
Interview with Shoshanna Gillick, MD
GENDER ARTICLES
This educational column authored by Gianna E. Israel is regularly featured on
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Interview with Shoshanna Gillick, MD (#19)
Copyright 1997
by Gianna E. Israel
In the past I have received requests that I interview progressive persons who
are care-providers or leaders within the transgender community. As an gender
specializing counsellor I find interviewing exciting. I enjoy asking informed
questions, and having an opportunity to share with you new advances with our
community.
Shoshanna Gillick, MD has three board certifications in General Psychiatry,
Child/Adolescent Psychiatry and Forensic Psychiatry. She has over 20 years
experience as a psychiatrist. As a Lt. Commander in the United States Navy she
has made rounds in Japan, the Philippines, Guam, Hawaii, and Southern
California. Prior to transitioning she also worked as an associate professor at
the University of Southern California School of Medicine. Among numerous
accomplishments post-transitionally, Dr. Gillick is experienced HMO psychiatric
provider, DSM-IV expert, and a psycho-pharmacologist expert.
Recently Dr. Gillick relocated to the Northern California. She maintains a
private practice in San Francisco. Earlier this month Dr. Gillick and I met for
dinner at San Francisco's Union Square. Meeting her was exciting over a Japanese
dinner. I had sushi and she had a delicious steak. Having recently attended
theatre, she was dressed in a pretty navy blue and gold combination pantsuit.
She has a wonderful sense of humour, and a fascinating perspective on gender
identity issues. I hope you enjoy her interview, as much as I enjoyed meeting
with her.
- GIANNA
- Dr. Gillick, before I frighten off my readers, I believe it is
important people accurately understand what psychiatry is, and how it fits
into the medical-mental health system. If my understanding is correct,
psychiatry is that profession where medical training, psychological
perspective and treating mental illness are practiced. Psychiatrists are
frequently misunderstood and feared by the average person on the street.
Because transgender persons have been treated in a deprecating fashion in
the past by the medical-mental healthcare system, these individuals may not
realize what benefits can be gained from seeing a psychiatrist. Could you
tell me when it would be appropriate for a person to see a psychiatrist?
And, how psychiatric treatment might differ from psychotherapy or
gender-specialized counselling?
- DR. GILLICK
- A psychiatrist is a medical doctor, who after graduating from medical
school, takes on specialty training, for four years, learning about
disorders of personality development, thinking and mood. These disorders
over the last thirty years, have been successfully diagnosed and treated
with a number of medications that can substantially improve a patient's
ability to handle life situations over and above normal daily stress.
Suicidal thinking and behaviour, profound depression and psychotic
delusions are among the symptoms that require psychiatric evaluation and
medication that stabilizes brain chemistry.
- GIANNA
- Over the years I have counselled individuals in the beginning of
transition who greatly feared being institutionalized because they have
gender identity issues. In the past transgender men and women have been
institutionalized by psychiatrists. Frequently they were misdiagnosed or
hospitalized by family members. Moreover, in today's age of modern
medicine, many medical and mental health practitioners know very little
about gender identity issues. Is there any information you can provide my
readers which would help them understand this issue better? Also, what can
be done if a transgender man or woman believes he or she is being held or
institutionalized on the basis of having a transgender identity?
- DR. GILLICK
- In my experience the overwhelming majority of transgender people do not
display mental impairment that would require or even benefit from
involuntary psychiatric treatment in a hospital setting. It would be
malpractice to incarcerate anyone for being transgendered in and of itself.
However, like everyone else, transgendered people are at risk for
depression and other psychiatric disorders that may present an acute threat
to a patient's survival and ability to care for oneself. In all 50 of the
United States, statutes limit the time a person can be involuntarily
hospitalized without judicial determination of dangerousness to self and
others that would justify extension of involuntary hospitalization.
Patient's right advocates are legal representatives who, again in my
experience, fight vigorously to support non-dangerous patients who no
longer desire or need inpatient hospitalization.
- GIANNA
- Doctor, I'd like to ask you a couple questions about hormones since you
are an experienced psycho-pharmacologist. Can you explain how estrogens and
progesterones actually work in transgender women, and how testosterone
actually works in transgender men? Also, Transgender Care advises that MTF
individual's estrogen and testosterone levels should mimic the blood
chemistry of pre-menopausal women, and that FTM individual's testosterone
levels should mimic that of genetic men. As I understand it, a person's
body chemistry is actually a very finely tuned process. However some
transgender people believe that "more hormones is better." What actually
happens when a person takes to many hormones?
