National Post

ONTARIO COURT FACES ODD GENITAL QUESTION

Ontarian wants public funding for non-binary surgery

- Sharon Kirkey

In a lengthy legal battle that could lead to more requests for customized and unorthodox gender-affirming surgeries, an Ontario resident is seeking publicly funded surgery to construct a vagina while preserving the penis.

The case reflects a small but growing demand for niche surgeries for people who identify as non-binary, meaning neither exclusivel­y female nor exclusivel­y male.

To critics, the procedures are risky experiment­s that illustrate “how far off the rails” gender-affirming medicine has gone and the excesses of “consumer-driven gender embodiment.”

“Our public health-care system is at the breaking point and really needs to focus on procedures that are medically necessary,” Pamela Buffone, founder of the parents’ group Canadian Gender Report, said in an email to the National Post.

“Is this type of surgery health care? The patient will not be physically healthier because of the operation, which is likely to result in complicati­ons and the need for corrective surgeries and further demands on the health system.”

LGBTQ rights groups say such surgeries can profoundly improve a person’s quality of life and reduce the distress and deep sense of unease from gender dysphoria. Health-care providers shouldn’t make assumption­s about what care may be medically necessary, Egale Canada argued in a written submission to the court.

“Ultimately OHIP’S interpreta­tion (of a vaginoplas­ty) is exclusiona­ry and discrimina­tes against non-binary people on the basis of their gender identity,” Egale said.

If there is any ambiguity in what should be publicly covered, it should be resolved in favour of the claimant, it said.

As National Post columnist Jamie Sarkonak first reported in September, the case involves 33-year-old K.S., as she is identified in court documents, who was born male but who identifies as female dominant and uses a feminine name.

Ontario’s Health Insurance Plan (OHIP) originally denied K.S.’S request in 2022 for funding for a penile sparing vaginoplas­ty, a procedure that isn’t available in Canada. The surgery was to be performed at the Crane Center for Transgende­r Surgery in Austin, Tex.

According to legal documents, K.S. argued that “to ignore ‘the other third’ of her and how she presents would be invalidati­ng; she is ‘both,’ not exclusivel­y one or the other but literally a mix.”

OHIP argued that, while it may be of medical benefit to K.S., a vaginoplas­ty without penectomy (removal of the penis) is considered an experiment­al procedure and isn’t listed as an insured service.

K.S. complained to Ontario’s Health Services Appeal and Review Board, which overturned OHIP’S decision, ruling that a vaginoplas­ty is among the 11 external genital surgeries listed for public coverage, and that it shouldn’t inherently include a penectomy.

OHIP appealed the decision to Ontario’s Superior Court of Justice. The case was heard in February. “We do not yet have a decision — it could still be months,” K.S.’S lawyer, John Mcintyre, said in an email.

K.S., who has experience­d gender dysphoria since a teen, doesn’t completely align with either the male or female genders, the appeal board heard. Her doctor, an Ottawa endocrinol­ogist, supported K.S.’S request for a specific type of bottom surgery.

“It is very important for (K.S.) to have a vagina for her personal interpreta­tion of her gender expression, but she also wishes to maintain her penis,” the doctor wrote in a letter to OHIP. “(K.S.) is transfemin­ine but not completely on the ‘feminine’ end of the spectrum (and) for this reason it’s important for her to have a vagina while maintainin­g a penis.”

K.S. argued that forcing a non-binary person to undergo binary surgery — male to female, or female to male — would only exacerbate her gender dysphoria and would be akin to an act of conversion therapy, which has been banned in Canada since 2022.

She also wishes to preserve her penis for sexual health reasons and out of concern the “urological rerouting” could create urinary incontinen­ce problems, a recognized complicati­on.

In its decision, the health services appeal tribunal referenced standards of care as set out by the influentia­l World Profession­al Associatio­n for Transgende­r Health, or WPATH, which considers a penile sparing vaginoplas­ty a valid treatment option. The board said it adopted the trans care group’s logic that “gender diverse presentati­ons may lead to individual­ly customized surgical requests some may consider ‘non-standard.’”

The Ontario health ministry said it doesn’t comment on matters before the courts. K.S. declined to comment. The Crane Center in Texas offers several non-binary surgical options. “We offer everything you could think of,” Dr. Curtis Crane, a plastic surgeon and reconstruc­tive urologist with fellowship training in transgende­r surgery, said during a Facebook live Q&A session three years ago.

Crane argues that vaginoplas­ty without penectomy surgery is not experiment­al. “I probably do 10 or so a year; it’s not uncommon,” he said in an interview.

Bodies with mixed genitalia “absolutely do exist in nature,” he added. “There are disorders of differenti­ation of sexual genitalia that will leave both parts.”

Techniques vary, but with the standard male-to-female vaginoplas­ty — penile inversion vaginoplas­ty — a vaginal canal is created and lined using penile tissue. “Next you would move on to surgically dissecting out the phallus, shortening the urethra and making a clitoris,” Crane said.

With penile preservati­on vaginoplas­ty, the vagina can be created using scrotal tissue or tissue from other parts of the body, like the abdomen or colon.

But Dr. Yonah Krakowsky, a staff urologist at Women’s College Hospital in Toronto and medical lead of the hospital’s transition-related surgeries program, told the review board that phallus-sparing vaginoplas­ties are considered experiment­al, published reports on the “functional or psychologi­cal outcomes” are lacking and that the surgical technique used in the process is poorly understood.

Crane said he couldn’t recall the cost of a penile preserving vaginoplas­ty. When Sarkonak, the Post’s columnist, called the Texas clinic, she was told gender-affirming surgeries can range from US$10,000 to US$70,000.

“If someone just has an agenda to say, ‘no,’ (to public funding), you can never compete with that,” Crane said.

Others said it’s hard to justify the public coverage when Canadians are facing lengthy wait lists for standard surgeries and diagnostic tests.

“It’s hard to call this actual health care,” said Dr. Roy Eappen, a Montreal endocrinol­ogist and senior fellow at Do No Harm, a medical and policy advocacy group.

“There is no evidence that it improves anything physically, and the evidence that it helps mental health is not there either.”

While more people are identifyin­g as non-binary, Crane said there are “plenty” of non-binary people who don’t want any surgery.

Eappen agreed. “I don’t know how many of them will want this kind of surgery. But I think this (case) would encourage them to ask. And I’m not sure we’re actually doing anyone a favour.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Appellant K.S. doesn’t completely align with either the male or female genders, the appeal board heard.
GETTY IMAGES Appellant K.S. doesn’t completely align with either the male or female genders, the appeal board heard.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada