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Gender-Affirming Surgery (Top Surgery)

Gender-affirming surgery is a collection of surgical procedures for adults ages 18 and older diagnosed with gender dysphoria. The operations are often referred to as “top surgery" and "bottom surgery.” Duke Health offers several top surgery options to transgender, gender-diverse, nonbinary, and gender-nonconforming adults who want their appearance to align with their internal identity. If, after a consultation with our doctors, you decide to pursue top surgery, we work toward a positive outcome that improves your physical, emotional, and psychological well-being.

What You Should Know About Gender-Affirming Surgery

Choosing to pursue gender-affirming surgery is an individual, personal decision. You’ll want to consider how it will change your quality of life and how it will help you achieve your goals.

Gender Dysphoria One important step is understanding how much you are affected by gender dysphoria, a diagnosis that the American Psychiatric Association defines as a conflict between your physical or assigned gender and the gender with which you identify. 

Candidates for Top Surgery To be a candidate for top surgery, you must:

  • Be 18 or older
  • Be in good health without illness or a condition that can increase your risk of surgical complications
  • Have a BMI under 35
  • Provide a clearance letter from your mental health or primary care provider stating you have gender dysphoria and you have been living in your assigned gender for at least 12 months

Top Surgery Costs Some private insurance plans will cover transgender surgery when it is used to address a diagnosis of gender dysphoria. Check with your insurance plan to determine your coverage.

Understanding Which Top Surgery Is Right for You There are several approaches to transgender surgery. We will review these with you during your initial consultation and make a recommendation based on your physical exam and medical history.

You May Have Scars Your surgeon will use the natural contours of your breasts to minimize scarring as much as possible. In some cases, depending on your breast size and weight, a small bunching of tissue may result in scars known as “dog ears” following mastectomy. These can be corrected later with revision surgery.

Understand the Risks Top surgery carries the same risks as other standard surgeries. These include the risk of bleeding and infection and risks associated with general anesthesia. Your doctor will discuss these risks with you if surgery is recommended.

Initial Consultation and Tests

Consultation and Exam Your first step will be an in-person consultation. Our providers spend time meeting with you, evaluating your anatomy, answering your questions, and determining if this surgery will help you achieve your goals.

Your surgeon will review your family history, general health status, lifestyle habits such as smoking, previous operations, any medications you may be taking, and conditions that can put you at risk for surgery.

Measurements, Photographs, Tests Your breasts will be measured and assessed for size and shape, and photographs may be taken for your medical record. Before treatment is recommended, you will also undergo one or more of the following tests.

  • Blood tests may be necessary to evaluate your hormone levels. Pre-surgical testing also requires several blood tests to assess your liver and kidney function and to determine if you have a previously undetected infection, blood disorder, or anemia.
  • A mammogram may be performed to look for any underlying breast abnormalities. Additional imaging, including ultrasound and MRI, may also be requested.

Recommending Treatment Based on these findings, your surgeon will recommend an approach to surgery. She will discuss the expected outcome, potential risks and complications, and your post-operation recovery. Alternatively, your surgeon may recommend that you lose weight, quit smoking, or discontinue medication before surgery to ensure you experience the best possible outcome.

If You Take Hormone Therapy Some gender-affirming hormone therapy , such as testosterone, can be continued if you pursue transgender surgery. Others, such as anti-estrogen therapy, may be stopped. Your surgeon will explain what you need to do to prepare for surgery.

Top Surgeries

Chest reconstruction - mastectomy, breast reduction.

We use different approaches to remove breast tissue and contour breasts to appear more masculine. The right approach depends on your anatomy and the size of your breasts. Techniques for medium to large breasts include nipple-sparing, double incision, buttonhole, and inverted-T incision. Keyhole and peri-areolar techniques may be used for smaller breasts or for those with good skin elasticity. Your surgeon will discuss your options with you after your physical exam and consultation.

Breast Augmentation

There are also many different approaches to breast augmentation, including the use of implants and fat grafting. We can also combine breast augmentation with body contouring, liposuction, and neurotoxin injections such as Botox injections and dermal fillers.

The Procedure Length

On average, top surgery takes about two to three hours and is performed under general anesthesia in an outpatient ambulatory surgery center. In some case, an overnight stay may be required. Sometimes a second procedure is needed to further tighten skin and achieve optimal cosmetic results.

Your chest will be wrapped in bandages, and a compression chest vest or surgical bra will be worn after the procedure. Drains will be required after mastectomy but not after breast augmentation. Initial recovery takes about one week. It may take three to six months for all swelling to subside and scars to fade.

Duke University Hospital is proud of our team and the exceptional care they provide. They are why we are once again recognized as the best hospital in North Carolina, and nationally ranked in 11 adult and 9 pediatric specialties by U.S. News & World Report for 2023–2024.

Why Choose Duke

You'll Work With a Plastic Surgeon Experienced in Gender Affirmation Surgery Our plastic surgeon has worked with many individuals seeking gender confirmation surgery. She is fellowship trained in body contouring, which means she has completed additional training in procedures that improve the body shape. Our surgeon is also a member of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH), a nonprofit organization working to standardize and improve transgender care.

Duke Health Is Committed to the LGBTQ+ Community Duke Health values diversity and has taken many steps to show its commitment to eliminating discrimination, promoting equality, and standing beside our lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) community. Duke University Hospital, Duke Regional Hospital, and Duke Raleigh Hospital are recognized as LGBTQ+ Healthcare Equality Leaders by the Human Rights Campaign Foundation for perfect scores across areas of patient-centered care, support services, and inclusive health insurance policies for LGBTQ+ patients.

Related Care

  • Gender-Affirming Hormone Therapy

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Stages of Gender Reassignment

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gender reassignment or affirmation

The idea of getting stuck in the wrong body sounds like the premise for a movie in "Freaky Friday," a mother and a daughter swap bodies, and in "Big" and "13 Going on 30," teenagers experience life in an adult's body. These movies derive their humor from the ways in which the person's attitude and thoughts don't match their appearance. A teenager trapped in her mother's body, for example, revels in breaking curfew and playing air guitar, while a teenager trapped in an adult's body is astounded by the trappings of wealth that come with a full-time job. We laugh because the dialogue and actions are so contrary to what we'd expect from someone who is a mother, or from someone who is an employed adult.

But for some people, living as an incongruous gender is anything but a joke. A transgender person is someone who has a different gender identity than their birth sex would indicate. We interchange the words sex, sexuality and gender all the time, but they don't actually refer to the same thing. Sex refers to the parts we were born with; boys, we assume, have a penis, while girls come equipped with a vagina. Sexuality generally refers to sexual orientation , or who we're attracted to in a sexual and/or romantic sense. Gender expression refers to the behavior used to communicate gender in a given culture. Little girls in the U.S., for example, would be expected express their feminine gender by playing with dolls and wearing dresses, and little boys would be assumed to express their masculinity with penchants for roughhousing and monster trucks. Another term is g ender identity, the private sense or feeling of being either a man or woman, some combination of both or neither [source: American Psychological Association ].

Sometimes, a young boy may want to wear dresses and have tea parties, yet it's nothing more than a phase that eventually subsides. Other times, however, there is a longing to identify with another gender or no gender at all that becomes so intense that the person experiencing it can't function anymore. Transgender is an umbrella term for people who identify outside of the gender they were assigned at birth and for some gender reassignment surgeries are crucial to leading a healthy, happy life.

Gender Dysphoria: Diagnosis and Psychotherapy

Real-life experience, hormone replacement therapy, surgical options: transgender women, surgical options: transgender men, gender reassignment: regrets.

gender reassignment or affirmation

Transgender people may begin identifying with a different gender, rather than the one assigned at birth, in early childhood, which means they can't remember a time they didn't feel shame or distress about their bodies. For other people, that dissatisfaction with their biological sex begins later, perhaps around puberty or early adulthood, though it can occur later in life as well.

It's estimated that about 0.3 percent of the U.S. population self-identify as transgender, but not all who are transgender will choose to undergo a gender transition [source: Gates ]. Some may choose to affirm their new gender through physically transforming their bodies from the top down, while others may prefer to make only certain cosmetic changes, such as surgeries to soften facial features or hair removal procedures, for example.

Not all who identify with a gender different than their birth sex suffer from gender dysphoria or go on to seek surgery. Transgender people who do want gender reassignment surgery, however, must follow the standards of care for gender affirmation as defined by the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH).

In 1980, when gender identity disorder (GID) was first recognized, it was considered a psychiatric disorder. In 2013, though, GID was, in part, reconsidered as biological in nature, and renamed gender dysphoria . It was reclassified as a medical condition in the American Psychological Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-V), a common language and standards protocol manual for the classification of mental disorders. With this classification, transgender people must be diagnosed prior to any treatment [source: International Foundation for Gender Education ].

Gender dysphoria is diagnosed when a person has a persistent desire to become a different gender. The desire may manifest itself as disgust for one's reproductive organs, hatred for the clothing and other outward signs of one's given gender, and/or a desire to act and be recognized as another gender. This desire must be continuously present for six months in order to be recognized as a disorder [source: WPATH].

In addition to receiving the diagnosis from a mental health professional, a person seeking reassignment must also take part in psychotherapy. The point of therapy isn't to ignite a change, begin a conversion or otherwise convince a transgender person that it's wrong to want to be of a different gender (or of no specific gender at all) . Rather, counseling is required to ensure that the person is realistic about the process of gender affirmation and understands the ramifications of not only going through with social and legal changes but with permanent options such as surgery. And because feeling incongruous with your body can be traumatizing and frustrating, the mental health professional will also work to identify any underlying issues such as anxiety, depression, substance abuse or borderline personality disorder.

The mental health professional can also help to guide the person seeking gender reassignment through the next step of the process: real-life experience.

gender reassignment or affirmation

WPATH requires transgender people desiring gender reassignment surgery to live full-time as the gender that they wish to be before pursuing any permanent options as part of their gender transition. This period is a known as real-life experience (RLE) .

It's during the RLE that the transgender person often chooses a new name appropriate for the desired gender, and begins the legal name-change process. That new name often comes with a set of newly appropriate pronouns, too; for example, when Chastity Bono, biologically born as Sonny and Cher's daughter in 1969, began her transition in 2008 she renamed herself as Chaz and instructed people to use "he" rather than "she" [source: Donaldson James ].

In addition to a new name and pronouns, during this time gender-affirming men and women are expected to also adopt the clothing of their desired gender while maintaining their employment, attending school or volunteering in the community. Trans women might begin undergoing cosmetic procedures to rid themselves of body hair; trans men might take voice coaching in attempt to speak in a lower pitch. The goal of real-life experience is to expose social issues that might arise if the individual were to continue gender reassignment. How, for example, will a boss react if a male employee comes to work as a female? What about family? Or your significant other? Sometimes, during RLE people realize that living as the other gender doesn't bring the happiness they thought it would, and they may not continue to transition. Other times, a social transition is enough, and gender reassignment surgery isn't pursued. And sometimes, this test run is the confirmation people need to pursue physical changes in order to fully become another gender.

In addition to the year-long real-life experience requirement before surgical options may be pursued, WPATH recommends hormonal therapy as a critical component to transitioning before surgery. Candidates for hormone therapy may choose to complete a year-long RLE and counseling or complete six months of a RLE or three-months of a RLE/three months of psychotherapy before moving ahead with hormone therapy.

Upon successfully completing a RLE by demonstrating stable mental health and a healthy lifestyle, the transitioning individual becomes eligible for genital reconstructive surgery — but it can't begin until a mental health professional submits a letter (or letters) of recommendation indicating that the individual is ready to move forward [source: WPATH].

gender reassignment or affirmation

Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) , also called cross-sex hormones, is a way for transgender individuals to feel and look more like the gender they identify with, and so it's a major step in gender reassignment. In order to be eligible for hormone therapy, participants must be at least 18 years old (though sometimes, younger adolescents are allowed to take hormone blockers to prohibit their naturally occurring puberty) and demonstrate to a mental health professional that they have realistic expectations of what the hormones will and won't do to their bodies. A letter from that mental health professional is required, per the standards of care established by WPATH.

Hormone therapy is used to balance a person's gender identity with their body's endocrine system. Male-to-female candidates begin by taking testosterone-blocking agents (or anti-androgens ) along with female hormones such as estrogen and progesterone . This combination of hormones is designed to lead to breast growth, softer skin, less body hair and fewer erections. These hormones also change the body by redistributing body fat to areas where women tend to carry extra weight (such as around the hips) and by decreasing upper body strength. Female-to-male candidates begin taking testosterone , which will deepen the voice and may cause some hair loss or baldness. Testosterone will also cause the clitoris to enlarge and the person's sex drive to increase. Breasts may slightly shrink, while upper body strength will increase [source: WPATH].

It usually takes two continuous years of treatment to see the full results of hormone therapy. If a person were to stop taking the hormones, then some of these changes would reverse themselves. Hormone therapy is not without side effects — both men and women may experience an increased risk for cardiovascular disease, and they are also at risk for fertility problems. Some transgender people may choose to bank sperm or eggs if they wish to have children in the future.

