Help Ban Genital Cosmetic Surgery on Children

Learn the facts about genital cosmetic surgery performed on children and use your influence as a healthcare professional to help make a difference in the lives of these children.

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Help Ban Genital Cosmetic Surgery on Children

Reports of young girls in distant northeastern African countries pinned to the ground by female relatives and subjected to female genital mutilation with razors wielded by village circumcisers to satisfy the social norms of their cultures persist. Disturbing and shocking, thankfully this custom is unheard of in our country. 

But cosmetic genital surgery is a standard of care performed in hospitals across the United States on intersex babies. Surgery performed for the sole purpose of changing the appearance of non-standard sexual anatomy in order to satisfy social norms.  Social surgeries.

Intersex

What is intersex? An umbrella term for people born with variations in their sexual anatomy, intersex is when the external genitalia, reproductive organs, chromosomes and hormones fail to align in the expected binary fashion. It’s estimated 1-2% of babies are born with intersex traits but the incidence is not tracked. Many people do not know they have intersex characteristics until puberty, adulthood, or when an unrelated surgery incidentally reveals opposite sex organs, such as ovaries discovered in a male. 

At birth, doctors proclaim, “It’s a boy!” or “It’s a girl!” at first sight. But when a newborn infant presents with a small member combined with undescended testicles, that member could be deemed an enlarged privy parts. Is the newborn a male or female? It’s an untenable question. We can’t handle genital ambiguity. To be told their baby is neither clearly male nor female is terrifying to parents. 

But in the absence of pathology, surgery is not the solution to parenteral distress.  Humans are diverse in every way possible but as interACT: Advocates for Intersex Youth point out, being different does not mean being diseased.

Gender-normalizing Surgery

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Termed “gender normalizing” by those who believe that sexual anomalies need fixing, these concealment-centered surgeries are often shrouded in secrecy, thus instilling shame.

The goal is to make these infants look as female or male as possible. Most babies are surgically re-designed to look like females as it’s considered easier to take away than to add. This may include redirecting the urethra, reducing the privy parts and creating a lady parts (infant vaginoplasty). Gonads and ovaries may be removed.

It sounds horrific but the initial surgery is only the beginning. There are usually multiple surgeries coupled with complications that include incontinence, sterility, and lack of sensation. Lifelong hormone replacement therapy is needed and many are left with significant scarring. Artificial lady partss need to be dilated regularly throughout infancy and childhood, causing emotional distress and physical discomfort.

Repeated exposure to anesthesia can have harmful effects on developing brains.

Dr. John Money: Case Study

This old but still prevalent concealment-centered treatment gained traction in the 1950s largely due to Dr. John Money, a psychologist affiliated with Johns Hopkins. He believed that children with “unfinished genitals” could easily be made into whichever sex was decided. It didn’t matter which sex one was born. What mattered was convincing genitalia.

The decision-makers for surgery were the doctor and the parents, with the doctor carrying a bias of authority. Parents have later said they weren’t given all the information needed and were unduly influenced at a time of heightened anxiety to make a decision in favor of surgery. Indeed, the situation was sometimes presented as a psycho-social emergency demanding immediate action if the child was to ever have a normal life.

One of Dr. Money’s patients was David Reimer, an identical twin boy born in 1965, whose member was completely destroyed in a botched circumcision. Eager to experiment with his nurture over nature theory, Dr. Money recommended sex-rearing David as a girl, assuring the devastated parents that as long as they started at an early age and never wavered, David need never be told he was born male.

Despite being called Brenda Lee, despite wearing frilly dresses and given dolls, despite the removal of his testes and the addition of a lady parts, Brenda acted like a boy, walked like a boy, sat like a boy, and even insisted on standing up to urinate like a boy. His childhood was marked by dreaded and traumatizing trips to Johns Hopkins, where he endured repeated medical genital examinations and exhibitions. He suffered deep confusion, humiliation and shame. Brenda finally changed his name to David and insisted on living as a boy at age 15.  

After a tragically tormented life marked by failed relationships and severe depression, David died of suicide by gunshot at the age of thirty-eight. Collateral damage included David’s twin brother Brian, who died of an overdose of antidepressants at the age of thirty-six. 

