Introduction
Editors:
Friedemann Pfäfflin,
Ulm University, Germany
Walter O. Bockting,
University of Minnesota, USA
Eli Coleman,
University of Minnesota, USA
Richard Ekins,
University of Ulster at Coleraine, UK
Dave King,
University of Liverpool, UK
Managing Editor:
Noelle N Gray,
University of Minnesota, USA
Editorial Assistant:
Erin Pellett,
University of Minnesota, USA
Editorial Board
Authors
Contents
Historic Papers
Info
Authors´Guidelines
© Copyright
Published by

ISSN 1434-4599
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Volume 2, Number 2, April - June 1998
PART TWO - A Brief Reference Guide to the Standards of Care
CAVEATIt is recommended that no one use this guide without consulting the full
text of the SOC (Part Three) which provides an explication of these concepts.
- Professional
involvement with patients with gender identity disorders involves any of the following
- The
Roles of the Mental Health Professional with the Gender Patient.
- The Training of Mental Health
Professionals
- The
Differences between Eligibility and Readiness Criteria for Hormones or Surgery
- The
Mental Health Professional's Documentation Letters for Hormones or Surgery Should
Succinctly Specify
- One-Letter is
Required for Instituting Hormone Treatment; Two-Letters are Required for Surgery
- Children with gender Identity
Disorders
- Treatment of Adolescents
- Psychtherapy with Adults
- The Real-Life Experience
- Eligibility
and Readness Criteria for Hormone Therapy adults
- Requirements for
Genital Reconstructive and Breast Surgery
- Surgery
I. Professional
involvement with patients with gender identity disorders involves any of the following:
- Diagnostic assessment
- Psychotherapy
- Real life experience
- Hormonal therapy
- Surgical therapy.
II. The Roles of
the Mental Health Professional with the Gender Patient. Mental health
professionals (MHP) who work with individuals with gender identity disorders may be
regularly called upon to carry out many of these responsibilities:
- To accurately diagnose the individual's gender disorder according to either the DSM-IV
or ICD-10 nomenclature
- To accurately diagnose any co-morbid psychiatric conditions and see to their appropriate
treatment
- To counsel the individual about the range of treatment options and their implications
- To engage in psychotherapy
- To ascertain eligibility and readiness for hormone and surgical therapy
- To make formal recommendations to medical and surgical colleagues
- To document their patient's relevant history in a letter of recommendation
- To be a colleague on a team of professionals with interest in the gender identity
disorders
- To educate family members, employers, and institutions about gender identity disorders
- To be available for follow-up of previously seen gender patients.
III. The Training of
Mental Health Professionals
- The Adult-Specialist
- basic clinical competence in diagnosis and treatment of mental or emotional disorders
- the basic clinical training may occur within any formally credentialing discipline--for
example, psychology, psychiatry, social work, counseling, or nursing.
- recommended minimal credentials for special competence with the gender identity
disorders:
master's degree or its equivalent in a clinical behavioral science field granted by
an institution accredited by a recognized national or regional accrediting board
specialized training and competence in the assessment of the DSM-IV/ICD-10 Sexual
Disorders (not simply gender identity disorders)
documented supervised training and competence in psychotherapy
continuing education in the treatment of gender identity disorders
B. The Child-Specialist
- training in childhood and adolescent developmental psychopathology.
- competence in diagnosing and treating the ordinary problems of children and adolescents
IV. The
Differences between Eligibility and Readiness Criteria for Hormones or Surgery.
- Eligibility
--the specified criteria that must be documented before moving to a next
step in a triadic therapeutic sequence (real life experience, hormones, and surgery)
- Readiness
--the specified criteria that rest upon the clinician's judgment prior to
taking the next step in a triadic therapeutic sequence
V. The
Mental Health Professional's Documentation Letters for Hormones or Surgery Should
Succinctly Specify:
- The patient's general identifying characteristics
- The initial and evolving gender, sexual, and other psychiatric diagnoses
- The duration of their professional relationship including the type of psychotherapy or
evaluation that the patient underwent
- The eligibility criteria that have been met and the MHP's rationale for hormones or
surgery
- The patient's ability to follow the Standards of Care to date and the likelihood of
future compliance
- Whether the author of the report is part of a gender team or is working without benefit
of an organized team approach
- The offer of receiving a phone call to verify that the documentation letter is authentic
VI. One-Letter
is Required for Instituting Hormone Treatment; Two-Letters are Required for Surgery
- Two separate letters of recommendation from mental health professionals who work alone
without colleagues experienced with gender identity disorders are required for surgery and
- If the first letter is from a person with a master's degree, the second letter should be
from a psychiatrist or a clinical psychologist--those who can be expected to adequately
evaluate co-morbid psychiatric conditions.
- If the first letter is from the patient's psychotherapist, the second letter should be
from a person who has only played an evaluative role for the patient. Each letter writer,
however, is expected to cover the same seven elements
- One letter with two signatures is acceptable if the mental health professionals conduct
their tasks and periodically report on these processes to a team of other mental health
professionals and nonpsychiatric physicians.
