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Psychological
Research
J.
David Hester, PhD. has published two recent articles about
the rhetoric surrounding intersexuality. The first, Rhetoric of
the Medical Management of Intersex Children has been published by
the journal Genders.
The second article, called Intersex(es) and the Rhetoric of Healing
examines the role of on-line discourse that is a fairly recent phenomena
in intersex advocacy. David
Hester is a scholar and theologian based in Berlin. Both have
been included here with the permission of the author:
Dr. Ellen
K. Feder, of American University, has written
an excellent and important chapter on parents and intersexed children
in a volume on care and dependency. The work is significant in
that
it is the first account of intersex based on interviews with parents.
Dr. Feder argues that the isolation of parents and medicine's failure
to take account of their experiences is unfortunate; but more than
that, parents' isolation and confusion are built into the treatment
process itself:
-
Ellen
K. Feder, 2002, "Doctor's Orders: Parents and Intersexed
Children." Pp. 294-320 in The Subject of Care: Feminist
Perspectives on Dependency, edited by Eva Feder Kittay
and Ellen K. Feder. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers,
Inc. Read
the article on-line. (PDF)
Another
groundbreaking study by Catherine Minto, Sarah Creighton,
and colleagues was published in The Lancet, the leading medical
research journal in the UK. The article examines the effects
of
clitoral surgery on sexual function:
- Minto,
Catherine L, Lih-Mei Liao, Christopher R J Woodhouse, Phillip
G Ransley,
Sarah M Creighton. The effect of clitoral surgery on sexual outcome
in individuals who have intersex conditions with ambiguous genitalia:
a cross-sectional study. Lancet 2003. 361:1252-57. Available online
at:
Excellent
article by Sheri Berenbaum, Dept of Pyschology, Pennsylvania State
University examining the treatment protocols for intersex children,
and the lack of adequate follow-up studies:
Recent
article by Berenbaum and Bailey that indicates most girls with CAH
have female gender identity regardless of surgical status:
- Berenbaum,
Sheri A., Bailey, Michael J. 2003, Effects on Gender Identity
of Prenatal Androgens and Genital Appearance: Evidence from Girls
with Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology
& Metabolism. 88(3):1102-1106. Web access is pay per article
from http://jcem.endojournals.org/cgi/content/full/88/3/1102
Dr.
Nina Williams had a wonderful, yet disturbing case
study about one of her clients. Nina is also on the founding
Board of Directors of Bodies Like Ours. This case study was
presented at the American Psychological Assn annual meeting,
SF 2001:
Behavioral
effects of prenatal versus postnatal androgen excess in children
- Entrez-PubMed
Early
androgen effects on aggression in children and adults with CAH-Entrez-PubMed
Effects
of early androgens on sex-typed activities and interests in adolescents
Effects
of fetal androgen on childhood behavior - Entrez-PubMed
Gender-related
behavior and attitudes - Entrez-PubMed
Personality
characteristics and platelet MAO activity in CAH women - Entrez-PubMed
Psychological
findings in early treated cases of female pseudohermaphroditism
- Entrez-PubMed
Psychosocial
sequelae - Entrez-PubMed
Sexual
behavior in adolescent and adult females - Entrez-PubMed
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