Virtual Library of Newspaper Articles

Gender Identity Disorders in Childhood and Adolescence: A Critical Inquiry

Darryl B. Hill,
 Concordia University,
 Christina Rozanski,
 Hobart and William Smith Colleges
 Jessica Carfagnini,
 and
 Brian Willoughby,
 Concordia University

Report Presented at American Psychiatric Association Symposium

By Darryl B. Hill, et al,  CNSNews.com Information Services, June 11, 2003

(CNSNews.com Editor's Note: The following is an extract of a report presented at a May 19, 2003, symposium sponsored by the American Psychiatric Association entitled)

Abstract

While debates continue as to whether or not a diagnosis of gender identity disorder (GID) is wanted or needed by today's adult transsexual, there is increasing concern both in academic and lay literature regarding the diagnosis of children and adolescents with GID. This paper critically evaluates the diagnosis, assessment and treatment of GID in children and adolescents in light of published controversies, evidence and arguments in social science discourse since the release of the DSM-IV. In the years since GID's first inclusion in the DSM-III, growing criticisms weigh heavily against the diagnosis of GID in children and adolescents. This analysis urges a reconsideration of GID for children and, to a lesser extent, adolescents. In the very least, since this is a highly contentious diagnosis with little established reliability and validity, and problematic assessment and treatment approaches, researchers and clinicians need to establish that GID is validly diagnosed with non-biased assessments and treated effectively in accordance with current standards. Overall, there is deepening discomfort with pathologizing children and youth for extreme gender variance.

Gender Identity Disorders in Childhood and Adolescence: A Critical Inquiry

Gender identity disorder (GID) is one of the more recent diagnoses to enter the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), becoming a diagnosis in 1980 with the DSM-III (American Psychiatric Association, 1980). As it is currently described by the DSM-IV-TR (APA, 2000), GID is based on two main ideas: a strong and persistent cross-gender identification and discomfort about one's assigned sex or gender. In order to be diagnosed with GID, the individual must meet the four criteria listed in Table 1.

The "Diagnostic Features" section, the preamble, describes boys and girls with GID. It specifies that such boys may prefer "traditionally feminine activities," "girls' or women's clothes," and they may reject stereotypical boys' activities in favor of stereotypical girls' toys "such as Barbie" (p. 576). Boys might "insist on sitting to urinate" and insist that he is, or will grow up to be, female (p. 576). Girls diagnosed with GID shun dresses or other "feminine attire" for "boys' clothing and short hair" (p. 576-577). They usually have boys as playmates, enjoy "contact sports, rough-and-tumble play, and traditional boyhood games," and identify with "powerful male figures such as Batman or Superman" (p. 577). A girl with GID may "refuse to urinate in a sitting position," insist that she "has a penis, or will grow a penis," and that "she will grow up to be a man" (p. 577).

While debates continue as to whether or not GID is wanted or needed by today's adult transsexual (an issue not addressed by this paper), there is growing concern both in academic and lay literature regarding GID in children and adolescents. Indeed, this is not a popular diagnosis. Recent published criticisms of GID in psychiatric and psychological journals, as a well as book-length criticisms, target a wide range of problems with the conceptualization, assessment, and treatment of the diagnosis (e.g., Rottnek, 1999). These critiques build upon issues and positions that arose during a controversy in the late 1970s over using behavior modification techniques to alter gender identity in children and adolescents (e.g., Morin & Schultz, 1978; Newman, 1977; Nordyke, Baer, Etzel, & LeBlanc, 1977; Winkler, 1977; Wolfe, 1979). In the last decade, criticism against the GID diagnosis has been mounting. From within psychiatry, critics observe that GID is the only psychiatric diagnosis directly associated with the performance of gender roles (Richardson, 1996), and some even call for the complete removal of GID from the DSM (Isay, 1997).