VII. Children with Gender
Identity Disorders
- The initial task of the child-specialist mental health professional is to provide
careful diagnostic assessments of gender-disturbed children.
- the child's gender identity and gender role behaviors, family dynamics, past traumatic
experiences, and general psychological health are separately assessed. Gender-disturbed
children differ significantly along these parameters.
- hormonal and surgical therapies should never be undertaken with this age group.
- treatment over time may involve family therapy, marital therapy, parent guidance,
individual therapy of the child, or various combinations.
- treatment should be extended to all forms of psychopathology, not simply the gender
disturbance.
VIII. Treatment of Adolescents
- In typical cases the treatment is conservative because gender identity
development can rapidly and unexpectedly evolve. Teenagers should be followed, provided
psychotherapeutic support, educated about gender options, and encouraged to pay attention
to other aspects of their social, intellectual, vocational, and interpersonal development.
- They may be eligible for beginning triadic therapy as early as age 18, preferably with
parental consent.
- Parental consent presumes a good working relationship between the mental health
professional and the parents, so that they, too, fully understand the nature of the GID.
- In many European countries sixteen to eighteen-year-olds are legal adults for medical
decision making, and do not require parental consent. In the United States, age 18 is
legal adulthood.
C. Hormonal Therapy for Adolescents. Hormonal treatment should be conducted in two
phases only after puberty is well established.
- in the initial phase biological males should be administered an antiandrogen (which
neutralize testosterone effects only) or an LHRH agonist (which stops the production of
testosterone only)
- biological females should be administered sufficient androgens, progestins, or LHRH
agonists (which stops the production of estradiol, estrone, and progesterone) to stop
menstruation.
- second phase treatments--after these changes have occurred and the adolescent's mental
health remains stable
- biologic males may be given estrogenic agents
- biologic females may be given higher masculinizing doses of androgens
- second phase medications produce irreversible changes
D. Prior to Age 18.In selected cases, the real life experience can begin at age 16,
with or without first phase hormones. The administration of hormones to adolescents
younger than age 18 should rarely be done.
- first phase therapies to delay the somatic changes of puberty are best carried out in
specialized treatment centers under supervision of, or in consultation with, an
endocrinologist, and preferably, a pediatric endocrinologist, who is part of an
interdisciplinary team.
- two goals justify this intervention
- to gain time to further explore the gender and other developmental issues in
psychotherapy
- to make passing easier if the adolescent continues to pursue gender change.
- in order to provide puberty delaying hormones to a person less than age 18, the
following criteria must be met
- throughout childhood they have demonstrated an intense pattern of cross-gender identity
and aversion to expected gender role behaviors
- gender discomfort has significantly increased with the onset of puberty
- social, intellectual, psychological, and interpersonal development are limited as a
consequence of their GID
- serious psychopathology, except as a consequence of the GID, is absent
- the family consents and participates in the triadic therapy
E. Prior to Age 16. Second phase hormones, those which induce opposite sex
characteristics should not be given prior to age 16 years.
F. Mental Health Professional Involvement is an Eligibility Requirement for Triadic
Therapy During Adolescence.
- To be eligible for the implementation of the real life experience or hormone therapy,
the mental health professional should be involved with the patient and family for a
minimum of six months.
- To be eligible for the recommendation of genital reconstructive surgery or mastectomy,
the mental health professional should be integrally involved with the adolescent and the
family for at least eighteen months.
- School-aged adolescents with gender identity disorders often are so uncomfortable due to
negative peer interactions and a felt incapacity to participate in the roles of
their biologic sex that they refuse to attend school.
- Mental health professionals should be prepared to work collaboratively with school
personnel to find ways to continue the educational and social development of their
patients.
IX. Psychotherapy with Adults
- Many adults with gender identity disorder find comfortable, effective ways of
identifying themselves without the triadic treatment sequence, with or without
psychotherapy
- Psychotherapy is not an absolute requirement for triadic therapy.
- Individual programs vary to the extent that they perceive the need for psychotherapy.
- When the mental health professional's initial assessment leads to a
recommendation for psychotherapy, the clinician should specify the goals of treatment,
estimate its frequency and duration.
- The SOC committee is wary of insistence on some minimum number of psychotherapy sessions
prior to the real life experience, hormones, or surgery but expects individual programs to
set these
- If psychotherapy is not done by members of a gender team, the psychotherapist should be
informed that a letter describing the patient's therapy may be requested so the patient
can move on to the next phase of rehabilitation.
- Psychotherapy often provides education about a range of options not previously seriously
considered by the patient. Its goals are:
- to be realistic about work and relationships
- to define and alleviate the patient's conflicts that may have undermined a stable
lifestyle and to attempt to create a long term stable life style
- to find a comfortable way to live within a gender role and body
- Even when the initial goals are attained, mental health professionals should discuss the
likelihood that no educational, psychotherapeutic, medical, or surgical therapy can
permanently eradicate all psychological vestiges of the person's original sex assignment
X. The Real-Life Experience
- Since changing one's gender role has immediate profound personal and social
consequences, the decision to do so should be preceded by an awareness of what these
familial, vocational, interpersonal, educational, economic, and legal consequences are
likely to be.
