Los Angeles Times

New bill targets genital surgery on kids

- By Melody Gutierrez

SACRAMENTO — California legislator­s will again consider a ban on cosmetic surgery on small children born with atypical genitalia.

Senate Bill 225 by Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), introduced Jan. 15, would delay procedures not deemed medically necessary until a child is 6 years old, a change supporters say will lead to parents making more informed decisions for a child who has variations in physical sex characteri­stics, such as an enlarged clitoris or off-center urethra.

Surgeries have been performed on infants in rare cases in which the gender of the child is unclear, resulting in female genitalia being constructe­d on someone who later identifies as male, or vice versa.

Children begin to have a sense of their gender identity between 3 and 5 years old, according to the Gender and Sexuality Developmen­t Clinic at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia. Wiener said his goal is to allow children to be old enough to participat­e in decision-making about the procedures.

“This legislatio­n gives children and their families more time to research and opt in or out of non-emergency surgeries to irreversib­ly change a child’s sex characteri­stics,” Wiener said. “We must provide people the ability to make important healthcare decisions for themselves — especially when healthcare decisions are associated with a person’s gender assignment and can result in long-term pain, [post-traumatic stress disorder], depression and a loss of sexual sensation.”

Wiener wrote a similar bill in 2019, but it stalled under pressure from the California Medical Assn., the powerful lobbying arm of doctors in the Capitol, and the Societies for Pediatric Urology, both of which argued that the government should not legislate medical decisions.

“We recognize how sensitive this issue is and hope to be able to find some common ground with the bill sponsors,” said Anthony York, a spokesman for the medical associatio­n. “CMA’s policy is to ensure physicians have the necessary autonomy to perform medically necessary services. It is our hope that we can find common ground that addresses proponents’ concerns as well as those of physicians.”

Advocacy groups for intersex people — individual­s born with atypical reproducti­ve or sexual anatomy — have worked across the country to postpone genital surgeries that they say do more harm than good. Those groups argue that procedures that are purely cosmetic are performed before it’s known whether the genitalia constructe­d match the identity of the person later in life.

Among the supporters of the bill are Equality California and the intersex advocate group interACT. Kimberly Zieselman, executive director of interACT, said that after 15 years of advocacy, last year some children’s hospitals committed to ending medically unnecessar­y clitoral and vaginal surgeries.

“Now it’s California’s time to shine,” Zieselman said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i AP ?? STATE SEN. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) introduced the bill.
Rich Pedroncell­i AP STATE SEN. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) introduced the bill.

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