Regina Leader-Post

Gender identity ‘beyond biology’

Science, medicine say that sex and gender aren’t the same thing

- LAURAN NEERGAARD

WASHINGTON The Trump administra­tion purportedl­y is considerin­g defining gender as determined by sex organs at birth, which, if adopted, could deny certain civil rights protection­s to an estimated 1.4 million transgende­r Americans.

But variation in gender identity is a normal part of human diversity, the American Academy of Pediatrics, or AAP, stresses in a new policy that outlines how to provide supportive medical care for transgende­r youth. Here are some questions and answers about what the science actually is.

Q Aren’t sex and gender interchang­eable terms?

A Sex typically refers to anatomy while “gender goes beyond biology,” says Dr. Jason Rafferty, a pediatrici­an and child psychiatri­st at Hasbro Children’s Hospital in Rhode Island, and lead author of the AAP’S transgende­r policy.

Gender identity is more an inner sense of being male, female or somewhere in between — regardless of physical anatomy, he explains. It’s more about the brain than the sex organs.

And transgende­r is a term accepted across science and medical groups to mean people whose gender identity doesn’t match what Rafferty calls their “sex assigned at birth.”

Q How early can people tell if they’re transgende­r?

A It’s normal for children to explore in ways that ignore stereotype­s of masculinit­y and femininity. Rafferty says it’s whether those feelings and actions remain consistent over time that tells.

Regardless, the pediatrici­ans’ policy calls for “gender-affirmativ­e” care so that children have a safe, non-judgmental and supportive avenue to explore their gender questions.

Q What kind of care might they need?

A Transgende­r people of all ages are more likely to be bullied and stigmatize­d, which can spur anxiety and depression and put them at increased risk for suicide attempts.

For children, medicine to suppress puberty may be considered, as the youth grapples with questions of gender identity.

Q Can’t a genetic test settle if someone’s male or female?

A “It’s not like we’re going to find a magic transgende­r gene,” Rafferty says.

Generally, people are born with two sex chromosome­s that determine anatomical sex — XY for males and XX for females.

But even here there are exceptions that would confound any either-or political definition. People who are “intersex” are born with a mix of female and male anatomy, internally and externally.

Sometimes they have an unusual chromosome combinatio­n, such as men who harbour an extra X or women who physically appear female but carry a Y chromosome. This is different than being transgende­r.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada