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Listening to Trans and Nonbinary People
An interesting article has been published in Psychology Today.
Here is an extract – the full article can be read on-line.
Key points
- Biology cannot explain everything about sex and gender.
- We need to create supportive systems for transgender and nonbinary people based on what they tell us.
- Science explains surprisingly little about what actually determines a person’s “true” sex and or gender.
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Chromosomes and Genes Cannot Explain Gender Orientation
People who oppose affirmative gender care sometimes insist that everyone is either male or female. Of course, this is not true. Sex is usually determined based on external characteristics that correlate with the presence or absence of X and Y sex chromosomes.
At birth, most infants have either two X chromosomes and have external characteristics traditionally associated with being female, or an X and a Y chromosome and have external characteristics traditionally associated with being male. But this is not always the case. For instance, about 1 in 2,500 newborn females have only one X chromosome, called Turner’s syndrome. Girls with Turner’s syndrome usually exhibit short stature and cannot conceive spontaneously.
A child can be born with two X chromosomes and one Y chromosome (XXY), a condition known as Klinefelter syndrome, which occurs in about 1 in 600 live male births. There are a variety of other variations from the typical XX/XY sex chromosome pattern, leading to different physical and emotional consequences.
Hence, simply knowing someone’s chromosomal pattern tells us very little about whether they will feel male or female and scientists have been cautioned against tying genetic information to gender orientation or treating sex as a binary variable.
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Brain Anatomy
If it is incorrect, then, to assume that sex chromosomes determine biological sex or gender identification, perhaps it is something in the brain that makes this distinction. Indeed, researchers have looked for differences in brain anatomy and function among people expressing various sexual and gender identities.
In a moving op-ed piece in The Washington Post, Jennifer Finney Boylan, an English Professor at Barnard College of Columbia University and fellow at Harvard University who is openly transgender, concluded: “What the research has found is that the brains of trans people are unique: neither female nor male exactly, but something distinct.” When we looked at one of the papers that Boylan cites to support this conclusion, however, we noted that it used a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) method of characterizing the physical structure of brains as either male or female, which is not universally accepted.
In fact, most scientists would agree that there is very little known at this time that helps us distinguish “male” from “female” brains. If you ask an expert to look at the MRI of a brain it is impossible to determine whether that brain is inside the head of a man or woman.
Asking People How They Feel Is Our Current Best Evidence
So, if we cannot use sex chromosomes or brain anatomy to tell us who is male and who is female, our best method is to ask people how they feel. Increasingly, interviews and surveys with transgender people tell us several things. First, people often recognize they have been assigned the wrong sex at birth at a very early age. Second, transgender youth, who do not undergo gender-affirming care, have high rates of depression and suicidal ideation and suicide attempts. Third, most transgender people who undergo gender-affirming care do not regret doing so.
The Washington Post recently ran a series of articles on transgender and nonbinary people based on a survey they conducted with the Kaiser Family Foundation. One finding of the study was that “One in three transgender adults was 20-years-old or younger when they began to understand that their gender was different from their sex assigned at birth.”
Interviews and polls like this suggest that transgender people often recognize early on that the sex assigned to them at birth was incorrect and that this was not due to influence from anyone else, but rather to a recognition of how they feel.
Studies have consistently shown that transgender and nonbinary youth have high rates of depression and suicidal ideation, in part because of bullying and social ostracism. But treatment with puberty blockers and gender-affirming hormones (GBH) results in marked improvement in mental health outcomes.
When The Washington Post surveyors interviewed middle-aged transgender people, they found that: “All said they felt relief once they made their transition.” Derek P. Siegel, a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, wrote in The Conversation: “From 2019 to 2021, I interviewed 54 transgender women—both current and prospective parents—from diverse racial and class backgrounds across the country. I found that while many have navigated discrimination in their parenting journeys, they also have fulfilling parent-child relationships, often with the support of partners, families of origin, and their communities.”
We need more systematic data on this, but at present evidence suggests that people do not regret having gender-affirming treatments, including transition surgery.
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psychologytoday.com
Listening to Trans and Nonbinary People
Science cannot yet tell us what determines sex and gender.
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