- DR. GILLICK
- First of all I am not an endocrinologist. I am a transgendered
psychiatrist who has read a lot about hormones, and have been on estrogen
and progesterone for the past eight years. In 1997 we still basically do
not know exactly what these hormones do. We do know however that profound
changes in body chemistry do occur. Very recently we have learned that
there are estrogen and testosterone receptors all over the body, including
the brain, and that the effects of these two hormones are not limited to
the secondary sex characteristics. As a psychiatrist I am aware that
emotional changes are frequent in both sexes when they are given either
male or female hormones.
The attempt to mimic normal male and female hormone levels is one
approach to feminization in the biological males and masculinization in
biological females. The use of hormone blood levels to monitor the body
chemistry changes is not universally followed by the endocrinologists to
whom I have spoken. I would recommend that transgender clients openly
discuss with their physicians the rationale for any hormone recipe being
proposed. The philosophy that more is better is a dangerous one. Both
testosterone and estrogen occasionally have serious and/or dangerous
physical and emotional side effects that may require their termination or
at least a major change of dosage.
- GIANNA
- I recently read an article written by you, published in the Northern
California Psychiatric Physician (07/08 '97), which has sparked a great
deal of controversy in the Bay Area. I have two questions regarding that
article which discusses the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM- series). In your article
you state that "tearing out the GID page from the DSM-IV would plunge (the)
hurting children and adolescents back into the closet to fester and
suppurate." Suppurate means to leak and ooze all over the place. Your
statement sounds very dramatic, what did you mean by it?
- DR. GILLICK
- I am a developmental child psychiatrist trained and experienced in
evaluating children and adolescents. As both a child and an adolescent with
GID, I was seriously leaking gender, and can recall on a daily basis
festering and suppurating while attempting to construct a workable core
gender identity. Before there was a GID diagnosis I experienced a gender
identity disorder which made for one confused and extremely unhappy little
boy.
My article strongly differentiated between "gender non-conforming"
children and adolescents who displayed variant gender behaviour but did not
present with the emotional distress and functional impairment of a
psychiatric disorder. Unfortunately, most of my psychiatric colleagues are
either or both insensitive or ignorant of gender developmental issues, and
lump all individuals who display crossgender identification or behaviour as
sick, weird or psychotic.
I have attempted to educate my brothers and sisters in psychiatry to the
complexities of gender development, maintenance, leakage and breakdown. I
presented a workshop at the Gay & Lesbian Medical Association Convention in
August '97, and will be presenting interactive workshops in San Francisco
in the coming months that will be geared for both the care-provider and
gender community.
- GIANNA
- People's emotions become quickly charged when it comes to discussing
inclusion of GID (Gender Identity Disorder) within the DSM-IV, and
forthcoming DSM-V. Rightly so, transgender people recognize that its
inclusion can lead non-transgender individuals to believe persons having
gender identity issues are mentally disordered and medically diseased.
Politically, many transgender people want references to GID and
crossdressing to be completely removed from the DSM-series, much as
references to homosexuality were removed during the 1970's. However, unlike
gays and lesbians, no other group of people requires hormonal and surgical
intervention as routinely as transgender persons do. Consequently, the
removal of GID from the DSM- series may undermine potential insurance
benefits and services provided to transgender persons. Finally, some people
have suggested moving GID to the International Classification of Diseases
(ICD-9) in order to remove the stigma associated with a mental
classification.
Doctor, this is a complex issue for consumers, care-providers and
policy-makers, would you shed some light on the subject for us? Moreover,
as long as GID remains within the DSM-series, what suggestions do you have
for care-providers and consumers to help insure that transgender people are
not treated in a deprecating fashion. Finally, what advantages and
disadvantages are there with inclusion versus exclusion of GID in the
DSM-series?
- DR. GILLICK
- Rather than abolish GID, I suggest a more accurate picture of the
diversity of gender presentations. Under the heading of "gender variants" I
include non-pathological phenomena such as healthy gender independence,
healthy gender-blending, and healthy gender-questioning in youth and
adults. Variants means simply different presentations, which are not better
or worse than the "normal" masculine or feminine flavours. My concept of
"gender deviants" implies a symptomatic, painful, jumping off the track of
the gender train. I have introduced a clinical syndrome of anatomical
rejection/disgust with the genitalia of birth or "genital dysphoria." A
separate condition which I term "gender dysphoria" is a rejection of the
gender role and behaviour associated with the genitalia at birth. When
these two serious clinical syndromes combine that is what I am calling
gender identity disorder. I got it, and its no fun.