Sometimes hormonal therapy is enough to make a person feel he or she belongs to the desired gender, so treatment stops here. Others may pursue surgical means as part of gender reassignment.

gender reassignment or affirmation

Surgical options are usually considered after at least two years of hormonal therapy, and require two letters of approval by therapists or physicians. These surgeries may or may not be covered by health insurance in the U.S. — often only those that are considered medically necessary to treat gender dysphoria are covered, and they can be expensive. Gender reassignment costs vary based on each person's needs and desires; expenses often range between $7,000 and $50,000 (in 2014), although costs may be much greater depending upon the type (gender reconstructive surgeries versus cosmetic procedures) and number of surgeries as well as where in the world they are performed [source: AP ].

Gender affirmation is done with an interdisciplinary team, which includes mental health professionals, endocrinologists, gynecologists, urologists and reconstructive cosmetic surgeons.

One of the first surgeries male-to-female candidates pursue is breast augmentation, if HRT doesn't enlarge their breasts to their satisfaction. Though breast augmentations are a common procedure for cisgender women (those who identify with the gender they were assigned at birth), care must be taken when operating on a biologically male body, as there are structural differences, like body size, that may affect the outcome.

The surgical options to change male genitalia include orchiectomy (removal of the testicles), penile inversion vaginoplasty (creation of a vagina from the penis), clitoroplasty (creation of a clitoris from the glans of the penis) and labiaplasty (creation of labia from the skin of the scrotum) [source: Nguyen ]. The new vagina, clitoris and labia are typically constructed from the existing penile tissue. Essentially, after the testicles and the inner tissue of the penis is removed and the urethra is shortened, the skin of the penis is turned inside out and fashioned into the external labia and the internal vagina. A clitoris is created from excess erectile tissue, while the glans ends up at the opposite end of the vagina; these two sensitive areas usually mean that orgasm is possible once gender reassignment is complete. Male-to-female gender reconstructive surgery typically takes about four or five hours [source: University of Michigan ]. The major complication from this surgery is collapse of the new vaginal cavity, so after surgery, patients may have to use dilating devices.

Trans women may also choose to undergo cosmetic surgeries to further enhance their femininity. Procedures commonly included with feminization are: blepharoplasty (eyelid surgery); cheek augmentation; chin augmentation; facelift; forehead and brow lift with brow bone reduction and hair line advance; liposuction; rhinoplasty; chondrolargynoplasty or tracheal shave (to reduce the appearance of the Adam's apple); and upper lip shortening [source: The Philadelphia Center for Transgender Surgery]. Trans women may pursue these surgeries with any cosmetic plastic surgeon, but as with breast augmentation, a doctor experienced with this unique situation is preferred. One last surgical option is voice modification surgery , which changes the pitch of the voice (alternatively, there is speech therapy and voice training, as well as training DVDs and audio recordings that promise the same thing).

gender reassignment or affirmation

Female-to-male surgeries are pursued less often than male-to-female surgeries, mostly because when compared to male-to-female surgeries, trans men have limited options; and, historically, successful surgical outcomes haven't been considered on par with those of trans women. Still, more than 80 percent of surgically trans men report having sexual intercourse with orgasm [source: Harrison ].

As with male-to-female transition, female-to-male candidates may begin with breast surgery, although for trans men this comes in the form of a mastectomy. This may be the only surgery that trans men undergo in their reassignment, if only because the genital surgeries available are still far from perfect. Forty percent of trans men who undergo genital reconstructive surgeries experience complications including problems with urinary function, infection and fistulas [sources: Harrison , WPATH].

Female-to-male genital reconstructive surgeries include hysterectomy (removal of the uterus) and salpingo-oophorectomy (removal of the fallopian tubes and ovaries). Patients may then elect to have a metoidioplasty , which is a surgical enlargement of the clitoris so that it can serve as a sort of penis, or, more commonly, a phalloplasty . A phalloplasty includes the creation of a neo-phallus, clitoral transposition, glansplasty and scrotoplasty with prosthetic testicles inserted to complete the appearance.

There are three types of penile implants, also called penile prostheses: The most popular is a three-piece inflatable implant, used in about 75 percent of patients. There are also two-piece inflatable penile implants, used only 15 percent of the time; and non-inflatable (including semi-rigid) implants, which are used in fewer than 10 percent of surgeries. Inflatable implants are expected to last about five to 10 years, while semi-rigid options typically have a lifespan of about 20 years (and fewer complications than inflatable types) [source: Crane ].

As with trans women, trans men may elect for cosmetic surgery that will make them appear more masculine, though the options are slightly more limited; liposuction to reduce fat in areas in which cisgender women i tend to carry it is one of the most commonly performed cosmetic procedures.

gender reassignment or affirmation

As surgical techniques improve, complication rates have fallen too. For instance, long-term complication risks for male-to-female reconstructive surgeries have fallen below 1 percent. Despite any complications, though, the overwhelming majority of people who've undergone surgical reconstruction report they're satisfied with the results [source: Jarolím ]. Other researchers have noted that people who complete their transition process show a marked improvement in mental health and a substantial decrease in substance abuse and depression. Compare these results to 2010 survey findings that revealed that 41 percent of transgender people in the U.S. attempted suicide, and you'll see that finally feeling comfortable in one's own skin can be an immensely positive experience [source: Moskowitz ].

It's difficult, though, to paint a complete picture of what life is like after people transition to a new gender, as many people move to a new place for a fresh start after their transition is complete. For that reason, many researchers, doctors and therapists have lost track of former patients. For some people, that fresh start is essential to living their new lives to the fullest, while others have found that staying in the same job, the same marriage or the same city is just as rewarding and fulfilling and vital to their sense of acceptance.

In many ways, the process of gender affirmation is ongoing. Even after the surgeries and therapies are complete, people will still have to deal with these discrimination issues. Transgender people are often at high risk for hate crimes. Regular follow-ups will be necessary to maintain both physical and mental health, and many people continue to struggle with self-acceptance and self-esteem after struggling with themselves for so long. Still, as more people learn about gender reassignment, it seems possible that that these issues of stigma and discrimination won't be so prevalent.

As many as 91 percent Americans are familiar with the term "transgender" and 76 percent can correctly define it; 89 percent agree that transgender people deserve the same rights, privileges and protections as those who are cisgender [source: Public Religion Research Institute ]. But that's not to say that everything becomes completely easy once a person transitions to his or her desired gender.

Depending upon where you live, non-discrimination laws may or may not cover transgender individuals, so it's completely possible to be fired from one's job or lose one's home due to gender expression. Some people have lost custody of their children after divorces and have been unable to get courts to recognize their parental rights. Historically, some marriages were challenged — consider, for example, what happens when a man who is married to a woman decides to become a woman; after the surgery, if the two people decide to remain married, it now appears to be a same-sex marriage, which is now legalized in the U.S. Some organizations and governments refuse to recognize a person's new gender unless genital reconstructive surgery has been performed, despite the fact that some people only pursue hormone therapy or breast surgery [sources: U.S. Office of Personnel Management , Glicksman ].

Lots More Information

Author's note: stages of gender reassignment.

It's interesting how our terminology changes throughout the years, isn't it? (And in some cases for the better.) What we used to call a sex change operation is now gender realignment surgery. Transsexual is now largely replaced with transgender. And with good reason, I think. Knowing that sex, sexuality and gender aren't interchangeable terms, updating "sex change" to "gender reassignment" or "gender affirmation" and "transsexual" to "transgender" moves the focus away from what sounds like something to do with sexual orientation to one that is a more accurate designation.

Related Articles

  • How Gender Identity Disorder Works
  • Is gender just a matter of choice?
  • What is transgender voice therapy?
  • How fluid is gender?
  • Why do girls wear pink and boys wear blue?

More Great Links

  • DSM-5: Gender Dysphoria
  • National Center for Transgender Equality
  • The Williams Institute
  • American Medical Student Association (AMSA). "Transgender Health Resources." 2014. (April 20, 2015) http://www.amsa.org/AMSA/Homepage/About/Committees/GenderandSexuality/TransgenderHealthCare.aspx
  • American Psychological Association (APA). "Definition of Terms: Sex, Gender, Gender Identity, Sexual Orientation." 2011. (July 1, 2015) http://www.apa.org/pi/lgbt/resources/sexuality-definitions.pdf
  • AP. "Medicare ban on sex reassignment surgery lifted." May 30, 2014. (April 20, 2015) http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/05/30/medicare-sex-reassignment/9789675/
  • Belkin, Lisa. "Smoother Transitions." The New York Times. Sept. 4, 2008. (Aug. 1, 2011) http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/04/fashion/04WORK.html
  • Crane, Curtis. "The Total Guide to Penile Implants For Transsexual Men." Transhealth. May 2, 2014. (April 20, 2015) http://www.trans-health.com/2013/penile-implants-guide/
  • Donaldson James, Susan. "Trans Chaz Bono Eyes Risky Surgery to Construct Penis." ABC News. Jan. 6, 2012. (April 20, 2015) http://abcnews.go.com/Health/transgender-chaz-bono-seeks-penis-genital-surgery-risky/story?id=15299871Gates, Gary J. "How many people are lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender?" April 2011. (July 29, 2015) http://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/Gates-How-Many-People-LGBT-Apr-2011.pdf
  • Glicksman, Eve. "Transgender today." Monitor on Psychology. Vol. 44, no. 4. Page 36. April 2013. (April 20, 2015) http://www.apa.org/monitor/2013/04/transgender.aspx
  • Harrison, Laird. "Sex-Change Operations Mostly Successful." Medscape Medical News. May 20, 2013. (April 20, 2015) http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/804432
  • HealthResearchFunding.org (HRF). "14 Unique Gender Identity Disorder Statistics." July 28, 2014. (April 20, 2015) http://healthresearchfunding.org/gender-identity-disorder-statistics/
  • International Foundation for Gender Education. "APA DSM-5 Sexual and Gender Identity Disorders: 302.85 Gender Identity Disorder in Adolescents or Adults." (April 20, 2015) http://www.ifge.org/302.85_Gender_Identity_Disorder_in_Adolescents_or_Adults
  • Moskowitz, Clara. "High Suicide Risk, Prejudice Plague Transgender People." LiveScience. Nov. 18, 2010. (April 20, 2015) http://www.livescience.com/11208-high-suicide-risk-prejudice-plague-transgender-people.html
  • Nguyen, Tuan A. "Male-To-Female Procedures." Lake Oswego Plastic Surgery. 2013. (April 20, 2015) http://www.lakeoswegoplasticsurgery.com/grs/grs_procedures_mtf.html
  • Public Religion Research Institute. "Survey: Strong Majorities of Americans Favor Rights and Legal Protections for Transgender People." Nov. 3, 2011. (April 20, 2015) http://publicreligion.org/research/2011/11/american-attitudes-towards-transgender-people/#.VSmlgfnF9bw
  • Steinmetz, Katy. "Board Rules That Medicare Can Cover Gender Reassignment Surgery." Time. (April 20, 2015) http://time.com/2800307/medicare-gender-reassignment/
  • The Philadelphia Center for Transgender Surgery. "Phalloplasty: Frequently Asked Questions." (April 20, 2015) http://www.thetransgendercenter.com/index.php/surgical-procedures/phalloplasty-faqs.html
  • U.S. Office of Personnel Management. "Guidance Regarding the Employment of Transgender Individuals in the Federal Workplace." 2015. (April 20, 2015) http://www.opm.gov/diversity/Transgender/Guidance.asp
  • University of California, San Francisco - Department of Family and Community Medicine, Center of Excellence for Transgender Health. "Primary Care Protocol for Transgender Patient Care." April 2011. (April 20, 2015) http://transhealth.ucsf.edu/trans?page=protocol-hormones
  • University of Miami - Miller School of Medicine, Department of Surgery, Plastic, Aesthetic and Reconstructive Surgery. "Transgender Reassignment." 2015. (April 20, 2015) http://surgery.med.miami.edu/plastic-and-reconstructive/transgender-reassignment-surgery
  • University of Michigan Health System. "Gender Affirming Surgery." (April 20, 2015) http://www.uofmhealth.org/medical-services/gender-affirming-surgery
  • World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH). "Standards of Care for the Health of Transsexual, Transgender, and Gender Nonconforming People." Version 7. 2012. (April 20, 2015) http://www.wpath.org/uploaded_files/140/files/Standards%20of%20Care,%20V7%20Full%20Book.pdf
  • World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH). "WPATH Clarification on Medical Necessity of Treatment, Sex Reassignment, and Insurance Coverage for Transgender and Transsexual People Worldwide." 2015. (April 20, 2015) http://www.wpath.org/site_page.cfm?pk_association_webpage_menu=1352&pk_association_webpage=3947

