Published on March 28, 2008
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/2008....406.php
Cruellest cut
Boys who want to change sex and have their testicles removed should think again, experts have warned.
The warning follows a complaint by gay activist Nathee Theerarojjanaphon to the Medical Council that a 16-year-old boy in Chiang Mai province had his testicles removed and his two friends, aged 14 and 15, were also seeking to have the operation.
They believed that removing their testicles could make their complexion and body look like a woman's.
"There is no medical or scientific evidence that removing a boy's testicles can change his sexual appearance and complexion," says Dr Supachai Kunaratanapruk, chief of the Public Health Ministry's Department of Health Service Support.
Instead of looking beautiful, boys would face side-effects because the testicles generate male sex hormones, notably testosterone. They would have to take hormone drugs for the rest of their lives.
"It is not easy to be like a woman. You have to consult with your parents and a psychiatrist for a long time. And of course you have to make sure that you really want to be a woman and change your life forever," Supachai says.
Most sex-change operations for male teenagers have been done by legal and illegal clinics in Bangkok, Chiang Mai and Phuket. Clinics use websites to advertise the operations, which cost Bt4,000 to Bt5,000.
Supachai says most operations are of poor standard and dangerous.
Medical Council secretary-general Amnat Kulasanant says his agency will charge physicians who perform sex-change operations on boys under 18 because it is against the law.
By Pongphon Sarnsamak
Daily Xpress
XTRA
At knife's edge
>> According to international standards, people seeking a sex change must consult psychiatrists about their mental health.
>> Before making their
decision, they must live as a woman for six months to one year. Then if they decide they really want to be a woman, they can have an operation under international standards.
>> In Thailand, patients and physicians are not required to follow the international standard. The Medical Council is now drafting a new regulation to control sex-change operations and prevent medical errors.
>> Surgery on youths under 18 without permission from the
parents is not allowed by Thai law. Those who abuse the law can be jailed for one year and/or fined Bt20,000.
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/2008....406.php
Cruellest cut
Boys who want to change sex and have their testicles removed should think again, experts have warned.
The warning follows a complaint by gay activist Nathee Theerarojjanaphon to the Medical Council that a 16-year-old boy in Chiang Mai province had his testicles removed and his two friends, aged 14 and 15, were also seeking to have the operation.
They believed that removing their testicles could make their complexion and body look like a woman's.
"There is no medical or scientific evidence that removing a boy's testicles can change his sexual appearance and complexion," says Dr Supachai Kunaratanapruk, chief of the Public Health Ministry's Department of Health Service Support.
Instead of looking beautiful, boys would face side-effects because the testicles generate male sex hormones, notably testosterone. They would have to take hormone drugs for the rest of their lives.
"It is not easy to be like a woman. You have to consult with your parents and a psychiatrist for a long time. And of course you have to make sure that you really want to be a woman and change your life forever," Supachai says.
Most sex-change operations for male teenagers have been done by legal and illegal clinics in Bangkok, Chiang Mai and Phuket. Clinics use websites to advertise the operations, which cost Bt4,000 to Bt5,000.
Supachai says most operations are of poor standard and dangerous.
Medical Council secretary-general Amnat Kulasanant says his agency will charge physicians who perform sex-change operations on boys under 18 because it is against the law.
By Pongphon Sarnsamak
Daily Xpress
XTRA
At knife's edge
>> According to international standards, people seeking a sex change must consult psychiatrists about their mental health.
>> Before making their
decision, they must live as a woman for six months to one year. Then if they decide they really want to be a woman, they can have an operation under international standards.
>> In Thailand, patients and physicians are not required to follow the international standard. The Medical Council is now drafting a new regulation to control sex-change operations and prevent medical errors.
>> Surgery on youths under 18 without permission from the
parents is not allowed by Thai law. Those who abuse the law can be jailed for one year and/or fined Bt20,000.
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