The diagnosis of GID is very different from the observation of
non-pathological gender non-conformity that may be frequently seen in sissy
boys, tomboys, and androgynies, and intersexes. An important task for the
clinicians is to differentiate between healthy and hurting gender
diversity. Treating the healthy makes no sense at all, and ignoring the
hurting is unacceptable to ethical care-providers. In my suggestions for
DSM-V, I include transsexualism and transgenderism under a new category of
"transitional identities of sex and gender." Both represent an individual
seeking a more healthy adaptation to anatomical and gender role
incongruity.
If the transsexual and transgenderist after transition does not display
clinical distress or behavioural dysfunction, the individual leaves DSM-V
and is referred to as either a sexually-redefined individual or a
gender-redefined individual. This linear roadmap is quite concrete in
specifying that anatomically and gender role incongruent people can
substantially improve and escape the symptoms and stigma of deviance. They
graduate after doing the difficult coursework of reworking the rough edges
of incongruence into a more smoothly fitting-together gender identity.
To answer your specific question, it is my opinion there is no advantage
to abolishing the GID diagnosis. On the contrary, constructing a more
accurate picture of gender development and gender deviance makes it much
more likely that these children, adolescents and adults, will find the help
that they need to achieve a happier and more adaptive anatomical and gender
role integration.
- GIANNA
- Like the general population, transgender men and women experience
depression. Depression is characterized by a continued sense of low-self
worth, sadness, even helplessness. It interrupts people's regular ability
to function, eat and sleep. Sometimes people may be depressed for a day or
two, sometimes for weeks on end. Depression can be helped with a
combination of supportive counsellor or psychotherapy, and anti-depressant
medications. In fact, if a person is able to improve upon their
circumstances, with good support it is possible to find significant relief
from depression. Could you provide us with some basic pointers which will
help transgender persons and gender-specialized care-providers to
understand the significance of this mental health issue?
- DR. GILLICK
- Periodic demoralization is quite common for both the transgendered and
anyone else coping with a challenging and often confusing mismatch of mind
and body. Usually we find ways of coping that resolve the demoralization
and return us to a generally acceptable mood. When this demoralization
becomes generalized, deeper and resistant to even our most vigorous efforts
to fight it off, a "clinical depression" crystallizes with hopelessness,
helplessness, profound sadness, sleep disturbance and impaired self-esteem
that may progress to active self- destructive thinking. This is a medical
emergency that usually requires prescription of specific anti-depressant
medication to correct the imbalance in the chemical soup of the brain.
- GIANNA
- There are a variety of opinions regarding the prescribing of
anti-depressants while a person is on hormones. Also, some physicians are
extremely hesitant to provide hormones to a transgender person who is
severely depressed, when in fact sometimes the patient believes if he or
she can just get hormones the depression will go away. Could you provide us
some more information on this subject?
- DR. GILLICK
- Sometimes transgender individuals display serious, life-threatening
depression that will not get better with hormones, SRS or even chocolate. A
clinician must carefully diagnose, select medication and monitor the
patient's response to anti-depressant medication. My personal opinion is
that prescription of hormones should await the substantial resolution of
the depression. Even people responding well to hormones may develop a
clinical depression that will require combining anti-depressant medication
with the hormone regimen to permit the patient to function and proceed in
their gender reassignment. The internal medicine doctor and the
psychiatrist need to collaborate in treating the depressed transgender
patient for optimal clinical care of the entire individual.
- GIANNA
- Self-identified transgender youth, and gender-questioning youth, are
now becoming more prevalent as transgender issues become more visible
within society. What words of advise do you have for these young persons,
their parents and care-providers?
- DR. GILLICK
- Every adolescent questions gender and wonders where in the gender
spectrum they are, and where they will end up as an adult.
Self-identification of 13-year olds as pre-operative transsexuals is
premature. It precludes the normal trial and error, and trying on of
various identities, genders and clothing styles. If a youngster is hurting
and manifesting symptoms of GID, gender-specialized counselling is advised
to help the patient and the family system explore options that will not be
limited to exclusive heterosexual, homosexual and gender-rigid categories.
