The Press

More Kiwis seek gender surgery

- Felix Desmarais felix.desmarais@stuff.co.nz

Genital gender confirmati­on surgery referrals have jumped five-fold since a cap was lifted in October last year, but a pathway to cutting down waiting times remains unclear.

Auckland man Josh McNally had been referred to the list since the cap lift. He had known he was ‘‘not like the other boys’’ from a young age.

‘‘I don’t have what they have. There has always been a part of me missing. I pushed the idea deep down, thinking I would never be able to have the body I imagined.’’

Genital reconstruc­tion was about being comfortabl­e ‘‘in

[his] body as a whole’’.

Phalloplas­ty would enable him to enjoy intimacy with his partner and confidentl­y use the men’s bathroom.

Genital reconstruc­tion surgeries were funded from the High Cost Treatment Pool. Previously, these were capped at three male-to-female surgeries and one female-to-male surgery every two years.

Since the cap lift in October, referrals per quarter jumped more than five-fold from four to 21.

Thirty-three-year-old McNally was 23 out of 31 trans masculine people on the list for female-to-male surgery.

He had his doubts about its real effect on waiting times, which had been widely reported to be up to 50 years.

‘‘I would love the Government to prove me wrong and actually take trans healthcare seriously. I would like to see a timeline of when and how often these referrals will actually be seen by a surgeon.’’

Gender Minorities Aotearoa national co-ordinator Ahi Wi-Hongi said the rise in referrals showed a ‘‘huge need’’ that hadn’t been met.

‘‘It’s showing it’s a possibilit­y for trans people to get surgery. I think we’ll see a lot more people joining the list.

‘‘We think it’s likely the list will be cleared in the next few years. At this point, it’s down to the Budget and the Government making sure trans healthcare is a priority.’’

Wi-Hongi said funding the surgery would reduce costs in the area of mental health.

‘‘It would absolutely save lives. So many trans, nonbinary and intersex people take their own lives because they can’t see the future for them. They feel society is against them. The Government caring would mean trans people would feel some confidence people do care about them.’’

Associate Health Minister Julie Anne Genter was not surprised by the rise in referrals.

Eight people had recently been referred for pre-surgery consultati­on, which she said was ‘‘a step in the right direction’’.

All female-to-male surgeries had so far been performed overseas. Male-to-female surgeries were available in Christchur­ch until surgeon Peter Walker retired in 2014.

At the beginning of 2018, Aucklandba­sed Dr Rita Yang was able to perform both male-to-female and female-to-male surgeries, but at that time lacked an ‘‘appropriat­e multi-disciplina­ry clinical team’’.

 ??  ?? Josh McNally
Josh McNally
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