121. Gender Development Flashcards
Define Gender dysmorphia
Define Gender Role
Dysmorphia: discomfort when gender identity does not match natal sex
Gender role: societal/cultural expectation for how one should express themselves
How has the DSM changed in regard to gender development?
Now knows identity is not pathological, but recognizes that inner conflict about identity could cause distress (gender dysmorphhia)
Depathologizing gender identity
When do the following develop in a child:
Gender identity
Sexual orientation
Sexual Behavior
Gender identity: age 3-5
Sexual oreintation: during puberty (10-14)
Sexual behavior: occurs in utero
Epidemiology and trends of gender dysmorphia
- course
- what is social transition
- comorbidities
0.6-2.7% of all people have gender dysmorphia
trend: younger age has higher prevalence due to shifting culture/social activism
Course: intensifies during puberty changes (incongruence grows)
Social transition: process of how one lives as affirmed gender/changing gender role (causes persistence of dysmorphia thru adulthood without tx)
CoM: Anxiety, Abuse/Harassment, Depression, ADHD, ASD, Self-Injury/SI, Low self-esteem, unemployment/homelessness, social isolation
What are tx for gender dysmorphia?
- Puberty Blockers (GnRH agonists): pause development of secondary sex characteristics - buy time for youth to explore gender (reversible)
- Gender affirming hormones (testosterone, estradiol + androgen-blocker): partially irreversible, reduces undesired hormones and induce desired secondary sex characteristics (pt needs mental capacity to consent - usually age 16)
- Gender affirming surgery
transmasculine: chest reconstruction, oopher/hyster/vaginectomy, genital reconstruciton
transfeminine: breast augmentation, facial feminization, orchie/penectomy, genital reconstruction