NB Commentary:Okay People for
those of you who believe that Michael LaVaughn Robinson underwent sex
reassignment surgery at John Hopkins Hospital, in 1983, I will read a short
clip from an article written in The News-Letter on May 1, 2014. Just so we can
debunk the Christwire.org article that said that Michael Lavaughn Robinson was
a football player at Oregon State University and after sex change surgery, at
John Hopkins Hopkins, in 1983, legally changed his name to Michelle Robinson.
Maybe this little tidbit will help quell the noise.
Hopkins
Hospital: a history of sex reassignment
By The News-Letter
on May 1, 2014
In
1965, the Hopkins Hospital became the first academic institution in the United
States to perform sex reassignment surgeries. Now also known by names like
genital reconstruction surgery and sex realignment surgery, the procedures were
perceived as radical and attracted attention from The New York Times and tabloids alike. But they were
conducted for experimental, not political, reasons. Regardless, as the first
place in the country where doctors and researchers could go to learn about sex
reassignment surgery, Hopkins became the model for other institutions.
But in 1979, Hopkins stopped performing the surgeries and never
resumed.
In the
1960s, the idea to attempt the procedures came primarily from psychologist John
Money and surgeon Claude Migeon, who were already treating intersex children,
who, often due to chromosome variations, possess genitalia that is neither
typically male nor typically female. Money and Migeon were searching for a way
to assign a gender to these children, and concluded that it would be easiest if
they could do reconstructive surgery on the patients to make them appear female
from the outside. At the time, the children usually didn’t undergo genetic
testing, and the doctors wanted to see if they could be brought up female.
“[Money]
raised the legitimate question: ‘Can gender identity be created essentially
socially?’ … Nurture trumping nature,” said Chester Schmidt, who performed
psychiatric exams on the surgery candidates in the 60s and 70s.
This
theory ended up backfiring on Money, most famously in the case of David Reimer,
who was raised as a girl under the supervision of Money after a botched
circumcision and later committed suicide after years of depression.
However,
at the time, this research led Money to develop an interest in how gender
identities were formed. He thought that performing surgery to match one’s sex
to one’s gender identity could produce better results than just providing these
patients with therapy.
“Money,
in understanding that gender was — at least partially — socially constructed,
was open to the fact that [transgender] women’s minds had been molded to become
female, and if the mind could be manipulated, then so could the rest of the
body,” Dana Beyer, Executive Director of Gender Rights Maryland, who came
to Hopkins to consider the surgery in the 70s, wrote in an email to The News-Letter.
Surgeon
Milton Edgerton, who was the head of the University’s plastic surgery unit,
also took an interest in sex reassignment surgery after he encountered patients
requesting genital surgery. In 2007, he told Baltimore
Style: “I was puzzled by the problem and yet touched by the sincerity of
the request.”
Edgerton’s
curiosity and his plastic surgery experience, along with Money’s interest in
psychology and Migeon’s knowledge of plastic surgery, allowed the three to form
a surgery unit that incorporated other Hopkins surgeons at different times.
With the University’s approval, they started performing sex reassignment
surgeries and created the Gender Identity Clinic to investigate whether the
surgeries were beneficial.
“This
program, including the surgery, is investigational,” plastic surgeon John
Hoopes, who was the head of the Gender Identity Clinic, told The New York Times in 1966. “The most
important result of our efforts will be to determine precisely what constitutes
a transsexual and what makes him remain that way.”
To
determine if a person was an acceptable candidate for surgery, patients
underwent a psychiatric evaluation, took gender hormones and lived and dressed
as their preferred gender. The surgery and hospital care cost around $1500 at
the time, according to The New York Times.
Beyer
found the screening process to be invasive when she came to Hopkins to consider
the surgery. She first heard that Hopkins was performing sex reassignment
surgeries when she was 14 and read about them in Time and Newsweek.
“That
was the time that I finally was able to put a name on who I was and realized
that something could be done,” she said. “That was a very important milestone
in my consciousness, in understanding who I was.”
When
Beyer arrived at Hopkins, the entrance forms she had to fill out were focused
on sexuality instead of sexual identity. She says she felt as if they only
wanted to consider hyper-feminine candidates for the surgery, so she decided
not to stay. She had her surgery decades later in 2003 in Trinidad, Colo.
“It
was so highly sexualized, which was not at all my experience, certainly not the
reason I was going to Hopkins to consider transition, that I just got up and
left, I didn’t want anything to do with it,” she said. “No one said this
explicitly, but they certainly implied it, that the whole purpose of this was
to get a vagina so you could be penetrated by a penis.”
Beyer
thinks that it was very important that the transgender community had access to
this program at the time. However, she thinks that the experimental nature of
the program was detrimental to its longevity.
“It
had negative consequences because when it was done it was clearly
experimental,” she said. “Our opponents were able to use the experimental
nature of the surgery in the 60s and the 70s against us.”
By the
mid-70s, fewer patients were being operated on, and many changes were made to
the surgery and psychiatry departments, according to Schmidt, who was also a
founder of the Sexual Behaviors Consultation Unit (SBCU) at the time. The new
department members were not as supportive of the surgeries.
In
1979, SBCU Chair Jon Meyer conducted a study comparing 29 patients who had the
surgery and 21 who didn’t, and concluded that those who had the surgery were
not more adjusted to society than those who did not have the surgery. Meyer
told The New York Times in
1979: “My personal feeling is that surgery is not proper treatment for a
psychiatric disorder, and it’s clear to me that these patients have severe
psychological problems that don’t go away following surgery.”
After
Meyer’s study was published, Paul McHugh, the Psychiatrist-in-Chief at Hopkins
Hospital who never supported the University offering the surgeries according to
Schmidt, shut the program down.
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Thanks for your comment. Peace, NB