Aging and
Gender Diversity
Social Work Today
By Tarynn M. Witten, PhD, MSW, FGSA
Vol. 4 No. 4 p. 28
Transsexuals, transgenders, cross-dressers, and other
persons whose gender expression or identification is other than the
“traditional” male or female represent a substantial but
epidemiologically invisible minority group within the worldwide older
adult population.
In an era in which forecasting the health of elder
populations is increasingly important, discussion of quality-of-life
issues faced by older transsexuals and other gender minority persons
should not be deferred. It is difficult, unfortunately, to provide
data-based information about many of the health issues faced by elder
transsexuals, as this group is particularly “epidemiologically
invisible” (Witten and Eyler, 1999), with many of its members
preferring not to reveal their natal sex due to perceived and real
risks and stigma associated with being “out.” However,
the number of transgender-, transsexual-, and intersex-identified
elders is increasing worldwide (Witten, 2002, 2003).
Stages
The gender minority community includes numerous subgroups of importance.
Many intersex-identified elder individuals will likely have had genital
surgery forced upon them at early ages and may have been subjected
to hormonal treatments as well. They may, consequently, be facing
numerous psychological issues related to the undesired violation of
their bodies and effects the undesired surgery has had on their lives.
Others in the same group who may not have had the surgery are dealing
with the consequences of their lifelong, nonnormative status.
For a given transidentified person, time of transition
(hormonal and surgical modification) can be important to understanding
the aging process. A person may be older when he or she chooses to
transition, or the person may have made the transition earlier in
life and is now older in the contragender identity and body, having
dealt with a longer period of time in the transition state. Each of
these individuals may or may not be hormonally or surgically modified.
As such, their experience as elders will differ and requires understanding
from the social worker, geriatric case manager, and/or caregiver.
Issues of long-term stress, negative life experience,
long-term exposure to hormones, and transition in midlife can profoundly
affect socioeconomic status for the transidentified person. While
these factors can have numerous immediate effects, they also have
long-term effects (Turrell, 2002; Kraaij, et al., 2002). Persons who
undertake gender transition during midlife or the elder years are
more likely than their younger peers to experience difficulties related
to physical health. Ill health, especially cardiac or pulmonary dysfunction,
may preclude eligibility for surgical procedures, including breast
or genital reconstruction. In addition, persons with moderate or severe
hypertension or other conditions of old age may be poor candidates
for estrogen therapy. Androgen supplementation in female-to-male (FTM)
transsexuals and transgenders may increase coronary artery disease
risk and is also a risk factor for the development of polycythemia,
a potentially life-threatening condition. Only recently has any significant
work been done on the mortality and morbidity rates for transsexual
and transgender clients on cross-hormonal treatment (Ascherman, et
al., 1989).
Access to Services
For transgender-identified persons, healthcare and personal assistance
services are more complex than for those who are transsexual and postoperative.
Apparent mismatch between genital anatomy and gender of presentation
can result in difficulty in obtaining medical services, practical
nursing care, or even appropriate funeral arrangements. In the late
1990s, Tyra Hunter, a preoperative male-to-female (MTF) transsexual,
was refused appropriate and timely medical care by Washington, DC
paramedics who, when arriving on the scene of a hit-and-run car accident
involving Hunter, discovered her transgenderism. Believing that her
gender incongruity implied that she must also be homosexual, the paramedics
refused to render treatment because they thought that she might have
AIDS. The case of Leslie Feinberg (Feinberg, 1996), who was forced
to leave an emergency department when his female anatomy was discovered,
is also well-known in the gender minority community. Many healthcare
personnel consider transgenderism (or transsexualism or cross-dressing)
to be evidence of psychiatric pathology, and inappropriate psychiatric
referrals may result. Similar issues are often experienced by intersex
individuals (Witten, 2004).
Economic Status
The financial aspects of transsexual and transgender healthcare are
also affected by gender discrimination. Many FTM transsexual and transgender
adults begin gender transition after years of lesbian identification.
Many of them have incomes well below the national average, most likely
as a result of gender and antilesbian discrimination. Conversely,
MTF transsexual and transgendered persons tend to be older at the
time of transition and have enjoyed decades of male privilege and
income. Nonetheless, attempts to transition in the workplace are at
times met with dismissal; only one state and a handful of municipalities
provide legal protection from employment discrimination based on gender
presentation.
Physical Changes/Healthcare Issues
The physical realities of aging may serve to facilitate social gender
transition. For example, women and men share more physical similarity
during the elder years than at any time since childhood. Loss of facial
skin tone produces a softer appearance for many genetic males, and
the natural diminishment of circulating estrogens, accompanied by
a shift toward andronization of the hair follicles, facilitates the
production of new beard growth in FTM transsexuals. Loss of muscle
mass and increased body fat content that is experienced by both male
and female elders often results in men and women appearing more alike
physically. These physiologic alterations are clearly advantageous
to transsexual persons who begin the transition process later in life.
Although cross-dressers do not usually seek contragender
hormonal services, middle-aged and elder cross-dressing persons often
experience difficulty in obtaining appropriate healthcare services
due to privacy concerns. For example, most MTF cross-dressers remove
leg and body hair to appear as normal women while dressed as women.
