusions or other
psychotic symptoms. Delusional beliefs about the sexual body or gender can occur in
psychotic conditions but they can be distinguished from the phenomena of a gender identity
disorder as outhned in this paper.
There are issues of nosology because current classification systems seern to suggest that
gender identity disorders in chüdhood are equivalent to those in adulthood and that the
one inevitably leads to the other. This is not the case.
Psychological and social interventions
In terms of management, we propose the following broad
guidance.
1. A full assessment including a family evaluation is essential as other emotional and behavioural problems are very common and unresolved issues in the child's enviromnent are often present e.g. loss. Separation problems are particularly common in the younger group.
2. Therapy should aim to assist development, particularly that of gender identity, by exploring the nature and characteristics of the atypical organisation of the child's or adolescent's gender identity. It should focus on ameliorating the comorbid problems and difficulties in the child's life and in reducing the distress being experienced by the child (from his or her gender identity problem and other difficulties).
3. Recognition and acceptance of the gender identity problem and removing the secrecy can bring considerable rehef.
4. Decisions about the extent to which to allow the child to assume a gender role congruous to his or her sense of gender identity are difficult and the child and family need support in tolerating uncertainty and anxiety in relation to the gender identity development and how best to manage it.
This includes problems of whether to inform others of the child's disorder and how others e.g. schools, in the child's life, should respond to the child (for example, if the child wishes to attend school using the cloflüng and name of the other sex). Professional network meetings can be very useful in finding appropriate solutions to these problems.
In all the above, therapeutic intervention as early as
possible in a child's life is indicated and an opfimistic approach to improving the
child's life and, in some cases, altering secondarily the gender identity development.
The role of the child and adolescent mental health services may be three-fold:
Physical intervention
This should be addressed in the context of adolescent
development. Identity issues and beliefs in adolescents are complex. They may become
firmly held and strongly expressed. This may give a false impression of irreversibility;
more fluidity may retum again at a later stage. For this reason, Le. the possibility of
change of outcome, and because the effect of early physical and hormonal treatments are
unknown, physical interventions should be delayed as long as it is clinically appropriate.
Before any physical intervention is considered, extensive exploration of the issues to do
with the psychological, farnily and social network aspects should be undertaken.
Pressure for physical interventions because of an adolescent's level of distress
can be great and in such
circumstances" a referral to a child and adolescent multi-disciplinary specialist
service should be considered.
In order for adolescents and those with parental responsibility to make properly informed
decisions, it is recommended that they have experience of themselves in the post-pubertal
state of their biological sex. Where, for clinical reasons, it is thought to be in the
patient's interest to intervene before this, this must be managed within a speciafist
service with paediatric endocrinological advice and more than one psychiatric opinion.
Broadly, physical interventions fall into three groups which can be thought of as
stages:
(a) Interventions which are wholly reversible - these include hypothalamic blockers which result in suppression of oestrogen or testosterone production. They can suppress some aspects of secondary sexual characteristics.
(b) Interventions which are partially reversible - these include hormonal interventions which masculinise or feminise the Sody. Reversal may involve surgical intervention.
(c) Interventions w.hich are irreversible - these are the surgical procedures.
The decision to move to physical interventions should be
made, whenever possible, within the context of a multi-discipfinary specialist service
including a child and adolescent psychiatrist, a paediatric endocrinologist and other
child and adolescent mental health professionals.
The staged process recommended here is considered safe as it keeps options open through
the first two stages. (A small minority of patients eventually come to regret gender
reassignment.) Moving from one stage to another should not occur until there has been
adequate time for the young person fully to assimilate the effects of intervention to
date. Interventions which are irreversible (surgical procedures) should not be carried out
prior to adulthood at age 18. As adulthood is reached, any referral on should be to an
adult gender identity specialist service. Any surgical interverition should not be carried
out prior to adulthood, or prior to a real life experience for the young person of living
in the gender role of the sex with which they identify for at least two years. The
threshold of 18 should be seen as an ehgibility criterion and not an indicator in itself
for more active intervention as the needs of many adults may also be best met by a
cautious, evolving approach.
Gender identity disorders in children and adolescents:
A large element of management is promoting
the young person's tolerance of uncertainty and resisting pressures for quick solutions.
Surgical intervention cannot be justified until adulthood.
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