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Gender Affirmation Surgery

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If you’re transgender, you may pursue hormone therapy or gender reassignment surgery to help align your body with your gender identity. Some transgender individuals also choose to pursue surgery to help reduce or enhance secondary sexual characteristics. For transgender men, this may include surgery to reduce breast size or remove the ovaries. Transgender women may elect for breast augmentation or facial feminization surgery to meet their needs. At MedStar Health, we offer the following procedures to help you be comfortable in your own skin. Types of gender reassignment surgery:

Feminizing vaginoplasty : Reconstructive surgery procedure that alters the structure of the genitals to create a vagina using penile or colon tissue. Dr. Del Corral uses a one-stage procedure, revisions can be necessary to enhance the final surgical result

Revision vaginoplasty (after loss of depth) : A secondary procedure allowing for revisions to the urethra, neovaginal canal, labia minora, and majora addressing asymmetries within the vagina, and scar revisions to help functionality. MedStar Center for Gender Affirmation specializes in revisional procedures after complications from primary vaginoplasty

Colon vaginoplasty : A different approach to an original vaginoplasty. The colon or small bowel can be used to line the vaginal wall to create depth, dilation, and providing a natural source of lubrication. At the MedStar Center for Gender Affirmation, we use a robotic-assisted approach to minimize incisions in the abdomen, and faster recovery while providing better access for the revision

Masculinizing phalloplasty/scrotoplasty : Reconstructive surgery that creates a penis using a free flap or pedicled flap of skin. These sections of the skin can be taken from the arm (radial forearm free-flap, RFF) or thigh (anterior lateral thigh pedicled flap phalloplasty, ALT).  These procedures are performed in a combined team that include a reconstructive urologist and plastic surgeons

Metoidioplasty : The use of local tissue to create an enlargement to the penile area (clitoral release/enlargement, may include urethral lengthening)

Masculinizing chest surgery (“top” surgery) : Breast tissue is removed and the nipples and areolae are altered to help masculinize the chest

Facial feminization : Reconstructive surgery procedures that alters the shape and size of facial features to make them closer to typical female facial features — this may include a brow lift, forehead re-contouring, hairline correction, and rhinoplasty (nose reshaping)

Facial masculinization : Reconstructive surgery that alters the shape and size of facial features to make them more masculine — this may include forehead lengthening and augmentation, cheek augmentation, chin re-contouring, jaw contouring, thyroid cartilage enhancement (Adam’s apple surgery), and rhinoplasty (nose reshaping)

Reduction thyrochondroplasty (thyroid cartilage shave) : Reconstructive surgery that reduces the size of the thyroid cartilage, also known as the “Adam’s apple.” It is shaved down to create a more feminine appearance

Breast augmentation mammoplasty : Surgery to reshape, enlarge, and modify the breasts and achieve a more desired shape and look to the chest

Hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy : Surgical removal of the uterus, cervix, ovaries, fallopian tubes, and surrounding structures

Orchiectomy : Reconstructive surgery to remove the testicles

Vaginectomy : Reconstructive surgery to remove all parts of the vagina

Gender surgery planning and recovery

What to expect.

You may need to meet a few requirements before qualifying for certain gender affirming procedure(s) at MedStar Health. The exact requirements will depend on your insurance coverage and may include one or more letters of referral from qualified mental health professionals, well-documented gender dysphoria, and/or one year of continuous hormone therapy. Procedures that are considered strictly cosmetic by your insurance plan will have fewer requirements.

After properly qualifying for surgery, you’ll meet with one of our surgeons. They will examine you and ask questions to determine if you physically qualify for surgery. If you qualify, you’ll discuss any risks and potential complications and walk through the steps involved. You’ll be given specific instructions to follow prior to your surgery.

On the day of surgery, your surgeon may use a variety of leading-edge techniques to achieve the best results, such as minimally invasive surgery to significantly reduce scarring.

Recovery from surgery

It’s important to follow your surgeon’s instructions for proper care of your body after surgery. You may have specific directions about taking medications and how to clean and care for the surgical site. Healing may take several weeks as swelling decreases.

Why choose us?

MedStar Health is the largest health care system in Maryland and the Washington, D.C., region. When you choose us for care, you’ll have access to our network of 10 hospitals and a team of more than 3,000 physicians and specialists.

If you choose MedStar Health for a breast augmentation or reduction procedure, you’ll be choosing to work with a nationally recognized leader in breast surgeries. Our breast surgeons have years of experience working exclusively in breast procedures and have developed their own techniques to help patients recover faster and have better results.

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Gabriel Alfonso Del Corral, MD

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Laura Kate Tom, MD

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MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center

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Frequently asked questions

Do I need a referral?

If you’re exploring options for insurance coverage, you may need to request a referral from your primary care doctor, depending on your health insurance plan. Check with your carrier to see if medical coverage is an option for you and, if so, whether a referral is required.

How should I prepare?

Before surgery, you may be asked to get blood tests and take or adjust medications — this may include temporarily stopping hormone therapy. If you smoke, quitting will help you heal faster and avoid possible complications. You’ll also need to arrange for transportation to and from the hospital and for someone to stay with you the night after the surgery.

For more information visit Patient Resources  or Preparing for Surgery

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Gender Affirmation Surgery and Compassionate Care for Individuals with Gender Dysphoria

Gender dysphoria is a medical term used to describe a condition in which a person’s gender identity – an internal and innate sense of oneself as being male or female – is incompatible with the external sexual characteristics present at birth. For example, a person born with female genitals who feels essentially male in every other way and identifies with that gender; or a person born with male genitals, yet feels essentially female in every other way and identifies with that gender. Both may be said to have gender dysphoria – a state of mind that can lead to depression, social anxiety, social isolation and a general state of emotional distress.

In recent years, recognition and acceptance of gender dysphoria as a legitimate diagnosis has spurred efforts in the medical community to offer compassionate support along with medical and surgical options to help people reconcile their outward appearance and sexual functioning with their internal self-perceptions.

A diagnosis of gender dysphoria is made by a healthcare provider after a thorough and careful evaluation has been done by a team of medical and psychological professionals. The next steps will depend on the individual’s goals and expectations.

What Is Gender Affirmation Surgery?

Any surgical procedure designed to align a person’s internal sense of self with their external physical and sexual characteristics is known as gender affirmation surgery. This is sometimes called gender confirmation surgery as well. Older terms such as gender reassignment or sex reassignment surgery have fallen out of favor.

While some may opt for hormone therapy only, for some transgender, transsexual or gender non-conforming patients it is medically and psychologically necessary to change their physical body to reduce gender dysphoria and improve their quality of life.

Some individuals may choose to undergo “top surgery” to alter their anatomy to be more in-line with their gender identity – male to female  transgender individuals (transfemales or transwomen) may take female hormones to promote breast development with or without breast implants. Furthermore, some transwomen undergo facial feminization, Adam’s Apple reduction, or vocal cord surgery as well. Female to male  transgender individuals (transmen or transmales) may have their breasts surgically removed (bilateral mastectomy) in addition to taking male hormones to increase muscle mass, lower their tone of voice and promote the growth of body and facial hair.

Genital Gender Affirmation Surgeries

Some people will choose to complete their transition with genital gender affirmation surgery or “bottom surgery” – a surgical procedure (or procedures) by which the genital organs are altered to physically resemble and function like those that are associated with their identified gender. Prior to genital gender affirmation surgery, patients must have been on hormones for at least a year while living consistently as the gender to which they are transitioning.

UH reconstructive urologist, Shubham Gupta, MD, FACS offers male to female and female to male genital reconstruction surgeries, including:

  • Vaginoplasty (male to female)
  • Phalloplasty and metoidioplasty (female to male)

Eligibility Requirements for Gender Affirmation Surgery

All gender transition surgeries result in permanent, physical transformation so patients must meet certain eligibility requirements before proceeding. To be eligible, patients must:

  • Be of legal age (age 18 in the United States)
  • Complete 12 months of continuous hormone therapy (HT)
  • Successfully complete 12 months of living full-time as the gender with which they identify
  • Undergo a mental health assessment and participate in psychotherapy
  • Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of the surgeries (including cost), potential complications, recovery and rehabilitation.

The Region’s Only Comprehensive Program

Gender transition surgeries require the expertise of multiple specialists, including reconstructive urologists, plastic surgeons and otolaryngologists (ENT) to achieve optimal cosmetic and functional outcomes. The surgeons at University Hospitals work as a team to offer patients a wide variety of procedures to help them complete their gender transition journey.

University Hospitals is the only health system in the region to offer these complex and highly specialized gender affirmation surgeries that are not widely available in the United States. As a result, thousands of individuals now have access to these life-changing services that have the potential to improve their quality of life and decrease depression and social anxiety.

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Understanding Insurance Requirements for Gender Affirmation Surgery

  • Type of Surgeries
  • Barriers to Access
  • WPATH Standards

Restrictions to Coverage

Getting started, what you can do.

Insurance coverage for orchiectomy, genitoplasty, and other types of gender-affirmation surgery is largely governed by standards issued by the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH). Many health insurance providers use these guidelines to direct which procedures are medically necessary. However, not every insurer—or state—does.

Because acceptance of WPATH guidelines can vary, it can sometimes be hard to determine which procedures are covered by your health plan and whether gender affirmation is even affordable.

This article describes the types of surgeries pursued by transgender or gender-nonconforming people as a part of gender affirmation and the barriers they face. It also explains the WPATH standards of care for each type of surgery, how insurance companies use them to determine eligibility, and what restrictions are imposed by providers or states.

Gender-affirmation surgery is the preferred term but gender-confirmation surgery and gender-alignment surgery can also be used. Outdated terms like "sex reassignment" or "sex change" should not be used.

Gender affirmation reflects the process a person goes through when they begin to live as their authentic gender rather than the gender assigned to them a birth.

Medical or surgical procedures are only one facet of gender affirmation.

Types of Gender-Affirmation Surgery

Not all transgender, non-binary , and genderqueer individuals want surgery to align their bodies to their gender identity. Some people are content with social or other medical transition options .

Others want one or more surgeries, including those referred to as " top surgery ” (occurring above the waist) and "bottom surgery" (occurring below the waist).

An extensive national survey of transgender people found that:

  • 66% of transgender women either had or wanted  vaginoplasty or labiaplasty .
  • 51% of transgender women either had or wanted breast augmentation.
  • 50% of transgender women either had or wanted facial feminization (surgery to make a face appear more feminine).
  • 37% of transgender women either had or wanted a tracheal shave (removal of the Adam’s apple).
  • 58% of transgender women either had or wanted orchiectomy (removal of the testicles).
  • 22% of transgender men either had or wanted phalloplasty (the creation of a penis).
  • 27% of transgender men either had or wanted metoidioplasty (surgery that uses existing genitalia to create a penis).
  • 97% of transgender men either had or wanted chest reconstruction or mastectomy (removal of the breasts).
  • 71% of transgender men either had or wanted a hysterectomy (removal of the uterus).

Common Barriers to Gender-Affirmation Surgery

Cost, surgeon availability, and a process referred to "gatekeeping" are three major hurdles commonly faced by people undergoing gender affirmation.

Cost is one of the primary reasons people have limited access to gender-affirmation surgeries. Historically, most public or private insurance companies have not covered these procedures. Fortunately, that is changing.

Some public and private insurance companies cover some or all gender-affirmation surgery options. But that coverage often comes with many hoops that people need to jump through. It is also not available to all people in all states.

Surgeon Availability

Another major factor limiting access to surgery is the small number of surgeons trained to perform them. These surgeons, particularly very experienced ones, are often booked months or years in advance.

In addition, many don’t take insurance. Fortunately, as insurance coverage for gender-affirmation surgeries has increased, so too has physician interest in training. Today, there are many hospitals across the country that routinely perform vaginoplasty and accept insurance to pay for them.

"Gatekeeping"

Another barrier is a process called “gatekeeping" currently endorsed by WPATH. Gatekeeping involves undergoing a significant therapy or psychiatric assessment before they are allowed to transition medically.

It is a process that attracted considerable debate given that this level of scrutiny is not required for other major surgeries. It ultimately places the decision in the hands of a psychiatrist who can determine if a person is mentally "fit" to pursue treatment.

Discrimination and Stigma

In addition to barriers like cost and surgeon availability/competency, there is also a long history of discrimination and stigma limiting transgender patients’ access to care.

Insurance and the WPATH Standards

When determining eligibility for gender-affirming surgery coverage, many insurers turn to the WPATH Standards of Care to inform their eligibility guidelines. These are also known as the WPATH criteria or WPATH requirements.

WPATH updates its guidelines every five to 10 years. These standards of care help define which treatments are medically necessary and under which conditions they should be authorized. The standards have become less restrictive over time, reflecting the growing recognition of gender diversity in society.

The standards of care are broadly described as follows:

Standards for Top Surgery

“Top surgery” refers to gender-affirmation surgery of the breast or chest. For transmasculine people, this surgery is called chest reconstruction. For transfeminine people, it is breast augmentation.