- When clinicians assess the quality of a person's real-life experience in the new gender
role, the following abilities are reviewed
- to maintain full or part-time employment
- to function as a student
- to function in community-based volunteer activity
- to undertake some combination of items 1-3
- to acquire a new (legal) first or last name
- to provide documentation that persons other than the therapist know that the patient
functions in the new gender role.
11. Eligibility
and Readiness Criteria for Hormone Therapy for Adults
- Three eligibility criteria exist.
- age 18 years
- demonstrable knowledge of what hormones medically can and cannot do and their social
benefits and risks
- Either
a documented real life experience should be undertaken for at least three
months prior to the administration of hormones Or
- a period of psychotherapy of a duration specified by the mental health professional
after the initial evaluation (usually a minimum of three months) should be undertaken
- under no circumstances should an person be provided hormones who has neither fulfilled
criteria #3 or #4.
- Three readiness criteria exist:
- the patient has had further consolidation of gender identity during the real-life
experience or psychotherapy
- the patient has made some progress in mastering other identified problems leading to
improving or continuing stable mental health
- hormones are likely to be taken in a responsible manner
- Hormones can be given for those who do not initially want surgery or a real life
experience. They must be appropriately diagnosed, however, and meet the criteria stated
above for hormone administration.
12. Requirements
for Genital Reconstructive and Breast Surgery
- Six eligibility criteria for various surgeries exist and equally apply to biological
males and biological females
- legal age of majority in the patient's nation
- 12 months of continuous hormonal therapy for those without a medical contraindication
- 12 months of successful continuous full time real-life experience. Periods of returning
to the original gender may indicate ambivalence about proceeding and should not be used to
fulfill this criterion
- while psychotherapy is not an absolute requirement for surgery for adults, regular
sessions may be required by the mental health professional throughout the real life
experience at a minimum frequency determined by the mental health professional.
- knowledge of the cost, required lengths of hospitalizations, likely complications, and
post surgical rehabilitation requirements of various surgical approaches.
- awareness of different competent surgeons
- Two readiness criteria exist
- demonstrable progress in consolidating the new gender identity
- demonstrable progress in dealing with work, family, and interpersonal issues resulting
in a significantly better or at least a stable state of mental health.
13. Surgery
- Genital, Breast, and Other Surgery for the Male to Female Patient
- Surgical procedures may include orchiectomy, penectomy, vaginoplasty, augmentation
mammaplasty, and vocal cord surgery.
- Vaginoplasty requires both skilled surgery and postoperative treatment. Three techniques
are: penile skin inversion, pedicled rectosigmoid transplant, or free skin graft to line
the neovagina
- Augmentation mammaplasty may be performed prior to vaginoplasty if the physician
prescribing hormones and the surgeon have documented that breast enlargement after
undergoing hormonal treatment for two years is not sufficient for comfort in the social
gender role. Other surgeries that may be performed to assist feminization include:
reduction thyroid chondroplasty, liposuction of the waist, rhinoplasty, facial bone
reduction, face-lift, and blephoroplasty.
- Genital and Breast Surgery for the Female to Male Patient.
- Surgical procedures may include mastectomy, hysterectomy, salpingo-oophorectomy,
vaginectomy metoidioplasty, scrotoplasty, urethroplasty, and phalloplasty.
- Current operative techniques for phalloplasty are varied. The choice of techniques may
be restricted by anatomical or surgical considerations. If the objectives of phalloplasty
are a neophallus of good appearance, standing micturition, and/or coital ability, the
patient should be clearly informed that there are both several separate stages of surgery
and frequent technical difficulties which require additional operations.
- Reduction mammaplasty may be necessary as an early procedure for some large breasted
individuals to make the real life experience feasible.
- Liposuction may be necessary for final body contouring
- Postsurgical Follow-up by Professionals.
- Long term postoperative follow-up is one of the factors associated with a good
psychosocial outcome.
- Follow-up is essential to the patient's subsequent anatomic and medical health and to
the surgeon's knowledge about the benefits and limitations of surgery
- Postoperative patients may incorrectly exclude themselves from follow-up with the
physician prescribing hormones as well as their surgeon and mental health professional.
- These clinicians are best able to prevent, diagnose and treat possible long term medical
conditions that are unique to the hormonally and surgically treated.
- Surgeons who are operating on patients who are coming from long distances should include
personal follow-up in their care plan.
- Continuing long term follow-up has to be affordable and available in the patient's
geographic region.
- Postoperative patients also have general health concerns and should undergo regular
medical screening according to recommended guidelines
- The need for follow-up extends beyond the endocrinologist and surgeon, however, to the
mental health professional, who having spent a longer period of time with the patient than
any other professional, is in an excellent position to assist in any post-operative
adjustment difficulties.
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