In the past gender-variance has been misdiagnosed as GID and
inappropriately (and often tragically) involuntarily hospitalized to cure
them of their deviance. I strongly condemn this misuse of the DSM to
stigmatize, pathologize, and incarcerate gender-nonconformist children and
adolescents. In other words, crossgender identification is not in and of
itself sufficient for a clinician to determine a diagnosis or need for
treatment.
- GIANNA
- In addition to being gender specialists, we are both familiar with
forensic mental health and medicine. For my readers, forensics is the point
where legal issues and medical/mental health issues interact. For example,
Dr. Gillick may evaluate and testify regarding a client's mental welfare
within family, civil or criminal court. Forensics is also the profession
which provides psychiatric services to sex offenders and the criminally
insane. Surprisingly, a significant proportion of gender-specialized
care-providers also specialize within forensics. The treatment models used
for providing forensic services are understandably rigid, because the
care-provider is charged with the responsibility of treating the criminal
and protecting society.
I have noticed my colleagues with forensic backgrounds routinely to
treat transgender people as they would criminals. For example, these
care-providers frequently refer to transgender people with incorrect
pronouns, in writing and conversation. They seem to have an attitude that
transgender people are incapable of self-defining their gender identity.
Frequently, using a forensic model, transgender persons must first prove
they can live in role (often for up to a year) before being treated with
hormones. In any event, these forensic care-providers seem to view
transgender persons as deviant and pathological. I believe this is wrong,
and that my colleagues with forensic backgrounds need to apply a different
treatment model when providing services to transgender persons. Could you
share with us your viewpoints and suggestions on this issue?
- DR. GILLICK
- Unfortunately, like the HBIGDA Standards of Care, the standards of
education and training of so-called forensic experts is woefully
inadequate. As a graduate of the USC Institute of Psychiatry, Law and the
Behavioural Sciences (1978-1979), and as a card-carrying forensic
psychiatrist, I can testify that most of my colleagues are either, or both,
insensitive and ignorant about the transgender community. Many of them are
phobic of us and express hostility even to the possibility of learning
something that doesn't quite fit in to their academic cubby-holes. A
forensic psychiatrist is no better at understanding or treating a
transgender client than the non-forensic psychiatrist. Both groups have had
little or no gender-specialized training or experience with the gender
community. Again, unfortunately, it has been my experience that even in the
relatively enlightened San Francisco psychiatric community there is a
strong resistance to dialogue with the gender community. Specifically, I
have encountered resistance and indifference from the training director of
the psychiatric residency training program at the University of California,
San Francisco, Langley Porter. I have offered to meet with him as a
psychiatric colleague and transgender consumer of services, but these were
turned down and he has not responded to further offers.
- GIANNA
- Doctor, I appreciated having an opportunity to interview with you.
However, before ending, do you have any closing comments for my readers.
Also, outside of your profession, could you tell us a little about
yourself. As care-providers our clients often like to hear about our
interests and hobbies. Perhaps you could tell us about yours.
- DR. GILLICK
- In closing, I would conclude that identifying oneself as transgendered
is merely a beginning toward understanding the dynamics of the biological,
psychological and social factors affecting the individual. Choice of
treatment, path of gender realignment, and sexual and gender integration
remain to be explored. It isn't easy, and it doesn't magically resolve
itself when you transition genders. For some of us it is a matter of life
and death. It requires our most serious attention to finding our way in the
world. On a lighter note, I'm a 53 year-old tough little Jewish boy from
Newark with GID. I am most proud of my 23 year-old daughter who is
preparing to apply to medical school and clean up some of her father's
theories.
I am also a enthusiastic student of popular culture who learned most of
what I know about gender from the American cinema from the 1950's, '60's
and '70's, I dig rock and roll music, and American musical theatre. I also
continue my love of baseball, after estrogen and progesterone wiped out my
previous attraction to professional football and basketball. Theoretically,
I think Freud was really on to something in his discovery of childhood
sexuality, and I further believe that gender organizes and structures
sexuality and identity of the developing individual during childhood. I
still have allot to learn, but most people agree that I am getting better
at accessorizing.
- GIANNA
- Readers, my guest Shoshanna Gillick, MD can be reached at (415)
621-8346 or written to at 2710 California Street, San Francisco, CA 94113.
Later this year I will be interviewing Barbara Anderson, Ph.D. Dr. Anderson
is a gender-specialist, clinical sexologist and family therapist; with over
35 years experience. I welcome questions, comments from you regarding my
column contents and interviews.
Gianna E. Israel Gender Library