The WPATH criteria for top surgery include:

  • Persistent, well-documented gender dysphoria (distress caused by the difference between a person’s gender and the gender they were assigned at birth)
  • The ability to make an informed decision and consent to treatment
  • Any significant medical or mental health conditions are “reasonably well controlled”

Standards for Hormone Therapy

It is important to note that hormone therapy is not required for these surgeries. However, a year of hormone therapy is recommended  for transgender women because it allows them to get the maximum possible breast growth without surgery, which improves surgical outcomes.

For transgender men, there is no hormone requirement or recommendation. That’s because some transmasculine people are only dysphoric about their chests. Therefore, they do not want or need testosterone treatment.

There are also several physical and psychological reasons people choose to undergo top surgery without hormone use. That said, people who are taking testosterone and are very active may wish to wait a year for surgery because testosterone and exercise can significantly reshape the chest. Therefore, waiting a year may result in a more aesthetic outcome.

Standards for Orchiectomy, Hysterectomy, and Ovariectomy

These surgeries involve the removal of the testicles (orchiectomy), uterus (hysterectomy), or ovaries (ovariectomy).

WPATH criteria for these surgeries include:

  • Persistent, well-documented gender dysphoria
  • Any significant medical or mental health conditions are “well controlled”
  • At least 12 continuous months of appropriate hormone therapy, unless there are reasons someone can’t or won’t take hormones. The purpose of this guideline is so that people can experience reversible hormone changes before they undergo irreversible ones.

Surgeries to remove the gonads (testes, ovaries) and the uterus may be performed independently. They may also be performed alongside other gender-affirmation surgeries.

Removing the gonads alone can lower the amount of cross-sex hormone therapy required to get results. In addition, removing the uterus or cervix eliminates the need to screen those organs. That’s important because those screening exams can cause dysphoria and discomfort in many transgender men.

Standards for Vaginoplasty, Phalloplasty, and Metoidioplasty

This group of surgeries constructs a vagina (vaginoplasty) or penis (phalloplasty, metoidioplasty). These procedures make a person’s genitalia more in line with their gender identity.

  • Any significant medical or mental health conditions are “well controlled”
  • Appropriate hormone therapy for 12 continuous months, unless there are reasons why someone can’t or won’t take hormones
  • Living in a gender role that is consistent with their gender identity for 12 continuous months

The requirement for a year of living in a gender role is because it gives people time to adjust to their desired gender. In addition, doctors widely believe that a year is a sufficient time for that adjustment before undergoing a complicated, expensive, and irreversible surgery.

Aftercare for these surgeries can be emotionally intense and difficult. For example, following vaginoplasty , consistent vaginal dilation is required to maintain depth and girth and avoid complications. These requirements can sometimes be challenging for people with a history of sexual trauma.

Aftercare Recommendations

Due to these surgeries’ physical and emotional intensity, experts recommend that those considering them have regular visits with a mental or medical health professional.

Standards for Facial Feminization Surgery

There are no formal guidelines for facial feminization surgery. In addition, it has historically been tough to get this procedure covered by insurance due to a lack of research on the benefits.

However, some individuals have been able to have it successfully covered by arguing that it is as medically necessary as genital surgery and has equally positive effects on quality of life.

Standards for Children and Adolescents

WPATH guidelines for children and adolescents include criteria for fully reversible interventions ( puberty blockers that pause puberty, for example) or partially reversible ones (hormones, for example). However, they do not recommend irreversible (surgical) interventions until the age of majority in their given country.

One exception is chest surgery for transmasculine adolescents. WPATH criteria suggest this could be carried out before adulthood, after ample time of living in their gender role, and after being on testosterone treatment for one year.

Despite the increasing uptake of WPATH guidelines by insurers, not every organization embraces them or applies them in the same way. Even WPATH notes that “the criteria put forth in this document... are clinical guidelines. Individual health professionals and programs may modify them.” And many times, they do.

Generally speaking, private insurance companies are more likely to offer coverage for some or all procedures than government agencies like Medicaid and Medicare. Even so, eligibility requirements can vary as can copayment and coinsurance costs.

Medicaid is the U.S. government health coverage program for low-income people, jointly funded by the federal government and states. Of the estimated 1.4 million transgender adults living in the United States, approximately 152,000 have Medicaid coverage, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Many state Medicaid programs cover aspects of gender-affirming health services. But only two states—Maine and Illinois—cover all five WPATH standards of care as of October 2022 (hormone therapy, surgery, fertility assistance, voice and communication therapy, primary care, and behavioral intervention).

Current Medicaid Coverage Status

In terms of gender-affirming surgery, 23 states provide coverage for adults, while nine states (Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Hawaii, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Texas, and Wyoming) currently deny coverage. The remaining states either have no policies in place or offer no reporting of coverage.

Medicare is federal health insurance for people 65 or older and some younger people with disabilities. Original Medicare (Part A and Part B) will cover gender-affirmation surgery when it is considered medically necessary. Prior to 2014, no coverage was offered.

The challenge with accessing surgery is that Medicare has no national precedent for approving or denying coverage. As such, approval or denial is based largely on precedents within your state and is conducted on a case-by-case basis.

This suggests that approval may be more difficult in states that deny coverage to Medicaid recipients given that Medicare is administered by a central agency called the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

As a general guideline, the CMS states that the following is needed for you to be an eligible candidate for gender-affirmation surgery:

  • Have a diagnosis of gender dysphoria
  • Provide proof of counseling
  • Provide evidence of hormone therapy (for transgender women)

If coverage is denied, there is an appeal process you can undergo to overturn the denial.

Private Insurance

Most private insurance companies in the United States will offer coverage for some—but not necessarily all—gender-affirming surgeries.

According to the Transgender Legal Defense & Education Fund (TLDEF), many of the larger insurers offer coverage for a comprehensive array of surgeries, including providers like:

  • Blue Cross/Blue Shield
  • UnitedHealthcare

Others have different standards in different states (such as AmeriHealth) or only offer coverage for specific surgeries like facial feminization surgery (Prestige and AmeriHealth New Hampshire).

Though coverage of gender-affirmation surgery is increasing, many private insurers still require you to meet extensive criteria before approval is granted. By way of example, to get approval for breast augmentation, a transgender woman would need to provide a company like Aetna:

  • A signed letter from a qualified mental health professional stating their readiness for physical treatment as well as their capacity to consent to a specific treatment
  • Documentation of marked and sustained gender dysphoria
  • Documentation that other possible causes of gender dysphoria have been excluded
  • The completion of six to 12 months of hormone therapy
  • A risk assessment of breast cancer screening by a qualified healthcare provider

Even if approval is granted, copayment, coinsurance, and out-of-pocket costs can vary, often considerably.

Out-of-Pocket Costs

According to a 2022 study from Oregon Health & Science University, a transgender person who underwent "bottom" surgery from 2007 to 2019 paid an average of $1,781 out of pocket.

With that said, 50% had to leave their state due to the restriction or unavailability of gender-affirmation surgery and ended up paying an average of $2,645 out of pocket, not including travel or living expenses.

Showing that a person has “persistent, well-documented gender dysphoria” usually requires a letter from a mental health provider. This letter usually states that the person meets the criteria for gender dysphoria, including the length of time that has been true.

This letter often also contains a narrative of the person’s gender history in detail. In addition, the letter should state how long the provider has been working with the person.

Well or Reasonably Controlled

It is important to note that some standards require that medical and mental health problems be well controlled, while others only require them to be reasonably well controlled. Documentation of this is also usually in a letter from the relevant healthcare provider.

This letter should contain information about the history of the condition, how it is controlled, and the length of the clinician’s relationship with the person. Ideally, the phrases “well controlled” or “reasonably well controlled” are used in the letter as appropriate.

Using terminology referenced in the WPTH criteria makes it easier for providers and insurance companies to determine that the conditions of the standards of care have been met.

Of note, mental health conditions are not a contraindication for gender affirmation surgeries. In fact, these procedures can help resolve symptoms in many transgender people and others with gender dysphoria. Symptom relief is true not just for anxiety and depression but for more severe conditions such as psychosis.

Getting insurance coverage for gender confirmation surgery can be a frustrating process. However, it can help to prepare a copy of the WPATH guidelines and any relevant research papers to support your goals. That’s particularly true if they include surgeries other than those listed above.

In addition, it may be a good idea to reach out to your local LGBT health center for assistance. Many health centers are now hiring transgender patient navigators who have extensive experience with the insurance process. They can be a great resource.

Local and national LGBTQ-focused legal organizations often have helplines or access hours where people can seek information.

Gender-affirmation surgery refers to various surgeries that allow people to align their bodies with their gender. WPATH guidelines offer criteria for determining whether someone is a good candidate for gender-affirmation surgery.

Not all insurance offers coverage for gender-affirmation surgery, but some do. First, however, you need to provide the proper documentation to show that you meet specific surgery criteria. This documentation is usually in a letter written by your physician or mental health clinician.

Morrison SD, Capitán-Cañadas F, Sánchez-García A, et al. Prospective quality-of-life outcomes after facial feminization surgery: an international multicenter study . Plast Reconstr Surg . 2020;145(6):1499-1509. doi:10.1097/PRS.0000000000006837

National Center for Transgender Equality. The report of the 2015 U.S. transgender survey .

World Professional Association for Transgender Health. Standards of care for the health of transsexual, transgender, and gender nonconforming people, 7th version .

Kaiser Family Foundation. Update on Medicaid coverage of gender-affirming health services .

CMS.gov. Gender dysphoria and gender reassignment surgery .

Transgender Legal Defense & Education Fund. Health insurance medical policies: gender dysphoria / gender reassignment .

Aetna. Gender-affirming surgery .

Downing J, Holt SK, Cunetta M, Gore JL, Dy GW. Spending and out-of-pocket costs for genital gender-affirming surgery in the US . JAMA Surg.  2022;157(9):799-806. doi:10.1001/jamasurg.2022.2606

Meijer JH, Eeckhout GM, van Vlerken RH, de Vries AL. Gender dysphoria and co-existing psychosis: review and four case examples of successful gender affirmative treatment . LGBT Health . 2017;4(2):106-114. doi:10.1089/lgbt.2016.0133

By Elizabeth Boskey, PhD Boskey has a doctorate in biophysics and master's degrees in public health and social work, with expertise in transgender and sexual health.

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Trans woman contemplates.

Gender Affirmation: Do I Need Surgery?

Featured Expert:

Fan Liang

Fan Liang, M.D.

There is no one-size-fits-all approach for the gender affirmation process. Perhaps you don’t want to undergo surgery right now because it’s too expensive or your family is not on board. Maybe you don’t see surgery as being a part of your transition process at all.

Gender affirmation is an individualized journey. Doing your own research and talking to experts will help you decide which options are best for you.

Dr. Fan Liang, the current medical director of Johns Hopkins Center for Transgender and Gender Expansive Health , stresses that while surgery can be a part of the transition process for many, it’s not for everyone. "Each patient needs to consider their personal goals and decide whether surgical options will improve their quality of life and lessen their gender dysphoria," she adds.

Dr. Liang shares insights into the many choices available to patients who wish to use nonsurgical options to express their gender identity. “It’s very possible that surgery is not in the transition plan for someone in the gender affirmation process. There are several nonsurgical services that may help transgender patients achieve their transition goals.

Hormone Treatment

Hormone therapy can help you achieve more masculine or feminine characteristics. Commonly prescribed by a primary care provider or endocrinologist, hormone treatments can be part of a presurgical plan or a stand-alone service.

These medications work to more closely align outward secondary sexual characteristics, such as enlarged breasts, body fat distribution or facial hair, with someone’s gender identity.

For transgender women or transfeminine nonbinary individuals, the hormones administered include estrogens and antiandrogens. For transgender men or transmasculine nonbinary individuals, hormones administered include androgens such as testosterone. Always talk to your doctor about your options and any possible side effects before beginning hormone treatment.

Dermatology

As part of the gender affirmation process, you can choose to undergo permanent hair removal for both aesthetic reasons and as preparation for some surgeries. Laser and electrolysis are the recommended methods.

  • During electrolysis, your dermatologist may use chemical or heat energy to destroy hair follicles and tweezers to remove the hair. Possible side effects of the treatment are pain, swelling or redness.
  • Laser hair removal uses infrared light to destroy hair follicles. Laser hair removal can cover a larger area more quickly than electrolysis. Possible side effects include skin irritation and redness. Some hair could be resistant to the laser treatment or grow back, although it is usually finer and lighter. Laser is not an option for every skin and hair type (for example, gray hair and/or fair hair).

