INTERESTING FACTS (part one)
Can men be pregnant with
their own babies?
If you click
your mouse on the words that are blue or underlined,you will get more
information. Before I tell you how a man can become pregnant and give birth to
a baby, I will tell you about how this unusual phenomenon came about.
It is a known fact that husbands can suffer from similar pains that
their wives suffer from during their wives pregnancies but can husbands
actually give birth to their own babies? The answer is yes, they can.
When Jay Thomas, age 33, decided he wanted to
get pregnant in 2016, he spoke to his physician. , J
But none of that turned out to be true,
according to Thomas, who gave birth to the couple’s son Dorian, 2, less than a
year after that doctor’s appointment..
One of the most persistent myths transgender
men and nonbinary people hear from doctors is that testosterone has sterilized
them. While testosterone does block ovulation, transgender men can get pregnant
if they are not taking that regularly.
It’s just one example of the misinformation and
discouragement transgender men say they face from the medical establishment
when they decide to get pregnant that is a problem advocates and experts blame
on a lack of training and research around transgender health care, as well as
doctors’ biases.
There is no data on how many transgender men
and nonbinary people give birth in the United States each year, because medical
systems track them as female, but experts believe the numbers are likely higher
than many would expect. The number of people who identify as transgender is
growing: A 2016 study from the Williams Institute found that 1.4 million
adults in the U.S identify as transgender, which was double the estimate based
on data;
In Australia, where government agencies began tracking both sex and gender in official records in 2013, 54 transgender men gave birth to
babies in 2014, according to statistics from the country’s universal health
care system. And a Dutch study published in the journal Human Reproduction in 2011 found that a majority of trans men
reported wanting families of their own.
But doctors, nurses and medical office staff
are still adjusting to the idea that those who are pregnant may not be identified
as women. Transgender and nonbinary people describe gaps in medical
professionals’ understanding ranging from an ultrasound technician calling them
by the wrong name to doctors who tell them hormone therapy probably ruined
their fertility. The consequences can be dire. A recently published case study described a transgender man who went to an emergency
room with severe abdominal pain — but doctors were slow to realize that he was
pregnant and in danger. The man delivered a stillborn baby several hours later.
The issue extends to all types of medical care for transgender and
nonbinary people, not only to prenatal care, said Dr. Alex Keuroghlian, director
of the National LGBT Health Education Center at Fenway Health, which educates
health care organizations on how to care for lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender and queer people.
A 2017
report by the Center for American Progress, a liberal policy
institute, found that 29 percent of trans people reported that a medical
provider had refused to see them because of their sexual orientation or gender
identity in the previous year, and 21 percent of trans respondents said a
provider had used harsh or abusive language when they sought medical care.
“It’s not a standard part of medical education,
it’s not a standard part of nursing education, or training of mental health
clinicians,” Keuroghlian, who is a psychiatrist at Massachusetts General
Hospital, said of health care for transgender and nonbinary people. “So many
health care professionals are playing catch-up after the fact and learning how
to accommodate the range of experiences that gender minority people have in
health care.”
That lack of awareness can cause trans people to
avoid doctors. According to a 2016 report in the journal Medical Care, about 30 percent of trans people reported delaying or
not seeking care due to discrimination.
“It really is a matter of life and death for
transgender and nonbinary people to be seen, valued, and supported by their
medical providers,” said Trystan Reese, who is the director of family formation
for the Family Equality Council, a
national nonprofit that advocates for LGBTQ families, “whether in a fertility
setting or going in for a broken arm or diabetes or any other health issue they
might have.”
The need for Trans people to constantly explain
themselves to doctors and other medical staff can be draining.
Ethan Clift, age 36, and his wife Allison
Clift-Jennings, age 41, who are both transgender, decided in 2017 that they
wanted biological children. Clift, a lobbyist, also wanted to begin taking
testosterone as part of his transition. Because testosterone blocks ovulation,
the couple, who live in Reno, Nevada, decided to freeze their embryos before
Clift transitioned. “The whole process is
difficult — it really is tailored for women, essentially, in the language and
everything about it,” Clift said. Keuroghlian said
this is a common experience of transgender men in medical settings.
“There’s a tremendous amount of stigma related to
having a gender minority identity, and most people weren’t raised to have an
awareness of gender diversity, including an awareness of the fact that people
of many genders need OB-GYN services and may experience pregnancy and have
children,” Keuroghlian said.
Whether the mistreatment is intentional or not,
Keuroghlian said trans and nonbinary people who are made to feel uncomfortable
usually don’t return and are more likely to avoid doctors in the future. Some choose to give birth outside of hospitals
instead.
According to a small 2014 study published by the
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, 22 percent of trans and
nonbinary people said they chose to give birth at home with the assistance of a
midwife or doula. Overall, just 1.36 percent of
births in the U.S. were outside of hospitals in 2012, according
to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Jasper Moon, a midwife in Portland, Oregon, who is
nonbinary and uses “they” and “them” pronouns, is four months pregnant and
plans to give birth at home with the assistance of midwives. “They know me
really well, I know them really well, I trust them, and everything goes
appropriately because I don’t have random newcomers like I would at a hospital
birth,” Moon said.
Many trans and nonbinary
people also look online for information about getting pregnant and giving
birth. A private Facebook group for trans men, which contains more than 200
members, serves as a network for those looking for advice on how to plan
families.
