The Star Malaysia

Ban genital surgery on intersex children, says US rights group

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NEW YORK: Genital surgery should be banned on children whose sex characteri­stics are ambiguous because the procedures can scar young patients for life and be considered human rights violations, a leading rights group said.

Several hundred so-called intersex children in the United States have undergone sex reassignme­nt surgery in recent years, and worldwide, doctors recommend surgery for an estimated one in every 2,000 intersex babies, US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) and interACT, an advocacy group, said yesterday.

Surgeries to make them resemble more typical boys or girls include removal of testes or ovaries, deepening shallow vaginas and enlarging small penises, they said in a report.

They called for a US moratorium on all surgical procedures on intersex children too young to participat­e in the decision.

The surgeries amount to “human rights abuse taking place in a medical setting,” said Kyle Knight, a HRW researcher.

“These surgeries are medically unnecessar­y, they are harmful and they haven’t delivered on the outcomes that were originally theorised,” he said.

The report said the benefits of sex reassignme­nt surgery remain unproven but the resulting harm can be catastroph­ic.

Surgery can cause life-long pain, sterilisat­ion, loss of sexual sensation and health complicati­ons, it said.

Some 1.7% of the world’s population, or 127.5 million people, is thought to be born intersex, accord- ing to the report.

But detailed data on the US intersex population, once called hermaphrod­ites, is largely lacking, Knight noted.

The surgeries’ popularity dates back to 1960s’ research which concluded intersex people could be assigned typical male or female genitals if operated on early in their infancy, HRW and interACT said.

In a recent open letter cited by the report, three former US Surgeons General said plastic surgeries on genital organs “can cause ... emotional distress.”

Efforts to warn medical doctors about the risks have been ongoing since the 1990s but met with mixed success, the report said.

It did find that a growing number of doctors are opposed to recommendi­ng surgery on intersex babies unless medically necessary, the report said after interviewi­ng nearly two dozen health care practition­ers.

Various United Nations’ agencies have condemned the practice as violating fundamenta­l human rights. — Reuters

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