Voice Therapy

Voice therapy with a laryngologist may help you achieve a way of speaking that more closely matches your gender identity. During an initial consultation, you will be comprehensively evaluated, including screening for the presence of any physical problems with your voice, such as vocal cord nodules. Depending on your desired outcome, a voice therapist who specializes in gender affirmation can help you with the following:

  • Habitual speaking pitch
  • Resonance (the way sound is shaped to produce a vocal quality)
  • Inflection/prosody (the melodic ups and downs of the voice)
  • Rate of speech
  • Volume/intensity
  • Articulation (how speech sounds are produced)
  • Pragmatics (social rules of communication)
  • Nonverbal communication

“As you consider your options, remember that the journey is your own,” says Liang. Knowing what is available, talking to other people who have transitioned and meeting with transgender health care experts can help you make an informed decision on which procedures, if any, are right for you.

The Center for Transgender and Gender Expansive Health Team at Johns Hopkins

Embracing diversity and inclusion, the Center for Transgender and Gender Expansive Health provides affirming, objective, person-centered care to improve health and enhance wellness; educates interdisciplinary health care professionals to provide culturally competent, evidence-based care; informs the public on transgender health issues; and advances medical knowledge by conducting biomedical research.

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Error bars represent 95% CIs. GAS indicates gender-affirming surgery.

Percentages are based on the number of procedures divided by number of patients; thus, as some patients underwent multiple procedures the total may be greater than 100%. Error bars represent 95% CIs.

eTable.  ICD-10 and CPT Codes of Gender-Affirming Surgery

eFigure. Percentage of Patients With Codes for Gender Identity Disorder Who Underwent GAS

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Wright JD , Chen L , Suzuki Y , Matsuo K , Hershman DL. National Estimates of Gender-Affirming Surgery in the US. JAMA Netw Open. 2023;6(8):e2330348. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.30348

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National Estimates of Gender-Affirming Surgery in the US

  • 1 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New York
  • 2 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles

Question   What are the temporal trends in gender-affirming surgery (GAS) in the US?

Findings   In this cohort study of 48 019 patients, GAS increased significantly, nearly tripling from 2016 to 2019. Breast and chest surgery was the most common class of procedures performed overall; genital reconstructive procedures were more common among older individuals.

Meaning   These findings suggest that there will be a greater need for clinicians knowledgeable in the care of transgender individuals with the requisite expertise to perform gender-affirming procedures.

Importance   While changes in federal and state laws mandating coverage of gender-affirming surgery (GAS) may have led to an increase in the number of annual cases, comprehensive data describing trends in both inpatient and outpatient procedures are limited.

Objective   To examine trends in inpatient and outpatient GAS procedures in the US and to explore the temporal trends in the types of GAS performed across age groups.

Design, Setting, and Participants   This cohort study includes data from 2016 to 2020 in the Nationwide Ambulatory Surgery Sample and the National Inpatient Sample. Patients with diagnosis codes for gender identity disorder, transsexualism, or a personal history of sex reassignment were identified, and the performance of GAS, including breast and chest procedures, genital reconstructive procedures, and other facial and cosmetic surgical procedures, were identified.

Main Outcome Measures   Weighted estimates of the annual number of inpatient and outpatient procedures performed and the distribution of each class of procedure overall and by age were analyzed.

Results   A total of 48 019 patients who underwent GAS were identified, including 25 099 (52.3%) who were aged 19 to 30 years. The most common procedures were breast and chest procedures, which occurred in 27 187 patients (56.6%), followed by genital reconstruction (16 872 [35.1%]) and other facial and cosmetic procedures (6669 [13.9%]). The absolute number of GAS procedures rose from 4552 in 2016 to a peak of 13 011 in 2019 and then declined slightly to 12 818 in 2020. Overall, 25 099 patients (52.3%) were aged 19 to 30 years, 10 476 (21.8%) were aged 31 to 40, and 3678 (7.7%) were aged12 to 18 years. When stratified by the type of procedure performed, breast and chest procedures made up a greater percentage of the surgical interventions in younger patients, while genital surgical procedures were greater in older patients.

Conclusions and Relevance   Performance of GAS has increased substantially in the US. Breast and chest surgery was the most common group of procedures performed. The number of genital surgical procedures performed increased with increasing age.

Gender dysphoria is characterized as an incongruence between an individual’s experienced or expressed gender and the gender that was assigned at birth. 1 Transgender individuals may pursue multiple treatments, including behavioral therapy, hormonal therapy, and gender-affirming surgery (GAS). 2 GAS encompasses a variety of procedures that align an individual patient’s gender identity with their physical appearance. 2 - 4

While numerous surgical interventions can be considered GAS, the procedures have been broadly classified as breast and chest surgical procedures, facial and cosmetic interventions, and genital reconstructive surgery. 2 , 4 Prior studies 2 - 7 have shown that GAS is associated with improved quality of life, high rates of satisfaction, and a reduction in gender dysphoria. Furthermore, some studies have reported that GAS is associated with decreased depression and anxiety. 8 Lastly, the procedures appear to be associated with acceptable morbidity and reasonable rates of perioperative complications. 2 , 4

Given the benefits of GAS, the performance of GAS in the US has increased over time. 9 The increase in GAS is likely due in part to federal and state laws requiring coverage of transition-related care, although actual insurance coverage of specific procedures is variable. 10 , 11 While prior work has shown that the use of inpatient GAS has increased, national estimates of inpatient and outpatient GAS are lacking. 9 This is important as many GAS procedures occur in ambulatory settings. We performed a population-based analysis to examine trends in GAS in the US and explored the temporal trends in the types of GAS performed across age groups.

To capture both inpatient and outpatient surgical procedures, we used data from the Nationwide Ambulatory Surgery Sample (NASS) and the National Inpatient Sample (NIS). NASS is an ambulatory surgery database and captures major ambulatory surgical procedures at nearly 2800 hospital-owned facilities from up to 35 states, approximating a 63% to 67% stratified sample of hospital-owned facilities. NIS comprehensively captures approximately 20% of inpatient hospital encounters from all community hospitals across 48 states participating in the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP), covering more than 97% of the US population. Both NIS and NASS contain weights that can be used to produce US population estimates. 12 , 13 Informed consent was waived because data sources contain deidentified data, and the study was deemed exempt by the Columbia University institutional review board. This cohort study followed the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology ( STROBE ) reporting guideline.

We selected patients of all ages with an International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision ( ICD-10 ) diagnosis codes for gender identity disorder or transsexualism ( ICD-10 F64) or a personal history of sex reassignment ( ICD-10 Z87.890) from 2016 to 2020 (eTable in Supplement 1 ). We first examined all hospital (NIS) and ambulatory surgical (NASS) encounters for patients with these codes and then analyzed encounters for GAS within this cohort. GAS was identified using ICD-10 procedure codes and Common Procedural Terminology codes and classified as breast and chest procedures, genital reconstructive procedures, and other facial and cosmetic surgical procedures. 2 , 4 Breast and chest surgical procedures encompassed breast reconstruction, mammoplasty and mastopexy, or nipple reconstruction. Genital reconstructive procedures included any surgical intervention of the male or female genital tract. Other facial and cosmetic procedures included cosmetic facial procedures and other cosmetic procedures including hair removal or transplantation, liposuction, and collagen injections (eTable in Supplement 1 ). Patients might have undergone procedures from multiple different surgical groups. We measured the total number of procedures and the distribution of procedures within each procedural group.

Within the data sets, sex was based on patient self-report. The sex of patients in NIS who underwent inpatient surgery was classified as either male, female, missing, or inconsistent. The inconsistent classification denoted patients who underwent a procedure that was not consistent with the sex recorded on their medical record. Similar to prior analyses, patients in NIS with a sex variable not compatible with the procedure performed were classified as having undergone genital reconstructive surgery (GAS not otherwise specified). 9

Clinical variables in the analysis included patient clinical and demographic factors and hospital characteristics. Demographic characteristics included age at the time of surgery (12 to 18 years, 19 to 30 years, 31 to 40 years, 41 to 50 years, 51 to 60 years, 61 to 70 years, and older than 70 years), year of the procedure (2016-2020), and primary insurance coverage (private, Medicare, Medicaid, self-pay, and other). Race and ethnicity were only reported in NIS and were classified as White, Black, Hispanic and other. Race and ethnicity were considered in this study because prior studies have shown an association between race and GAS. The income status captured national quartiles of median household income based of a patient’s zip code and was recorded as less than 25% (low), 26% to 50% (medium-low), 51% to 75% (medium-high), and 76% or more (high). The Elixhauser Comorbidity Index was estimated for each patient based on the codes for common medical comorbidities and weighted for a final score. 14 Patients were classified as 0, 1, 2, or 3 or more. We separately reported coding for HIV and AIDS; substance abuse, including alcohol and drug abuse; and recorded mental health diagnoses, including depression and psychoses. Hospital characteristics included a composite of teaching status and location (rural, urban teaching, and urban nonteaching) and hospital region (Northeast, Midwest, South, and West). Hospital bed sizes were classified as small, medium, and large. The cutoffs were less than 100 (small), 100 to 299 (medium), and 300 or more (large) short-term acute care beds of the facilities from NASS and were varied based on region, urban-rural designation, and teaching status of the hospital from NIS. 8 Patients with missing data were classified as the unknown group and were included in the analysis.

National estimates of the number of GAS procedures among all hospital encounters for patients with gender identity disorder were derived using discharge or encounter weight provided by the databases. 15 The clinical and demographic characteristics of the patients undergoing GAS were reported descriptively. The number of encounters for gender identity disorder, the percentage of GAS procedures among those encounters, and the absolute number of each procedure performed over time were estimated. The difference by age group was examined and tested using Rao-Scott χ 2 test. All hypothesis tests were 2-sided, and P  < .05 was considered statistically significant. All analyses were conducted using SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc).

A total of 48 019 patients who underwent GAS were identified ( Table 1 ). Overall, 25 099 patients (52.3%) were aged 19 to 30 years, 10 476 (21.8%) were aged 31 to 40, and 3678 (7.7%) were aged 12 to 18 years. Private insurance coverage was most common in 29 064 patients (60.5%), while 12 127 (25.3%) were Medicaid recipients. Depression was reported in 7192 patients (15.0%). Most patients (42 467 [88.4%]) were treated at urban, teaching hospitals, and there was a disproportionate number of patients in the West (22 037 [45.9%]) and Northeast (12 396 [25.8%]). Within the cohort, 31 668 patients (65.9%) underwent 1 procedure while 13 415 (27.9%) underwent 2 procedures, and the remainder underwent multiple procedures concurrently ( Table 1 ).

The overall number of health system encounters for gender identity disorder rose from 13 855 in 2016 to 38 470 in 2020. Among encounters with a billing code for gender identity disorder, there was a consistent rise in the percentage that were for GAS from 4552 (32.9%) in 2016 to 13 011 (37.1%) in 2019, followed by a decline to 12 818 (33.3%) in 2020 ( Figure 1 and eFigure in Supplement 1 ). Among patients undergoing ambulatory surgical procedures, 37 394 (80.3%) of the surgical procedures included gender-affirming surgical procedures. For those with hospital admissions with gender identity disorder, 10 625 (11.8%) of admissions were for GAS.

Breast and chest procedures were most common and were performed for 27 187 patients (56.6%). Genital reconstruction was performed for 16 872 patients (35.1%), and other facial and cosmetic procedures for 6669 patients (13.9%) ( Table 2 ). The most common individual procedure was breast reconstruction in 21 244 (44.2%), while the most common genital reconstructive procedure was hysterectomy (4489 [9.3%]), followed by orchiectomy (3425 [7.1%]), and vaginoplasty (3381 [7.0%]). Among patients who underwent other facial and cosmetic procedures, liposuction (2945 [6.1%]) was most common, followed by rhinoplasty (2446 [5.1%]) and facial feminizing surgery and chin augmentation (1874 [3.9%]).

The absolute number of GAS procedures rose from 4552 in 2016 to a peak of 13 011 in 2019 and then declined slightly to 12 818 in 2020 ( Figure 1 ). Similar trends were noted for breast and chest surgical procedures as well as genital surgery, while the rate of other facial and cosmetic procedures increased consistently from 2016 to 2020. The distribution of the individual procedures performed in each class were largely similar across the years of analysis ( Table 3 ).

When stratified by age, patients 19 to 30 years had the greatest number of procedures, 25 099 ( Figure 2 ). There were 10 476 procedures performed in those aged 31 to 40 years and 4359 in those aged 41 to 50 years. Among patients younger than 19 years, 3678 GAS procedures were performed. GAS was less common in those cohorts older than 50 years. Overall, the greatest number of breast and chest surgical procedures, genital surgical procedures, and facial and other cosmetic surgical procedures were performed in patients aged 19 to 30 years.