CA Senate Bill 225

Senate Bill 225, introduced by Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco bans 4 types of non-medically required surgery on children under the age of 6.  Known as the Bodily Autonomy, Dignity and Choice Act, it’s civil rights on behalf of infants.

According to the Gender and Sexuality Development Clinic at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, a sense of gender identity starts between 3 and 5 years of age.

The bill delays all non-essential procedures until the child can participate in the decision and the parents have had time to absorb the information and sort out the situation.

California Medical Association (CMA) Opposition

Thus far, the CMA has been a powerful opponent. Despite the lack of evidence for nurture over nature, and despite evidence that surgery can cause unwanted irreversible conditions, CMA has opposed the bill.

But progress and momentum have begun. The new model calls for patient-centered care, not concealment-centered care. Two premier pediatric hospitals, Boston Children’s Hospital of Massachusetts and a Harvard teaching hospital, and Lurie Hospital of Chicago have ceased doing surgeries.  Lurie Hospital even apologized for what they call an “approach (that) was harmful and wrong”.

Help Do No Harm

Advocates and human rights groups recommend waiting until the child can participate in the decision. Medically unnecessary, irreversible procedures should be delayed. Teams of Difference of Sex Development (DSD) experts can provide sensitive and non-discriminatory care.

Join the World Health Organization, three former U.S. surgeons general and Human Rights Watch, the American Academy of Family Physicians, in calling for the end of these surgeries until research shows clear evidence of benefit. 

Similar legislation to CA SB 225 is expected in New York.

L&D nurses everywhere should educate themselves about the issue, identify their beliefs and provide support to their patients. CA residents, contact your CA State Assemblymember using Find My Rep and ask for their vote on SB 225. 

Thanks for reading this and your support is appreciated. I would love to hear your thoughts on this topic.

Nurse Beth,

Author, First-Year Nurse and How to Land Your First Nursing Job...and your next!


References

Colapinto, J. (2000). As nature made him: The boy who was raised as a girl. Toronto: HarperCollins Publishers.

Gutierrez, Melody. A new effort to ban cosmetic genital surgery on children launches in California legislature. 2021.  Retrieved January 16, 2021 

Intersex Care at Lurie Children’s and Our Sex Development Clinic. 2020. Retrieved Jan 11, 2020

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Hi! Nice to meet you! I especially love helping new nurses. I am currently a nurse writer with a background in Staff Development, Telemetry and ICU.

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I agree with the overall sentiment of the article. Profoundly poignant and exquisitely written, especially for a first year nurse. I was reluctant to comment on this one for a variety of reasons. Nonetheless, I had to scratch the itch. Is circumcision part of the list of cosmetic surgeries? 

Specializes in retired LTC.

Found this article very interesting. I would like to comment that I think (???) female circumcision may still be being secretly performed in some highly ethic societies within the US. Fortunately, I believe the practice is RARE, altho I admit, I'm not positive. The topic has been presented on several crime TV drama shows, so I would believe that it is known to law & health officials.

I say this in that I honestly would need to do my research to validate my above statement. But otherwise, I found the rest of this article informative and eye-opening to say the least. TY  

   

Specializes in Nurse Leader specializing in Labor & Delivery.

I too am wondering about newborn male elective genital cosmetic surgery, I.e. routine infant circumcision.

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.

klone and cynical- The ban is for only 4 surgeries-clitoroplasty, vaginoplasty, gonadectomy, and procedures to lengthen or reroute a urethra.

It doesn't affect male circumcision

14 minutes ago, amoLucia said:

Found this article very interesting. I would like to comment that I think (???) female circumcision may still be being secretly performed in some highly ethic societies within the US. Fortunately, I believe the practice is RARE, altho I admit, I'm not positive. The topic has been presented on several crime TV drama shows, so I would believe that it is known to law & health officials.

I say this in that I honestly would need to do my research to validate my above statement. But otherwise, I found the rest of this article informative and eye-opening to say the least. TY  

   

You are right, how awful! 

