Hindustan Times (Delhi)

The making of a standard protocol

NEED OF THE HOUR Healthcare providers have no guidelines on gender affirmativ­e care and sex reassignme­nt surgeries, says the transgende­r community. A look at one hospital team’s initiative to counter this

- Dhamini Ratnam dhamini.ratnam@htlive.com

Aday before Sameera Jahagirdar was wheeled in for her surgery at the Mahatma Gandhi Medical College and Research Institute (MGMCRI) in Puducherry, where she has been an anaestheti­st since 2006, she finally wore a churidar kurta to work. On November 4, 2016, Jahagirdar sat on the other side of the desk, not as a doctor, but as a client. Not in a shirt and pant, but in a bright blue kurta, a white dupatta draped over her shoulder. “It was wonderful. I was so happy telling my colleagues that I will be undergoing surgery tomorrow.”

Jahagirdar, who turns 40 this month, is one of several people who has undergone Gender Affirmativ­e (GA) surgery at this Puducherry hospital, which is run by a charitable trust and has a well-regarded teaching institute attached to it. Since 2010, the local transgende­r women community — have attended the transgende­r clinic that was started out of the department of Dermatolog­y, Venereolog­y and Leprology (DVL). Four years later, the hospital began to offer GA surgeries, alternativ­ely known as Sex Reassignme­nt Surgery (SRS), which helps align the body to the gender that a person identifies with. Two years ago, the hospital brought out an ‘SRS Protocol’, which was devised by Jahagirdar herself — she was the first to be operated under it.

Jahagirdar consulted community activists, administra­tive officials and legal experts, and studied the World Profession­al Associatio­n for Transgende­r Health (WPATH) Standards of Care document, which offers a detailed understand­ing of surgical and non-surgical health interventi­ons for transgende­r persons.

The WPATH is an internatio­nal notfor-profit group that promotes an understand­ing of gender dysphoria — the discomfort or distress that is caused by a discrepanc­y between a person’s gender identity and their sex assigned at birth (and associated sex characteri­stics). Gender dysphoria is listed in the diagnostic statistica­l manual of mental disorders, which is followed by mental health profession­als the world over. The process of transition­ing — or changing one’s gender — itself is not uniform. It could involve hormone therapy, and/or different kinds of surgery, which are based on an individual’s needs. It could also involve non-surgical interventi­ons, such as laser treatment for hair removal, or chest binding. Generally, it is acceptable practice for surgeons and endocrinol­ogists to ask for a psychiatri­c diagnosis of gender dysphoria if their client wishes to seek surgical and medical treatment for transition­ing.

But dysphoria is not a sign of someone being inherently disordered — worldwide, experts are now considerin­g chang- distinguis­h between intersex variations and transgende­r identities. See both as gender, body diversity. Not pathology

non-discrimina­tory, free access to healthcare, one of which is Gender Affirmativ­e (GA) surgery ing the term to gender incongruen­ce.

Jahagirdar recalls feeling the incongruen­ce from the time she was a child, realising that she was not a girl only when she saw a cousin, who was a girl, bathing. However, it was only in her 30s that Jahagirdar opted for hormone therapy — shots of estrogen and progestero­ne — that feminise the appearance.

In 2016, she decided to undergo surgery. “SRS is not a simple one-time surgery. It requires all medical profession­als involved to be non-judgmental, post-operative care, and proper pain alleviatio­n. So it can’t involve just one surgeon, but all the profession­als who are necessary to make the process possible have to be on board,” says Jahagirdar.

FIRST STEP

She stitched together a ‘Gender Care Team’, which comprises a dermatolog­ist, a psychiatri­st, two general surgeons, an obstetrici­an, an anaesthesi­ologist (Jahagirdar herself), a legal expert, a community representa­tive, Sheetal (who only goes by one name, and is the ‘nayak’ or head of the groups in Puducherry), and the deputy medical superinten­dent of the institute Dr Swati Pawar.

The team is missing an endocrinol­ogist. The protocol offers a five-step process: self-identifica­tion as transgende­r, psychiatri­c assessment, counsellin­g by surgeons, psychiatri­c certificat­ion, and clearance by the anaestheti­c department. It also provides prototypes of the legal documents necessary, such as a notarised affidavit confirming change of gender and a consent and waiver of liability form.

Since Jahagirdar’s surgery, 70 more have been conducted on from Tamil Nadu, garh and Bihar, and from Maharashtr­a. What’s common to these clients is that all were assigned male at birth. Thus, these surgeries are referred to as Male to Female, or MTF, surgeries. Till date, the hospital has conducted only three mastectomi­es ( breast tissue removal), but no hysterecto­mies (removal of uterus), or phalloplas­ty (constructi­on of phallus) surgeries — all of which are part of Female to Male, or FTM surgical procedures.

met a group of seven thirunangi­s, associated with the local communityb­ased organisati­on Sahodaran Community Oriented Health Developmen­t Society headed by Sheetal, all of whom had undergone surgeries at the MGMCRI in the past two years. “It’s a bit of a bore. But it’s good for us,” laughed Bawadharin­i, a 27-year-old Puducherry local, referring to the number of visits to the psychiatri­st and surgeon that the protocol has instituted. She added that she was unwilling to do the surgery before this because she was not sure if it was safe. The protocol offers a sense of protection, she said.

The protocol, which applies to both

for GA surgery, specifying that the adult does not require parental or societal approval

full spectrum of gendersex identity. The choice of procedures to be undertaken should be made by the individual FTM and MTF surgeries, was submitted to the institute’s ethics committee in August 2017. Dr Seetesh Ghosh, the gynaecolog­ist in the gender care team said that he will not conduct any hysterecto­my till the committee validates the protocol. “I need immunity: it’s not that only the surgeon is responsibl­e. The institutio­n is responsibl­e too.”

IMPROVING QUALITY OF LIFE

For a doctor to conduct a hysterecto­my on an apparently healthy female body of reproducti­ve age requires a shift in perspectiv­e: Not all persons assigned female gender at birth are women.

If an adult transman approaches a doctor to conduct a hysterecto­my, the decision does not need to be validated by parent, doctor or society.

A recent survey among transgende­r women found that GA surgery was an important factor in improving the quality of life. The study, conducted by urologists of the University Hospital at Essen, Germany, found that over three-fourth of the respondent­s experience strong, positive life satisfacti­on following the surgery.

While similar research has not been undertaken in India, a study that aims to map the discrimina­tion that transgende­r persons face at the hands of healthcare providers in India is currently underway.

Kolkata-based not-for-profit Civilian Welfare Foundation (CWF), in collaborat­ion with United Nations Global Youth unnecessar­y procedures of sex assignment done on infants and children that necessaril­y do not entail their consent

WPATH guidelines in terms of psychiatri­c assessment for gender dysphoria, taking into account contextual specifics Empowermen­t, began a project titled Health is Wealth in September 2017.

The study, which reaches out to 50 transperso­ns across the country, is part of this project, and is expected to be completed by July.

In the absence of any detailed nationalle­vel guideline on transgende­r health— an Indian Council of Medical Research task force was set up some years ago to create such a document, but emails to the medical body on the status of this remain unanswered — such empirical data would help dispel untruths and misconcept­ions that circulate among healthcare providers and policy-makers. Since current medical curriculum does not address transgende­r healthcare either, a guideline that mandates non-discrimina­tion and situates surgical interventi­on within a broader scheme of healthcare provisions, is a must.

A 2014 report tabled by the expert committee of the ministry of social justice and empowermen­t emphasized the need to develop trans-friendly policies/guidelines to ensure barrier-free access to healthcare. Subsequent­ly, the last seen draft of the Transgende­r (Protection of Rights) Bill 2016 promises to bring out a health manual in accordance with WPATH guidelines. But the bill, which is yet to come up in Parliament for discussion, has not laid down a timeline. The National Health Policy document released last year, also states that

client from medical negligence, ignorance or discrimina­tory attitude of healthcare providers entitlemen­ts from surgical status of transgende­r persons, because not every transgende­r person undergoes surgery research on transgende­r health will be promoted. The ICMR did not respond to a query on whether any new research has been initiated on this subject.

COMMUNITY EFFORTS

In the past decade, a growing community of transgende­r persons and activists, and healthcare profession­als have created guidelines for gender affirmativ­e care in line with global best practices.

In 2011, a UNAIDS India-constitute­d working group prepared an interim national guideline on sex reassignme­nt surgeries for Male-to-female transgende­r peopleinin­dia—thereportw­assubmitte­d tothenatio­nal Aids Control Organisati­on.

In 2014, Dr Anindya Kumar Ray, a psychiatri­st, helped formulate a protocol for the RG Kar government hospital in Kolkata, with the help of community-led organisati­ons. Ray, who is now posted at the Malda Medical College, explained that the protocol was for Gender Transition Related Health Services, with provisions for psychologi­cal, medical/hormonal and surgical services. The team would have been multi-disciplina­ry, and the client would have availed of only those aspects of gender care that they chose. It never took off.

Last January, Sappho for Equality, a West Bengal-based organisati­on that works with lesbians, bisexual women and transgende­r men came out with a ‘Good practice guide to gender affirmativ­e care’. “There was no standard protocol being followed. There was a complete lack of informatio­n, and a lot of insensitiv­ity on the part of the medical fraternity,” explains Dr Ranjita Biswas, who compiled the document with a colleague with contributi­ons from doctors across discipline­s and persons from the transgende­r community. “We visited the Directorat­e of Medical Education who told us that it would be difficult to make the guideline part of the curriculum since medical students already have to deal with a huge syl- labus,” said Biswas, a psychiatri­st.

Community members in Karnataka were a tad luckier with state officials. Last September, a national meet was held in Bengaluru on the socio-medical status of transgende­r persons in India, with particular emphasis on SRS.

The consultati­on was organised by the National Institute of Medical Health and Neuro-sciences and transgende­r rights organisati­ons Ondede and Swatantra. It brought state government officials together with medical and legal experts, community members and activists and made them commit to developing standards of care.

PROTOCOL NEEDED

Anush Datta, a 35-year-old transman born and brought up in rural West Bengal, underwent a breast reduction surgery in 2015. He spent ₹70,000, and doesn’t even have a bill (or a discharge certificat­e) to show for it. “I have no evidence that I underwent a surgery. The secrecy with which this whole thing was conducted put me at a great disadvanta­ge.”

Datta’s disadvanta­ge was compounded by the fact that there were no binding guidelines on the doctors he consulted. As a result, he was not asked for a certificat­ion of gender dysphoria from a psychiatri­st. His prescripti­on slip was never returned to him. He was given no post-operative care, either.

“The prohibitiv­e costs make the procedures accessible to only those who have the privilege of affording them. For those who can’t, the only remaining options are private, unmonitore­d set-ups with no accountabi­lity. Regular monitoring and redressal mechanisms have to be establishe­d to stem this,” said the working group of Sampoorna, a network of trans and intersex Indians across the globe.

Today, Datta’s story is more norm than exception, which makes MCMGRI’S efforts to institute a protocol for themselves all the more significan­t.

WHAT SHOULD NATIONAL GUIDELINES ON GENDER AFFIRMATIO­N DO?

 ?? ARIJIT SEN/HT PHOTO ?? The gender care team at the Mahatma Gandhi Medical College and Research Institute that provides sex reassignme­nt surgery (SRS) to transgende­r clients in Puducherry. It includes Sheetal, a community representa­tive, and Dr Sameera Jahagirdar, a...
ARIJIT SEN/HT PHOTO The gender care team at the Mahatma Gandhi Medical College and Research Institute that provides sex reassignme­nt surgery (SRS) to transgende­r clients in Puducherry. It includes Sheetal, a community representa­tive, and Dr Sameera Jahagirdar, a...
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