When stratified by the type of procedure performed, breast and chest procedures made up the greatest percentage of the surgical interventions in younger patients while genital surgical procedures were greater in older patients ( Figure 2 ). Additionally, 3215 patients (87.4%) aged 12 to 18 years underwent GAS and had breast or chest procedures. This decreased to 16 067 patients (64.0%) in those aged 19 to 30 years, 4918 (46.9%) in those aged 31 to 40 years, and 1650 (37.9%) in patients aged 41 to 50 years ( P  < .001). In contrast, 405 patients (11.0%) aged 12 to 18 years underwent genital surgery. The percentage of patients who underwent genital surgery rose sequentially to 4423 (42.2%) in those aged 31 to 40 years, 1546 (52.3%) in those aged 51 to 60 years, and 742 (58.4%) in those aged 61 to 70 years ( P  < .001). The percentage of patients who underwent facial and other cosmetic surgical procedures rose with age from 9.5% in those aged 12 to 18 years to 20.6% in those aged 51 to 60 years, then gradually declined ( P  < .001). Figure 2 displays the absolute number of procedure classes performed by year stratified by age. The greatest magnitude of the decline in 2020 was in younger patients and for breast and chest procedures.

These findings suggest that the number of GAS procedures performed in the US has increased dramatically, nearly tripling from 2016 to 2019. Breast and chest surgery is the most common class of procedure performed while patients are most likely to undergo surgery between the ages of 19 and 30 years. The number of genital surgical procedures performed increased with increasing age.

Consistent with prior studies, we identified a remarkable increase in the number of GAS procedures performed over time. 9 , 16 A prior study examining national estimates of inpatient GAS procedures noted that the absolute number of procedures performed nearly doubled between 2000 to 2005 and from 2006 to 2011. In our analysis, the number of GAS procedures nearly tripled from 2016 to 2020. 9 , 17 Not unexpectedly, a large number of the procedures we captured were performed in the ambulatory setting, highlighting the need to capture both inpatient and outpatient procedures when analyzing data on trends. Like many prior studies, we noted a decrease in the number of procedures performed in 2020, likely reflective of the COVID-19 pandemic. 18 However, the decline in the number of procedures performed between 2019 and 2020 was relatively modest, particularly as these procedures are largely elective.

Analysis of procedure-specific trends by age revealed a number of important findings. First, GAS procedures were most common in patients aged 19 to 30 years. This is in line with prior work that demonstrated that most patients first experience gender dysphoria at a young age, with approximately three-quarters of patients reporting gender dysphoria by age 7 years. These patients subsequently lived for a mean of 23 years for transgender men and 27 years for transgender women before beginning gender transition treatments. 19 Our findings were also notable that GAS procedures were relatively uncommon in patients aged 18 years or younger. In our cohort, fewer than 1200 patients in this age group underwent GAS, even in the highest volume years. GAS in adolescents has been the focus of intense debate and led to legislative initiatives to limit access to these procedures in adolescents in several states. 20 , 21

Second, there was a marked difference in the distribution of procedures in the different age groups. Breast and chest procedures were more common in younger patients, while genital surgery was more frequent in older individuals. In our cohort of individuals aged 19 to 30 years, breast and chest procedures were twice as common as genital procedures. Genital surgery gradually increased with advancing age, and these procedures became the most common in patients older than 40 years. A prior study of patients with commercial insurance who underwent GAS noted that the mean age for mastectomy was 28 years, significantly lower than for hysterectomy at age 31 years, vaginoplasty at age 40 years, and orchiectomy at age 37 years. 16 These trends likely reflect the increased complexity of genital surgery compared with breast and chest surgery as well as the definitive nature of removal of the reproductive organs.

This study has limitations. First, there may be under-capture of both transgender individuals and GAS procedures. In both data sets analyzed, gender is based on self-report. NIS specifically makes notation of procedures that are considered inconsistent with a patient’s reported gender (eg, a male patient who underwent oophorectomy). Similar to prior work, we assumed that patients with a code for gender identity disorder or transsexualism along with a surgical procedure classified as inconsistent underwent GAS. 9 Second, we captured procedures commonly reported as GAS procedures; however, it is possible that some of these procedures were performed for other underlying indications or diseases rather than solely for gender affirmation. Third, our trends showed a significant increase in procedures through 2019, with a decline in 2020. The decline in services in 2020 is likely related to COVID-19 service alterations. Additionally, while we comprehensively captured inpatient and ambulatory surgical procedures in large, nationwide data sets, undoubtedly, a small number of procedures were performed in other settings; thus, our estimates may underrepresent the actual number of procedures performed each year in the US.

These data have important implications in providing an understanding of the use of services that can help inform care for transgender populations. The rapid rise in the performance of GAS suggests that there will be a greater need for clinicians knowledgeable in the care of transgender individuals and with the requisite expertise to perform GAS procedures. However, numerous reports have described the political considerations and challenges in the delivery of transgender care. 22 Despite many medical societies recognizing the necessity of gender-affirming care, several states have enacted legislation or policies that restrict gender-affirming care and services, particularly in adolescence. 20 , 21 These regulations are barriers for patients who seek gender-affirming care and provide legal and ethical challenges for clinicians. As the use of GAS increases, delivering equitable gender-affirming care in this complex landscape will remain a public health challenge.

Accepted for Publication: July 15, 2023.

Published: August 23, 2023. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.30348

Open Access: This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License . © 2023 Wright JD et al. JAMA Network Open .

Corresponding Author: Jason D. Wright, MD, Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, 161 Fort Washington Ave, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10032 ( [email protected] ).

Author Contributions: Dr Wright had full access to all of the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.

Concept and design: Wright, Chen.

Acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data: All authors.

Drafting of the manuscript: Wright.

Critical review of the manuscript for important intellectual content: All authors.

Statistical analysis: Wright, Chen.

Administrative, technical, or material support: Wright, Suzuki.

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Dr Wright reported receiving grants from Merck and personal fees from UpToDate outside the submitted work. No other disclosures were reported.

Data Sharing Statement: See Supplement 2 .

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States That Have Restricted Gender-Affirming Care for Trans Youth

As the issue of trans rights has become more political, states are increasingly banning gender-affirming care for trans minors.

States Restricting Gender-Affirming Care

FILE - Trans-rights activists protest outside the House chamber at the Oklahoma state Capitol before the State of the State address, Feb. 6, 2023, in Oklahoma City. Rep. Mauree Turner, a Black, non-binary Democratic state legislator in the Oklahoma House, was formally censured by the Republican majority on Tuesday, March 7, for allegedly refusing to let state troopers question a transgender rights activist who was inside their legislative office. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki, File)

Sue Ogrocki | AP

Trans-rights activists protest outside the House chamber at the Oklahoma state Capitol on Feb. 6, 2023, in Oklahoma City.

A large majority of transgender adults in the United States – 78% – say living with a gender different from the one assigned to them at birth has made them more satisfied with their lives, according to a survey from The Washington Post and Kaiser Family Foundation .

Among respondents, more than three-quarters had changed their type of clothing, hairstyle or grooming habits to align with their preferred gender, while 31% had used hormone treatments and 16% had undergone gender-affirming surgery or a related surgical treatment to alter their appearance.

But such options are becoming available on a more limited basis, as politicians in multiple states have attempted to restrict trans Americans’ ability to seek gender-affirming medical treatments.

What Is Gender-Affirming Care? 

The Human Rights Campaign, a LGBTQ+ advocacy group, defines gender-affirming care as “age-appropriate care that is medically necessary for the well-being of many transgender and non-binary people who experience symptoms of gender dysphoria, or distress that results from having one’s gender identity not match their sex assigned at birth.” The organization notes both the American Medical Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics support “age-appropriate, gender-affirming care for transgender and non-binary people.”

Conservatives often oppose the concept of gender-affirming care – which may or may not include surgery or other interventions – for various reasons, including religious beliefs and concerns about child abuse. “You don’t disfigure 10-, 12-, 13-year-old kids based on gender dysphoria,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, said at an August news conference.

Some have expressed concern about a lack of data on the possible long-term consequences of gender-affirming medical treatment for minors. A 2022 Reuters investigation , for example, found “no large-scale studies have tracked people who received gender-related medical care as children to determine how many remained satisfied with their treatment as they aged and how many eventually regretted transitioning.” Others, according to the article, have raised alarms about children who are not appropriately evaluated before receiving gender-affirming medical care.

These States Have Banned Gender-Affirming Care for Minors

Mississippi

North Carolina

North Dakota

South Dakota

West Virginia

Below are the states that have moved to restrict some form of gender-affirming care for minors in 2023 and so far in 2024, based largely on legislation tracking from the Equality Federation, an advocacy accelerator that works with a network of state-based LGBTQ+ organizations.

Some states, such as Arizona and Alabama , passed bans prior to 2023 and are not included on the list.

Dozens of bills are still being considered by lawmakers in other states, according to the federation. And officials elsewhere, including in Florida and Missouri, have bypassed state legislatures altogether.

Signed into law by new Republican Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders in March, Arkansas’ law will make health care providers liable for civil action for up to 15 years after a minor turns 18 if they performed a gender transition procedure on that minor – essentially making it easier to file malpractice lawsuits in these situations. On that note, experts say the law acts as a de facto ban on gender-affirming care for children because it makes it nearly impossible for providers to get malpractice insurance, according to the AP . In 2021, state lawmakers passed the nation’s first ban on gender-affirming care for minors. The move was temporarily blocked shortly after, but on June 20, 2023, a federal judge issued a permanent injunction against it, ruling the ban unconstitutional. It marked the first time such a state ban was overturned, but the more recent law signed by Sanders was still set to go into effect.

The state Department of Health’s Board of Medicine announced a new rule in March that prohibits several types of treatment and procedures – such as sex reassignment surgeries and puberty blockers – for treating gender dysphoria in minors. Then, on May 17, DeSantis signed into law a similar gender-affirming care ban from the state legislature , which, in addition to prohibiting procedures from being performed on minors, also grants Florida courts “temporary emergency jurisdiction” over a child if they have been subjected to or “threatened” with sex-reassignment prescriptions or procedures. The law also requires transgender adults to get written consent before undergoing such procedures by using a form adopted by the Board of Medicine and Board of Osteopathic Medicine, according to Reuters. But on June 6, a district court judge in Florida issued a preliminary injunction that temporarily blocked enforcement of some parts of the law on behalf of several young plaintiffs. Months later, the same judge ruled that the parts of the law that apply to transgender adults can still be enforced while it is challenged in court.

Senate Bill 140 was signed into law by Georgia Republican Gov. Brian Kemp in late March. The legislation , pushed forward by the Republican majority in the state’s General Assembly, prohibits “certain surgical procedures for the treatment of gender dysphoria in minors from being performed in hospitals and other licensed healthcare facilities.” There are exceptions, including treatments that are deemed “medically necessary” and situations covering continued treatment for minors undergoing “irreversible hormone replacement therapies” prior to July 1, 2023. A federal judge on Sept. 5 allowed Georgia to resume enforcing the portion of the law banning doctors from starting hormone therapy for transgender minors, weeks after blocking it with a preliminary injunction. The prohibition on surgical procedures was not covered by the legal challenges.

The state’s GOP Gov. Brad Little approved a bill that criminalizes providing gender-affirming care for youth. Signed on April 4, 2023, and set to go into effect in January 2024, the law was intended to make it a felony to provide hormones, puberty blockers or other gender-affirming medical care to minors. But in December 2023, a federal judge issued a temporary injunction blocking the law’s enforcement. Then the U.S. Supreme Court in April 2024 ruled that the state could enforce the ban against everyone except the plaintiffs who challenged it. Even before that ruling, Little in March signed a new law which will prevent transgender people in Idaho from using publicly funded programs to help cover the cost of gender-affirming care. The ban included in the legislation, which is scheduled to go into effect on July 1, 2024, extends to state employees on work health insurance and adults using Medicaid.

Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb signed into law on April 5 a bill banning all gender-affirming care for minors, after previously saying there was “some vagueness to it,” according to the AP. The governor said in a statement that “permanent gender-changing surgeries with lifelong impacts and medically prescribed preparation for such a transition should occur as an adult, not as a minor.” The parts of the law banning puberty blockers and hormone treatments for minors were blocked by a federal judge on June 16, 2023, following a request for a preliminary injunction by the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana. But a federal appeals court ruling on Feb. 27, 2024, allowed those restrictions to go into effect.

Iowa’s ban , signed into law on March 22, prohibits health care professionals from “knowingly” performing certain medical practices on minors if they are “for the purpose of attempting to alter the appearance of, or affirm the minor’s perception of, the minor's gender or sex, if that appearance or perception is inconsistent with the minor's sex.” Practices covered by the law include hormone therapies and surgical procedures. As with other states’ laws, there are some exceptions, including a “medically verifiable disorder of sex development.”

The state on March 29 joined others in banning gender-affirming medical care for minors when the Republican-led Kentucky General Assembly voted to override Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear’s veto, becoming the first state led by a Democrat to approve such a ban in 2023. The law notes that any health provider who violates the prohibition can have their license or certificate revoked. A federal judge on June 28 temporarily blocked the portion of the law that would have banned transgender youth from accessing puberty blockers and hormone therapy, but that same judge lifted the injunction on July 14 – allowing the restrictions to go into effect. A federal appeals court panel on July 31 allowed the state to continue enforcing the law – and so did another in September.