FurtherRead More ..lay sources have begun questioning the practice of assessing and treating gender non-conforming children and adolescents. Popular books like Gender Shock (Burke, 1996) dramatize the controversial issues involved when treating GID. Most important, this discourse has been significantly invigorated by a wide coalition of transgender activists (e.g., GenderPAC), feminists (e.g., National Organization of Women), gay and lesbian organizations (e.g., National Gay and Lesbian Task Force), and human rights organizations (e.g., Human Rights Campaign) seeking reform of the GID diagnosis (In Your Face, 1999). A webpage, GIDreform.org, dedicated to GID reform tracks developments (see http://www.transgender.org/tg/gidr/ .

This paper critically evaluates the diagnosis, assessment, and treatment of GID in children and adolescents in light of published controversies, evidence, and arguments in social science discourse since the publication of the DSM-IV. The heat has been rising on these debates in recent years, and the case against using the GID diagnosis with children and adolescents is strong. Yet, this discourse is full of twists and turns. Proponents of the diagnosis readily admit fundamental problems with the diagnosis, at least from a scientific point of view. This paper liberally cites such proponents, hopefully without misrepresentation. As responsible scientists, they openly acknowledge the limitations of research on GID. Certainly no one expects that all questions about a disorder need to be answered before any diagnostic or therapeutic efforts, yet proponents persist with the diagnosis and treatment of children and adolescents. Not surprisingly, there is often a moral tone to much of the discourse, reflecting conflicting ideologies and deeply held values, perhaps protecting vested interests or reflecting gender politics. The question facing many is whether to maintain a diagnosis in the face of critical rational scientific argument because it fits with their morals and values, many of which are increasingly out of step with quickly changing views on gender and sexuality in the Western world. And ultimately, the appeal to morals fails to support this diagnosis. For, in a culture that widely supports the equality of the genders, and even (in many jurisdictions) legislates against discrimination on the basis of gender, the best approach is to guide gender choices, but not enforce one gendered way of being on any young person solely because it violates social norms. Thus, those not swayed by the paucity of good science underlying the diagnosis of GID in children and adolescents are often moved by the humanistic arguments against it. There are many issues in this wide-ranging discourse not addressed by this review. This paper focuses on the validity of the criteria used to diagnose GID, the validity and reliability of the diagnosis in clinical practice, the nature of GID, and the rationale for treatment (including the distress of the child and adult consequences of GID).

Karla
The Movie

The true story about a Female Sexual Predator and Child Murderer

Karla Homolka movie - female sexual predator

Families step aside on Homolka film

'They are not the censor police' Distribution in Canada now likely

Toronto Star
Oct. 13, 2005

The families of Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffy won't try to block the release of Karla, a film about the slayings of the teens, paving the way for the film's Canadian distribution.

"The families recognize that they are not the censor police," Tim Danson, a lawyer for the French and Mahaffy families, told the Toronto Star. "They understand that people have a constitutional right to make a movie or write a book."

The Hollywood film company behind the controversial movie, depicting the horrific murders by Paul Bernardo and Karla Homolka, says it's close to signing a contract with a distributor that would get the picture into Canadian theatres.   Read More ..

Female Sex Offender Amy Gail Lilley

Female Sex Offender
Amy Gail Lilley

Lecanto High School
3810 W. Educational Path, Lecanto, Fl. USA
Arrest date: November 2005
Victim's age: 15
Offender's age: 36

Lecanto High School teacher and former softball coach Amy Gail Lilley was sentenced to two years of house arrest and eight years of probation after pleading no contest in a 2005 student sex case. The female student told authorities that she and the teacher were in love and had sex several times. Lilley was charged with lewd and lascivious battery of a child under 16 and faced up to 15 years in prison.

Guardian U.K. Female sex offender nursery worker

Angry scenes as nursery worker appears in court on sexual assault charges

Vanessa George remanded in custody after crowds jeer from public gallery and throw missiles outside court

The Guardian, UK
June 11, 2009

A court drawing of Vanessa George

A nursery school worker was jeered and spat at when she appeared in court today, charged with sexual assault and making and distributing child abuse images.

Vanessa George, 39, who worked at the Little Ted's nursery in Plymouth, was remanded in custody amid angry scenes in and outside the city's magistrates court.

George, of Plymouth, faces three counts of sexual assault on girls and one on a boy. She is also accused of making, possessing and distributing indecent images of children. Read More ..

The Canadian Press

Ottawa girl 17 found guilty on 30 of 33 charges in teen pimping case

The Canadian Press
January 29, 2014

OTTAWA - An Ottawa teen who befriended girls on Facebook and other social media, then forced them to work as escorts, has been found guilty of 30 of 33 charges against her.

The 17-year-old - identified as the ringleader of the group - was found guilty Wednesday on counts including human trafficking, forcible confinement, assault, robbery, sexual assault, child luring and distributing child pornography.

Sexual Offenders - Reference materials & scholarly papers:

Allen, Craig. (1991).  Women and Men Who Sexually Abuse Children: A Comparative Analysis. Brandon, VT:  Safer Society Press.

Berendzen, R, & Palmer, L. (1993). Come here: A man overcomes the tragic aftermath of childhood sexual abuse. New York: Villard Books.

Elliott, Michele (Ed.). (1993). Female Sexual Abuse of Children. New York: Guilford Press.

Mike Lew, author of Victims No Longer, an excellent book for male survivors of sexual abuse, says of this book: "Michele Elliott and her colleagues guide us through denial, stereotypes, and conventional misinformation to an unflinching examination of painful realities. Theoretical, research, and clinical chapters help to forge a new understanding of the issues and set directions for further exploration. Many survivors, both male and female, will finally have their experiences validated. The powerfully moving survivors' stories will be vital tools for survivors in their healing and will aid therapists in understanding the complexities of recovery from sexual abuse by females" (from the cover).

Mathews, R, Matthews, J. K., & Speltz, K. (1989).  Female Sexual Offenders: An Exploratory Study. Brandon, VT:  Safer Society Press.

Miletski, H. (1997).  Mother-Son Incest: The Unthinkable Broken Taboo. Brandon, VT:  Safer Society Press.

Saradjian, J. & Hanks, H. (1996). Women Who Sexually Abuse Children: From Research to Clinical Practice (Wiley Series in Child Care and Protection) NY: John Wiley & Sons.

The papers:

Allen, C. M., & Pothast, H. L. (1994). Distinguishing characteristics of male and female child sex abusers. Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 21, 73-88.

Bachmann, K. M., Moggi, F., Stirnemann-Lewis, F. (1994) Mother-son incest and its long-term consequences: A neglected phenomenon in psychiatric practice. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 182, 723-725.

Banning, A. (1989). Mother-son incest: Confronting a prejudice. Child Abuse & Neglect, 13, 563-570.

Baron, R. S., Burgess, M. L., & Kao, C. F. (1991). Detecting and labeling prejudice: Do female perpetrators go undetected? Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 17, 115-123.

Briere J., & Elliott D.M. (2003). Prevalence and psychological sequelae of self-reported childhood physical and sexual abuse in a general population sample of men and women. Child Abuse & Neglect, 27, 1205-1222. [includes statistics on females' perpetrating sexual abuse against boys and girls]

Condy, S. R., Templer, D. I., Brown, R., & Veaco, L. (1987). Parameters of sexual contact of boys with women. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 16, 379-394.

Faller, K. C. (1987). Women who sexually abuse children. Violence and Victims, 2, 263-276.

Fehrenbach, P. A., & Monastersky, C. (1988). Characteristics of female adolescent sexual offenders. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 58, 148-151.

Finkelhor, D., Meyers, M. W., & Burns, N. (1988). Nursery crimes: Sexual abuse in day care. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage.

Finkelhor, D., & Russell, D. (1984). Women as perpetrators. In D. Finkelhor (Ed.), Child sexual abuse: New theory and research (pp.171-187). New York: Free Press.