1 hour ago, Nurse Beth said:

klone and cynical- The ban is for only 4 surgeries-clitoroplasty, vaginoplasty, gonadectomy, and procedures to lengthen or reroute a urethra.

Thank you. Assuming that these procedure are devoid of appropriate health benefits, it is beyond my moral comprehension why anyone would subject an infant to such cosmetic procedures. If anyone has a contrarian POV, I’d love to learn why anyone would allow their children to undergo such procedures. I try to be open-minded and my thoughts are always subject to change in the face of new evidence to the contrary of my thinking. I yearn to shed ignorance on this matter. Someone educate me, please. 

Specializes in Mental health, substance abuse, geriatrics, PCU.
2 hours ago, cynical-RN said:

Thank you. Assuming that these procedure are devoid of appropriate health benefits, it is beyond my moral comprehension why anyone would subject an infant to such cosmetic procedures. If anyone has a contrarian POV, I’d love to learn why anyone would allow their children to undergo such procedures. I try to be open-minded and my thoughts are always subject to change in the face of new evidence to the contrary of my thinking. I yearn to shed ignorance on this matter. Someone educate me, please. 

The desire to be "normal" and to have "normal" offspring is a powerful influence on people's decisions. Back in decades gone by, physicians wouldn't even tell the parents their baby was intersexed, they'd just go ahead and do the "corrective" surgery. Another tactic that some physicians used in the old days was presenting to the parents what a horrible life the child will have if not surgically "corrected". We can say thank you to patriarchial practice of medicine in those days for the damage it caused to intersexed children. 

When it comes to sex and gender, people have a hard time with things not being black and white.

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.
3 hours ago, TheMoonisMyLantern said:

The desire to be "normal" and to have "normal" offspring is a powerful influence on people's decisions. Back in decades gone by, physicians wouldn't even tell the parents their baby was intersexed, they'd just go ahead and do the "corrective" surgery. Another tactic that some physicians used in the old days was presenting to the parents what a horrible life the child will have if not surgically "corrected". We can say thank you to patriarchial practice of medicine in those days for the damage it caused to intersexed children. 

When it comes to sex and gender, people have a hard time with things not being black and white.

Yes, as you say, a very powerful desire to make things normal. And parents can't be faulted for wanting to believe in a quick solution. But the medical profession has a responsibility to avoid doing irreversible procedures that can be delayed.

 I applaud Senator Wiener for bringing it forward.

Specializes in ICU.

Why is male circumcision OK? I also believe this is genital mutilation. 

4 minutes ago, Psychnursehopeful said:

Why is male circumcision OK? I also believe this is genital mutilation. 

As a circumcised male, I don’t consider myself mutilated. Nonetheless, I respect our divergent views on the matter. 
 

To expand further, is abortion (with the exception of rape, incest, and saving the mother’s life) considered a cosmetic procedure done for convenience rather than health reasons? 

Specializes in ICU.
6 hours ago, cynical-RN said:

As a circumcised male, I don’t consider myself mutilated. Nonetheless, I respect our divergent views on the matter. 
 

To expand further, is abortion (with the exception of rape, incest, and saving the mother’s life) considered a cosmetic procedure done for convenience rather than health reasons? 

Cosmetic abortion? I can't follow your down that rabbit hole it's such a stretch. I would ask you to view male circumcision from a research/ ebp pov. Divorce yourself from the issue and really dig into it. I consider it purely cosmetic.  What other piece of tissue is removed for such limited benefit?

Specializes in Nurse Leader specializing in Labor & Delivery.
8 hours ago, cynical-RN said:

As a circumcised male, I don’t consider myself mutilated. Nonetheless, I respect our divergent views on the matter. 
 

To expand further, is abortion (with the exception of rape, incest, and saving the mother’s life) considered a cosmetic procedure done for convenience rather than health reasons? 

And I've spoken to several women who have had the infibulation procedure who likewise do not feel mutilated.

And no, abortion is not considered a "cosmetic" procedure. Are you ***ing kidding me? Please don't throw red herrings in, okay? If you want to have an abortion discussion, start a new thread. This is about infant genital mutilation. Full stop.