With a successful override attempt of former Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards’ veto by the state’s Republican supermajority legislature, Louisiana approved a ban on gender-affirming care for minors on July 18. The law , which went into effect on Jan. 1, 2024, covers procedures such as hormone therapies, puberty blockers and gender-reassignment surgeries. The ban’s ultimate approval came after a Republican lawmaker cast a tie-breaking vote to kill the legislation in May. But it was eventually resurrected and passed before Edwards’ veto. New Gov. Jeff Landry, a Republican, has supported the ban, saying in a post in X in May 2023, “Pediatric sex changes should have no place in our society.”

Mississippi’s law – among the first to be enacted in 2023 – bans any person from knowingly providing or engaging in conduct that aids and abets the performance of gender transition procedures on a minor in the state. The ban also prohibits the use of public funds or tax deductions for such procedures. Republican Gov. Tate Reeves said when he signed the bill into law that “radical activists” are telling children they are “just a surgery away from happiness,” according to the AP .

GOP Gov. Mike Parson on June 7 signed a bill that will restrict gender-affirming health care for minors and some adults in Missouri starting in late August. The law prevents the state’s Medicaid division from covering such treatment for people of any age, and prohibits providers from prescribing puberty-blockers or cross-sex hormones to minors until Aug. 28, 2027, unless they were being treated prior to the bill’s effective date. Missouri initially banned gender-affirming care in April through an emergency regulation from state Attorney General Andrew Bailey that limited treatments for both minors and adults, the latter of which was believed to be a first in the country . But Bailey terminated the rule – which had already been on pause due to a lawsuit – on May 16, citing the state legislature’s imminent ban. A circuit judge on Aug. 25 allowed the law to take effect.

Signed into law on April 28 by Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte, Montana’s ban on gender-affirming care for minors covers both surgical procedures and medications such as puberty blockers and testosterone. As with other state laws, the prohibition has exceptions including for someone “diagnosed with a disorder of sexual development.” Any physician who performs a banned procedure can be also sued in the 25 years following it if the after-effects result in any injury, “including physical, psychological, emotional or physiological harms.” Democratic state Rep. Zooey Zephyr, a transgender woman, was exiled from the Montana House floor after she said her fellow Republican lawmakers would have “blood on their hands” if they passed the bill. The law was set to take effect on Oct. 1, but a state judge issued a preliminary injunction on Sept. 27 that blocked its enforcement, according to the AP.

Republican Gov. Jim Pillen signed into law on May 22, 2023, a bill that limits gender-affirming medical care for minors, which covers people under the age of 19 in Nebraska. The law , which also bans abortions at 12 weeks of pregnancy, includes a ban on surgical procedures and limitations on “prescribed drugs related to gender alteration.” The regulations for hormone therapies – recommended by the state’s chief medical officer, a political appointee – were later approved by Pillen on March 12, 2024, and include a seven-day waiting period to start puberty-blocking medications or hormone treatments and a requirement for transgender patients under 19 to meet several therapy benchmarks. The gender-affirming care portion of the new law went into effect on Oct. 1, 2023.

Looking Back at 2023

A tribal woman tries to catch small fish as her granddaughter dozes on her back at a paddy field on the outskirts of Guwahati in India's Assam state on March 20, 2023. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath)

The state’s Republican-dominated legislature on Aug. 16 voted to successfully override a veto from Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and approve a ban on gender-affirming care for minors in North Carolina. The bill’s language covers both transition surgeries and puberty-blocking drugs or cross-sex hormones. The law goes into effect immediately, but as with other state bans that have been approved, there are some exceptions to the prohibition.

Republican Gov. Doug Burgum on April 19 signed a veto-proof bill into law that criminalizes providing gender-affirming medical care to minors. The law , which went into effect immediately as an “emergency measure,” makes performing sex reassignment surgery on a minor a felony, and makes providing gender-affirming medication such as puberty blockers to minors a misdemeanor. Burgum recommended in a statement that “thoughtful debate around these complex medical policies should demonstrate compassion and understanding for all North Dakota youth and their families,” according to the AP.

Republican Gov. Mike DeWine on Jan. 5, 2024, signed an executive order that prohibits young Ohioans from getting gender-affirming surgeries done before they turn 18. The order, which took effect immediately, came just a week after DeWine vetoed a bill from the state legislature that would have instituted a broader restriction on gender-affirming care for minors, including hormone therapies. But on Jan. 24, the state Senate successfully voted to override the governor’s veto, meaning the more wide-reaching ban – which also prohibits transgender girls and women from girls’ and women’s sports teams at both the K-12 and collegiate level – was expected to take effect in 90 days. That was until a judge on April 16 blocked the law by issuing a temporary restraining order.

GOP Gov. Kevin Stitt on May 1 signed into law a ban on gender-affirming care for minors in Oklahoma, saying he was “thrilled” to do so and “protect our kids.” The bill allows for any physician who knowingly provides gender transition procedures to be charged with a felony, but the prosecution must occur before the minor patient turns 45. The law went into effect immediately, but on May 18 the state agreed to not enforce it while opponents sought a temporary court order blocking it. A federal judge in October later declined to stop the law from taking effect.

Signed into law on Feb. 13, House Bill 1080 prohibits South Dakotan health care professionals from administering various types of gender-affirming procedures on minors. If a provider violates the law, the legislation requires a professional or occupational licensing board to revoke any license or certificate held by the provider. GOP Gov. Kristi Noem strongly supported the bill before signing it, according to the AP .

Tennessee’s legislation , which was signed by Gov. Bill Lee in March but was set to go into effect on July 1, bans health care providers from performing or offering to perform a medical procedure on a minor if its purpose is to enable that minor “to identify with, or live as, a purported identity inconsistent with the immutable characteristics of the reproductive system that define the minor as male or female.” It also prohibits such procedures if the purpose is to treat “purported discomfort or distress from a discordance between the minor's sex and asserted identity.” There are exceptions, and the law establishes penalties for providers who violate it. Just days before its July 1 effective date, a federal judge on June 28 temporarily blocked the portion of the law that would have banned transgender youth from accessing puberty blockers and hormone therapy. U.S. District Judge Eli Richardson, however, did not block the law’s ban on surgical procedures. A federal appeals court on July 8 temporarily reversed Richardson’s ruling, meaning the law can take effect at least until the court conducts a full review.

GOP Gov. Greg Abbott on June 2 signed a bill banning gender-affirming care for minors in Texas. The law contains exceptions similar to other states’ efforts at restricting transition care. The Texas Supreme Court on Aug. 31 allowed the law to go into effect on Sept. 1, overruling a state district judge who had issued a temporary injunction against the ban a week prior. The law’s passage was not Texas’ first attempt at limiting gender-affirming care: Abbott in 2022 ordered the investigation of families who were receiving such care, but the order was halted by a judge in the state.

Republican Gov. Spencer Cox signed into law on Jan. 28 the first gender-affirming care ban of the year. The Utah legislature’s Senate Bill 16 restricts health providers from performing “sex characteristic surgical procedures on a minor for the purpose of effectuating a sex change” or hormonal transgender treatment on minors who weren’t diagnosed with gender dysphoria before July 1, 2023. Cox said his approval of the law was an effort at least in part to pause “these permanent and life-altering treatments for new patients until more and better research can help determine the long-term consequences,” the AP reported .

A new law signed by GOP Gov. Jim Justice on March 29 prohibits minors from being prescribed hormone therapy and puberty blockers, or from receiving gender-affirming surgery. The law , which will take effect in January 2024, contains an exception geared toward youth for whom “treatment with pubertal modulating and hormonal therapy is medically necessary to treat the minor’s psychiatric symptoms and limit self-harm, or the possibility of self-harm.” In these cases, the minor must receive consent from their parents or guardians along with two medical providers.

Republican Gov. Mark Gordon on March 22 signed into law a measure that prohibits gender-affirming medical care for transgender minors. The ban , which is set to go into effect on July 1, 2024, covers treatment such as surgeries and puberty-blockers. While he did sign the bill, Gordon added that the legislation means the government is “straying into the personal affairs of families,” according to the AP.

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Dr Hilary Cass speaks about the publication of the Independent Review of Gender Identity Services for Children and Young People (The Cass Review), London, 9 April 2024.

The Cass review of gender identity services marks a return to reason and evidence – it must be defended

David Bell

Its author has had to fend off criticism and misinformation, but the report offers hope for a realistic conversation

A s the dust settles around Hilary Cass’s report – the most extensive and thoroughgoing evidence-based review of treatment for children experiencing gender distress ever undertaken – it is clear her findings support the grave concerns I and many others have raised. Central here was the lack of an evidential base of good quality that could back claims for the effectiveness of young people being prescribed puberty blockers or proceeding on a medical pathway to transition. I and many other clinicians were concerned about the risks of long-term damaging consequences of early medical intervention. Cass has already had to speak out against misinformation being spread about her review, and a Labour MP has admitted she “may have misled” Parliament when referring to it. The review should be defended from misrepresentation.

The policy of “affirmation” – that is, speedily agreeing with a child that they are of the wrong gender – was an inappropriate clinical stance brought about by influential activist groups and some senior gender identity development service (Gids) staff, resulting in a distortion of the clinical domain. Studies indicate that a majority of children in the absence of medical intervention will desist – that is, change their minds.

The many complex problems that affect these young people were left unaddressed once they were viewed simplistically through the prism of gender. Cass helpfully calls this “diagnostic overshadowing”. Thus children suffered thrice over: through not having all their problems properly addressed; by being put on a pathway for which there is not adequate evidence and for which there is considerable risk of harm; and lastly because children not unreasonably believed that all their problems would disappear once they transitioned. It is, I think, not possible for a child in acute states of torment to be able to think through consequences of a future medical transition. Children struggle to even imagine themselves in an adult sexual body.

Some claim that low numbers of puberty blockers were prescribed. Cass quotes figures showing around 30% of Gids patients in England discharged between April 2018 and 31 December 2022 were referred to the endocrinology service, of whom around 80% were prescribed puberty blockers; the proportion was higher for older children. But these numbers are likely to be an underestimate, as 70% of children were transferred to adult services once they were 17, and their data lost, as very regrettably they were not followed up. This is one of the most serious governance problems of Gids – also specifically addressed by the judges in Keira Bell v Tavistock . Six adult gender clinics refused to cooperate and provide data to Cass. However, having come under considerable pressure, they have now relented .

It is often claimed that puberty blockers were not experimental, as there is a long history of their use. They had been used in precocious puberty (for example where a child, sometimes because of a pituitary abnormality, develops secondary sexual characteristics before the age of eight) and in the treatment of prostate cancer. But they had not been prescribed by Gids to children experiencing gender dysphoria before 2011 . The lack of long-term evidence underlies the decision of the NHS to put an end to their routine prescription for children as a treatment for gender dysphoria – that is, for those whose bodies were physically healthy.

The attempts of Gids clinicians to raise concerns about safeguarding and the medical approach were ignored or worse . The then medical director heard concerns but did not act; ditto the Speak up Guardian and the Tavistock and Portman NHS foundation trust management. I was a senior consultant psychiatrist, and it was in my role as staff representative on the trust council of governors that a large number of the Gids clinicians approached me with their grave concerns. This formed the basis of the report submitted to the board in 2018. The trust then conducted a “review” of Gids, based only on interviewing staff. The CEO stated that the review did not identify any “failings in the overall approach taken by the service in responding to the needs of the young people and families who access its support”. I was threatened with disciplinary action . When the child safeguarding lead, Sonia Appleby, raised her concerns before the trust’s review, the trust threatened her with an investigation; and its response, as an employment tribunal later confirmed, damaged her professional reputation and stood in the way of her safeguarding work.

Characterising a child as “being transgender” is harmful as it forecloses the situation and also implies that this is a unitary condition for which there is unitary “treatment”. It is much more helpful to use a description: that the child suffers from distress in relation to gender/sexuality, and this needs to be carefully explored in terms of the narrative of their lives, the presence of other difficulties such as autism, depression, histories of abuse and trauma, and confusion about sexuality. As the Cass report notes, studies suggest that a high proportion of these children are same-sex attracted, and many suffer from homophobia. Concerned gay and lesbian clinicians have said they experienced homophobia in the service, and that staff worked in a “climate of fear”.

It is misleading to suggest that I and others who have raised these concerns are hostile to transgender people – we believe they should be able to live their lives free of discrimination, and we want them to have safe, evidence-based holistic healthcare. What we have opposed is the precipitate placing of children on a potentially damaging medical pathway for which there is considerable evidence of risk of harm. We emphasised the need, before taking such steps, to spend considerable time exploring this complex and multifaceted clinical presentation. Young people and clinicians routinely refer to “top surgery” and “bottom surgery”, terms that serve to seriously underplay these major surgical procedures, ie double mastectomy, removal of pelvic organs and fashioning of constructed penis or vagina. These procedures carry very serious risks such as urinary incontinence, vaginal atrophy, cardiovascular complications and many others we are only beginning to learn about. There is a very serious risk of sexual dysfunction and sterility.