Harper, J. F. (1993). Prepuberal male victims of incest: A clinical study. Child Abuse and Neglect, 17, 419-421.

Johnson, R. L., & Shrier, D. (1987). Past sexual victimization by females of male patients in an adolescent medicine clinic population. American Journal of Psychiatry, 144, 650-652.

Johnson, T. C. (1989). Female child perpetrators: Children who molest other children. Child Abuse & Neglect, 13, 571-585.

Krug, R. S. (1989). Adult male reports of childhood sexual abuse by mothers: Case descriptions, motivations and long-term consequences. Child Abuse and Neglect, 13, 111-119.

Lawson, C. (1993). Mother-son sexual abuse: Rare or underreported? A critique of the research. Child Abuse and Neglect, 17, 261-269.

Marvesti, J. (1986). Incestuous mothers: American Journal of Forensic Psychiatry, 7, 63-69.

McCarthy, L. M. (1986). Mother-child incest: Characteristics of the offender. Child Welfare, LXI, 447-459.

O'Conner, A. (1987). Female sex offenders. British Journal of Psychiatry, 150, 615-620.

Sarrel, P. M., & Masters, W. H. (1982). Sexual molestation of men by women. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 11, 117-131.

Wahl, C.W. (1960). The psychodynamics of consummated maternal incest. Archives of General Psychiatry, 3, 96/188-101/193.

Wakefield, H., Rogers, M., and Underwager, R. (1990). Female sexual abusers: A theory of loss. Issues In Child Abuse Accusations, 2, 181-195.

Los Angeles Times

Ex-High School Coach Gets a Year in Jail for Having Sex With Minor

LA Times, By Allison Hoffman, Times Staff Writer

January 24, 2004

A former Rancho Cucamonga High School coach on Friday was sentenced to a year in county jail for having sex with a 16-year-old girl who was one of her students.

Stacy Lynn Behrmann, 32, accepted a plea bargain in November on three counts of sex crimes against a minor.

She sat silently during the hearing in San Bernardino County Superior Court and did not look at friends and family members as she was led from the courtroom.

The girl, now 17, became friendly with Behrmann when she played on the high school girls' tennis and softball teams, which Behrmann coached.

According to investigative reports, the girl said their relationship was consensual and progressed to sexual intimacy in January 2003.

"She has robbed my daughter of her high school experience and years," the girl's foster father told the court.

15 Year Old Girl has Sex with 12 year old boy

Baby-faced boy Alfie
Patten is father at 13

Alfie
Dad, baby and mother

The Sun, UK
13 Feb 2009

Baby-faced Alfie, who is 13 but looks more like eight, became a father four days ago when his girlfriend Chantelle Steadman gave birth to 7lb 3oz Maisie Roxanne.

He told how he, at 12 years old, and Chantelle, 15, decided against an abortion after discovering she was pregnant.

National Post - Karla Homolka Female sex offender registry

Homolka sues Ottawa for violating her rights

Not allowing move to halfway house 'perverse,' suit says

OTTAWA - Karla Homolka, convicted in the killing of two teenage girls, claims in a lawsuit that the federal government has violated her constitutional rights by refusing to transfer her to a Montreal halfway house.

Homolka argues in a lawsuit filed in the Federal Court of Canada that it is time to begin her reintegration into society. In particular, she would like to become acquainted with Montreal, a city she plans to call home when she is eventually released.

"I do not think it is in my best interests, or anybody else's, for me to be released ... after eight years incarceration without any type of gradual release to a place where I have never been and do not know anyone," Homolka wrote in her application to be moved.

Homolka was sentenced to a 12-year term in 1993 for the killings of Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffy.  Read More ..

U.S.A. Department of Education

Educator Sexual Misconduct:
A Synthesis of Existing Literature

Prepared for the U.S. Department of Education

Office of the Under Secretary

Policy and Program Studies Service

U.S. Department of Education
Statistics
Sexual Assaults by teachers on students