A Pilot Survey of Indian Stakeholders: Parents, Doctors, and Grown-Up Patients of Disorders of Sexual Differentiation on Management Decisions and Associated Gender Dysphoria

Of late, there are many legal representations from select quarters to halt all medical interventions in children with differences of sex development (DSD). In this survey on management decisions in DSD, we distil the views of Indian stakeholders: parents, physicians, and grown-up patients with DSD o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Indian Association of Pediatric Surgeons 2024-07, Vol.29 (4), p.370-375
Hauptverfasser: Ratan, Simmi K, Neogi, Sujoy, Ahmad, Md Fahim, Das, Kanishka, Raman, Vijaya, Bendre, Pradnya S, Banerjee, Arka, Sharma, Shilpa, Acharya, Himanshu, Agrawal, Vikesh, Babu, Ramesh
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Of late, there are many legal representations from select quarters to halt all medical interventions in children with differences of sex development (DSD). In this survey on management decisions in DSD, we distil the views of Indian stakeholders: parents, physicians, and grown-up patients with DSD on their management decisions to identify decisional satisfaction or gender dysphoria. The survey domains included the patient demographics, final diagnosis, decision on the sex of rearing, surgical interventions, opinion of the stakeholders on the preferred age of sex assignment, final sex of rearing, and agreement/disagreement about sex assignment (gender dysphoria). A total of 106 responses were recorded (66% parents, 34% grown-up patients aged 12-50 years). Among parents, 65/70 (95%) preferred the sex to be assigned soon after birth. All grown-up patients preferred sex to be assigned soon after birth. Regarding decisions on surgery, 74% of physicians and 75% of the grown-up patients felt parents should be allowed to decide interventions. Among Indian parents, 90% felt they should have the right to decide surgery in the best interest of their child for a safe social upbringing. Overall, gender dysphoria among Indian DSD patients was
ISSN:0971-9261
1998-3891
DOI:10.4103/jiaps.jiaps_83_24