There are no reliable studies (for children or adults) that could support claims of low levels of regret. The studies often quoted (eg Bustos et al 2021) have been criticised for using inadequate and erroneous data . The critical issue here is the fact that children and young people who were put on a medical pathway were not followed up. Studies suggest that the majority of detransitioners, a growing population, who are having to deal with the consequences of having been put on a medical pathway, do not return to the clinics as they are very fearful of the consequences. The fact that there are no dedicated NHS services for detransitioners is symptomatic of the NHS’s lack of concern for this group. Many live very lonely and isolated lives.

Those who say a child has been “born in the wrong body”, and who have sidelined child safeguarding, bear a very heavy responsibility. Parents have been asked “Do you want a happy little girl or a dead little boy?” Cass notes that rates of suicidality are similar to rates among non-trans identified youth referred to child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS). Indeed, the NHS lead for suicide prevention, Prof Sir Louis Appleby, has said “invoking suicide in this debate is mistaken and potentially harmful”.

It has been suggested that the Cass report sought to “appease” various interests, with the implication that those who have promoted these potentially damaging treatments have been sidelined. But in reality, it is those of us who have raised these concerns who have been silenced by trans rights activists who have had considerable success in closing down debate, including preventing conferences going ahead. Doctors and scientists have said that they have been deterred from conducting studies in this area by a climate of fear, and faced great personal costs for speaking out, ranging from harassment to professional risks and even, as Cass has experienced, safety concerns in public.

The pendulum is already swinging towards a reassertion of rationality. Cass’s achievement is to give that pendulum a hugely increased momentum. In years to come we will look back at the damage done to children with incredulity and horror.

David Bell is a retired psychiatrist and former president of the British Psychoanalytic Society

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here .

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  • Court rules surgery not mandatory for legal gender change

Published : May 9, 2024 - 14:51

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(Getty Images)

A recent court ruling has declared it unlawful for the first time to require gender-affirmation surgery as a prerequisite for legally changing one's gender.

Judges at the Yeongdong branch of the Cheongju District Court recently granted permission to five people who have not undergone gender reassignment surgeries to change their legal gender from male to female on their family registers. The decision was confirmed by the court on Thursday.

The individuals, originally registered as male at birth, have adopted a female gender identity since childhood, according to local news reports. The reports indicate that they have all pursued hormone therapy for several years to affirm their gender expression.

In elucidating the reasoning behind their decision, the judges highlighted that the Supreme Court revised the administrative guidelines on gender registration for transgender individuals in 2020.

The judges underscored that the requirement of undergoing gender-affirmation surgery has shifted from being a mandatory "criteria for approval" for legal gender change to being a "reference point."

The judges noted that requiring people to receive surgery as a prerequisite to legally change genders could be a violation of the Constitution, which ensures human dignity and the right to pursue happiness.

The judges further explained that the requirements are “in conflict with the fundamental right of people to have protected their physical integrity and personal autonomy in connection with their human dignity.”

However, the judges simultaneously recognized that "some courts, at their discretion, have requested documents pertaining to gender-affirming surgery and have utilized the absence of such documentation as justification for denying the legal gender change."

Article 6, Paragraphs 3 and 4 of the “Guidelines for the Handling of Petition for Legal Sex Change Permit of Transgender People,” a rule set by the Supreme Court, stipulates that whether the person in question has undergone gender confirmation surgery or is sterile may be taken under consideration when deciding whether to accept or deny a request to change one's gender on official records.

“The Supreme Court should quickly eliminate the relevant guidelines’ articles so that lower courts can be consistent in their authorization standards,” said Song Ji-eun, a lawyer representing the five gender change applicants.

Overseas, a growing number of countries do not require gender reassignment surgery as a prerequisite for legal gender change. Japan’s highest court ruled in October 2023 that requiring gender reassignment surgery to obtain a legal gender transition was unconstitutional. The Czech Constitutional Court ruled the same on Tuesday.

Other countries such as Denmark, Belgium, and Argentina do not require surgery for legal gender changes.

Lee Jaeeun

Articles by Lee Jaeeun

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Czech Republic’s top court rules that surgery is not required to officially change gender

FILE - People march during the LGBTQ+ parade at the Old Town Square in Prague, Czech Republic, Saturday, Aug. 12, 2023. On Tuesday May 7, 2024 , the Czech Republic's highest legal authority ruled to dismiss part of a law requiring people to undergo surgery, including sterilisation and change of sexual organs, to be able to officially change their gender. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek, File)

FILE - People march during the LGBTQ+ parade at the Old Town Square in Prague, Czech Republic, Saturday, Aug. 12, 2023. On Tuesday May 7, 2024 , the Czech Republic’s highest legal authority ruled to dismiss part of a law requiring people to undergo surgery, including sterilisation and change of sexual organs, to be able to officially change their gender. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek, File)

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PRAGUE (AP) — The Czech Republic’s highest court on Tuesday ruled to dismiss part of a law requiring people to undergo gender-affirmation surgery, including sterilization, in order to officially change their gender.

The Constitutional Court said the requirements are “unconstitutional” and “in conflict with the fundamental right of trans people to have protected their physical integrity and personal autonomy in connection with their human dignity.”

Only two of the court’s 15 judges opposed the verdict, which cannot be appealed. Lawmakers must change the affected sections of the law by the middle of next year.

The court ruled at the request of a person who was seeking a gender change. The authorities refused to register him as a man because he had not undergone surgery.

The Czech practice was criticized by LGBTQ+ rights groups.

The Czech Republic, also known as Czechia, was one of the last European Union countries to have such conditions in law.

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  1. Gender Affirmation Surgery: What Happens, Benefits & Recovery

    Gender affirmation surgery may be a part of transitioning, or "coming out" to others (and yourself) if you're transgender, nonbinary or gender diverse. Surgeries exist that: ... Gender reassignment is an outdated term for gender affirmation surgery. The new language, "gender affirmation," is more accurate in terms of what the surgery ...

  2. Gender Confirmation Surgery

    The cost of transitioning can often exceed $100,000 in the United States, depending upon the procedures needed. A typical genitoplasty alone averages about $18,000. Rhinoplasty, or a nose job, averaged $5,409 in 2019. Insurance Coverage for Sex Reassignment Surgery.

  3. Gender-affirming surgery

    Gender-affirming surgery is known by numerous other names, including gender-affirmation surgery, sex reassignment surgery, gender reassignment surgery, and gender confirmation surgery. It is also sometimes called a sex change, though this term is usually considered offensive.

  4. Gender Affirmation Surgeries: Common Questions and Answers

    Gender affirmation surgery, also known as gender confirmation surgery, is performed to align or transition individuals with gender dysphoria to their true gender. A transgender woman, man, or non-binary person may choose to undergo gender affirmation surgery. The term "transexual" was previously used by the medical community to describe people ...

  5. Gender-affirming surgery (male-to-female)

    Gender-affirming surgery for male-to-female transgender women or transfeminine non-binary people describes a variety of surgical procedures that alter the body to provide physical traits more comfortable and affirming to an individual's gender identity and overall functioning.. Often used to refer to vaginoplasty, sex reassignment surgery can also more broadly refer to other gender-affirming ...

  6. Preparing for Gender Affirmation Surgery: Ask the Experts

    Request an Appointment. 844-546-5645 United States. +1-410-502-7683 International. To help provide guidance for those considering gender affirmation surgery, two experts from the Johns Hopkins Center for Transgender Health answer questions about what to expect before and after your surgery.

  7. Surgery for Transgender People: Learn About Gender Affirmation

    A trans person can choose from multiple procedures to make their appearance match their self-identified gender identity. Doctors refer to this as gender "affirmation" surgery. Trans people might ...

  8. Gender Affirmation Surgeries

    Top surgery is surgery that removes or augments breast tissue and reshapes the chest to create a more masculine or feminine appearance for transgender and nonbinary people. Facial gender surgery: While hormone replacement therapy can help achieve gender affirming changes to the face, surgery may help. Facial gender surgery can include a variety ...

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  10. Overview of gender-affirming treatments and procedures

    WPATH Clarification on Medical Necessity of Treatment, Sex Reassignment, and Insurance Coverage for Transgender and Transsexual People Worldwide WPATH. Transgender Health Information Program. ... Gender Affirmation: A framework for conceptualizing risk behavior among transgender women of color. Sex Roles. 2013 Jun 1;68(11-12):675-89. ...

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    Gender-affirmation surgery is a rapidly growing field in plastic surgery, urologic surgery, and gynecologic surgery. These procedures offer significant benefit to patients in reducing gender dysphoria and improving well-being. ... Male-to-female gender reassignment surgery: an institutional analysis of outcomes, short-term complications, and ...

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    Female-to-male surgery is a type of gender-affirmation or gender-affirming surgery. There are multiple forms of gender-affirming surgery, including altering the genital region, known as "bottom ...

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    Gender-affirming surgery is a collection of surgical procedures for adults ages 18 and older diagnosed with gender dysphoria. The operations are often referred to as "top surgery" and "bottom surgery.". Duke Health offers several top surgery options to transgender, gender-diverse, nonbinary, and gender-nonconforming adults who want their ...

  14. Transgender Surgeries & Gender Affirmation

    Gender Affirming Surgeries. For those patients who choose to have gender-affirming surgery, the Mount Sinai Center for Transgender Medicine and Surgery can help. These procedures may also be referred to as gender reassignment or confirmation procedures. We are among the world's leaders in this field, performing several hundred surgeries each ...

  15. Stages of Gender Reassignment

    And with good reason, I think. Knowing that sex, sexuality and gender aren't interchangeable terms, updating "sex change" to "gender reassignment" or "gender affirmation" and "transsexual" to "transgender" moves the focus away from what sounds like something to do with sexual orientation to one that is a more accurate designation. Related Articles

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  17. Gender Affirmation Surgery

    Any surgical procedure designed to align a person's internal sense of self with their external physical and sexual characteristics is known as gender affirmation surgery. This is sometimes called gender confirmation surgery as well. Older terms such as gender reassignment or sex reassignment surgery have fallen out of favor.

  18. Insurance for Gender Affirmation or Confirmation Surgery

    Outdated terms like "sex reassignment" or "sex change" should not be used. Gender affirmation reflects the process a person goes through when they begin to live as their authentic gender rather than the gender assigned to them a birth. Medical or surgical procedures are only one facet of gender affirmation.

  19. Gender Affirmation: Do I Need Surgery?

    Gender affirmation is an individualized journey. Doing your own research and talking to experts will help you decide which options are best for you. Dr. Fan Liang, the current medical director of Johns Hopkins Center for Transgender and Gender Expansive Health , stresses that while surgery can be a part of the transition process for many, it ...

  20. National Estimates of Gender-Affirming Surgery in the US

    Key Points. Question What are the temporal trends in gender-affirming surgery (GAS) in the US?. Findings In this cohort study of 48 019 patients, GAS increased significantly, nearly tripling from 2016 to 2019. Breast and chest surgery was the most common class of procedures performed overall; genital reconstructive procedures were more common among older individuals.

  21. What Is Gender-Affirming Care, and Which States Have Restricted it

    Republican Gov. Jim Pillen signed into law on May 22, 2023, a bill that limits gender-affirming medical care for minors, which covers people under the age of 19 in Nebraska. The law, which also ...

  22. The Cass review of gender identity services marks a return to reason

    The policy of "affirmation" - that is, speedily agreeing with a child that they are of the wrong gender - was an inappropriate clinical stance brought about by influential activist groups ...

  23. Enforcement Guidance on Harassment in the Workplace

    Based on these facts, the sex-based harassment experienced by Velma, which must be viewed in the context of her vulnerability as a survivor of dating violence, is sufficiently severe or pervasive to create an objectively hostile work environment. Example 46: Harassment Based on Gender Identity Creates an Objectively Hostile Work Environment.

  24. Court rules surgery not mandatory for legal gender change

    Published : May 9, 2024 - 14:51. (Getty Images) A recent court ruling has declared it unlawful for the first time to require gender-affirmation surgery as a prerequisite for legally changing one's ...

  25. Summary of Key Provisions: EEOC Enforcement Guidance on Harassment in

    The protected characteristics covered by the laws the EEOC enforces are race, color, religion, sex (including sexual orientation; gender identity; and pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions), national origin, disability, age (40 or older), and genetic information (including family medical history).

  26. Czech Republic's top court rules that surgery is not required to

    Updated 3:07 AM PDT, May 7, 2024. PRAGUE (AP) — The Czech Republic's highest court on Tuesday ruled to dismiss part of a law requiring people to undergo gender-affirmation surgery, including sterilization, in order to officially change their gender. The Constitutional Court said the requirements are "unconstitutional" and "in conflict ...

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    The decision took 10 months to be finalized, after she and others petitioned the court in June 2023 to update their gender in official records, saying that they wanted to "show that gender affirmation surgery should not be the main criterion for recognizing the change of legal gender.". The Hankyoreh sat down with Kay on April 28.