Clift said he and his wife use Reddit and
Instagram to find and share information with other trans and nonbinary people
who are going through transition or pregnancy. On Instagram, Clift said there
aren’t many trans men who are pregnant, but he can find them through hashtags
and ask them questions in the comments.
“I feel like transgender health is a form of
biohacking because there aren’t a ton of studies out there — legitimate studies
and there aren’t a ton of doctors that
really know it inside and out,” Clift said.
While it’s good that people are informing
themselves and each other, Dr. Juno Obedin-Maliver, a gynecologist and an
assistant professor at Stanford
University School of Medicine, said some of her trans and nonbinary
patients have misconceptions based on what they’ve read online.
For example, some trans men think they need to undergo hysterectomies
because they have read that testosterone will cause uterine cancer, but there
is no rigorous research supporting that, said Obedin-Maliver, who co-authored
the Pride
Study, the first nationwide report on the physical, mental and
social health of LGBTQ people.
“There’s very little knowledge, and there’s often
an opening for misinformation,” Obedin-Maliver said. “The answer to that is
rigorous comprehensive data that fills in those answers and comprehensive
medical education for clinicians so that we can meet what is a real need for
people to take care of themselves.”
Since 2011, the National LGBT Health Education
Center has trained more than 1,000 health care organizations on how to care for
LGBTQ patients.
Dr. Rupal Yu, a family physician for Piedmont Health Services, which
implemented training in all 12 of its North Carolina centers, recalled a young
trans man who came to her for care prior to the training. She said she was
surprised at how little she understood about trans patients, both socially and
medically.
Dr. Yu’s center in Carrboro, North Carolina, made
several changes starting in 2014, including developing gender-inclusive patient
intake forms and documenting patients’ gender identity and sex assigned at
birth in both physical and electronic records. Staff were trained on how to ask
and consistently use a patient’s preferred name and gender from “the front door
until they exit,” she added.
Keuroghlian, of the National LGBT Health Education Center, suggested that hospitals
change the name of their maternity wards to “labor and delivery,” so everyone
feels welcome.
But providers who strive to be more inclusive can
face criticism from non-transgender clients, including on social media, said
Maya Scott-Chung, program director for SprOUT
Family, a nonprofit that supports
LGBTQ people through the family building process. She said some clinics create
separate marketing materials for their LGBTQ clientele. Scott-Chung has worked with clinics that “have
done that to avoid the pushback from more conservative, heterosexual clients,”
she said.
Pregnant trans men and nonbinary people also fight
battles within their own bodies.
Thomas said pregnancy reignited his dysphoria, the
sense of disconnect transgender people experience between their bodies and
their gender identity. The surgeon who had done his mastectomy neglected to
remove all of the glands in his chest, he said, which caused some of the tissue
to return as the pregnancy progressed. A lot of things had changed for those
few months and it was rough — it was really hard.”
After giving birth, Thomas experienced postpartum
depression, but he began to feel better over time after he went back taking testosterone.
Reese — a transgender man who gave birth to a son
in 2017 in Portland, Oregon, and who has provided guidance for hundreds of
trans men who have given birth around the world — said it’s common for them to
experience dysphoria and postpartum depression. He said it’s another area where
research is needed.
“All we have is anecdotal evidence,” Reese said,
“and anecdotally, it does seem as though transgender and nonbinary people are
more susceptible to things like postpartum anxiety and postpartum depression.”
But he believes it’s a good thing that more trans
men and nonbinary people are beginning to see that pregnancy is a possibility
for them, whether they want to experience it or view it simply as a means to an
end.
“You can be a
man and have a baby,” Reese said, “and they are starting to see that that is
possible and that hasn’t always been the case.”
Now I will
tell you what you have been waiting for—how a man becomes pregnant and gives birth
to his baby.
Male to female
surgery involves removing the man’s penis and testicles A vagina is then formed from
the skin of the penis and the urethra. The head of the penis, known as the
glans, is used to make a clitoris. The
labia which are the vaginal lips are
made from the skin of the scrotum. These male parts of the man are used because
it is necessary that they are still part of his body otherwise they wouldn’t
match the genes of the rest of his body.
Robert Winston, a pioneer of
in-vitro fertilization, told London's Sunday Times that
"male pregnancy would certainly be possible" by having an embryo
implanted in a man's abdomen – with the placenta attached to an internal organ
such as the bowel – and later
delivered from the vagina that was made as pat of the man.
Of
course these organs would have to be removed from a woman who has just died and
whose organs are compatible to the body of the man.
Gillian
Lockwood, medical director of Midland
Fertility Services, a British fertility clinic, noted that the abdomen has
not evolved to separate from the placenta during delivery, hence the danger of
an ectopic pregnancy. Bioethicist Glenn McGee said "The question is not
'Can a man do it?'. It's 'If a man does have a successful ectopicpregnancy, can
he survive it?”
I preferred to have my wife bear our two daughters. My contribution was
to supply the two wiggling sperms which I could do since I am not a transgendered
man. Incidentally, I didn’t suffer from identical child-bearing cramps like my
wife did. We men have all the fun. Is that fair? No it isn’t but how can I differ
with nature?
At my wife’s doctor’s request, I hypnotized my wife so that she wouldn’t
feel any pain during her deliveries. Both deliveries were subsequently pain-free.
How do I know? I was right next to her when the deliveries were made.
No comments:
Post a Comment