The need to seek medical care often forces the dilemma of whether
to disclose one’s personal behavior to the physician or other
practitioner, or instead to postpone services until the body hair
has regrown. In those cases in which a chronic illness is present,
avoidance of medical care for any length of time can have serious
consequences. Situations in which the cross-dressing individual requires
emergency (e.g., cardiac) or long-term care (e.g., nursing home, rehabilitative
care) can be problematic for similar reasons.
Family and Social Support
Quality-of-life issues for older members of the gender minority community
often center on the degree of social integration the individual has
been able to achieve earlier in life, or on the personal flexibility
and resilience available for the development of new relationships
during the later years. Community resources and acceptance of persons
with nontraditional life paths can also be crucial. These needs are
similar to those of elder nontransgendered persons who benefit from
social network support and community resources.
Family relationships may be altered following the
older person’s “coming out” with regard to his or
her gender identity. Fatherhood and motherhood, siblingships, grandparenthood,
and other aspects of the family constellation may be reevaluated during
the gender transition process. Children and young adults are usually
(though not always) accepting of gender change. Young children may
respond well to being offered an actual or fictitious reference to
provide a “model” for transgenderism. Children aged 4
to 7 often still practice magical thinking to a higher degree than
their older peers and frequently have the least difficulty in accepting
cross-dressing, transgendered, and gender-transitioning adult relatives
(Ettner, 1999). Therefore, concerns regarding the appropriateness
of disclosing gender minority behaviors to grandchildren and other
young relatives are unwarranted; however, young children are also
vulnerable to their parents’ prejudicial attitudes and may react
negatively if their parents reject a grandparent or older relative.
Marriage, Partnership, and Sexual Expression
Although gender transition among older adults within the context of
a long-term marriage or partnership is still relatively rare, experience
with middle-aged couples in which one partner is transgendered or
transsexual suggest several possible patterns. Many spouses or long-term
partners of transgenders or transsexuals will choose to maintain the
relationship as a husband, wife, or lover changes gender presentation,
genital sex, or both; however, many others will not. Couples who do
maintain a marriage or partnership may need to “redefine”
their relationship.
Gender transition later in life may enable the individual
greater freedom of expression as his or her true self. Furthermore,
the normal bodily changes of aging will be partially offset by hormonal
and surgical therapies. Specifically, breasts that develop in midlife
or the elder years due to cross-gender hormonal administration will
not begin the ptotic process until very late in life. Genital (labial
or scrotal) ptosis will also be greatly postponed for individuals
who have experienced genital reconstruction during the elder years.
Conversely, the other normal changes of aging (e.g., body habitus,
dermal integrity) will be experienced equally by transsexuals and
their gender-congruent peers, and the bodily changes associated with
sex reassignment surgery, even if strongly desired, may be a positive
stressor for the elder client. Geriatric care managers who are providing
mental health services to older transsexuals are well-advised to prospectively
address this potential with their clients and remain alert for more
specific questions and complaints during (and especially after) the
gender transition process.
The greatest obstacle to sexual expression among older
adults (particularly heterosexual women) is the lack of availability
of suitable partners. Consequently, a MTF transsexual person who undertakes
gender transition later in life is more likely to experience sexual
isolation or deprivation than would have been the case prior to this
transformation (i.e., when the individual had been perceived as male).
In addition, some older women have been primarily socialized to believe
that female sexual behavior is acceptable only within the context
of marriage and possibly for the exclusive purpose of procreation
as well. However, persons who change gender later in life may share
in these perceptions to a lesser degree than do their nontranssexual
peers.
Sexual expression may be positively enhanced by the
newfound congruence between the body and the psychological (true)
self. With regard to the mechanics of sexual functioning following
sex reassignment surgery, few generalizations can be made. Orgasmic
capability is preserved in the majority of FTM genital reconstructive
procedures and many MTF surgeries as well. However, the sexual response
cycle usually requires a greater length of time among older adults
than their young and middle-aged peers.
Despite the obstacles to sexual expression, most transindividuals
experience a positive development of personal sensuality when they
are able to live in congruence with their deepest self-perception.
Patterns of sensual expression are usually present across the life
span, with sexual behavior also serving as a vehicle for the basic
human need of the sense of touch. When touch is absent, severe psychobiological
stress and symptomatology can result. The increased sensuality experienced
by transsexual and transgendered persons who are able to achieve a
sense of bodily wholeness may serve to enhance physical and mental
health by providing additional capability for healthy touch. Cross-dressing
persons who are able to integrate temporary role change into healthy
partnered or social relationships may similarly benefit.
Professional Response
Healthcare professionals can assist clients in this regard by validating
the sensual expressions and potentials of their older clients, offering
sexual counseling and education when needed and assisting other family
members in accepting the gender presentation and sexual expression
of their older relatives. Increased education for healthcare professionals
serving these communities, regarding gender diversity and sexual expression
among older adults, may also be needed for professionals in inpatient,
chronic, and acute care settings to provide appropriate and compassionate
care for their older clients and patients. Dispelling myths regarding
elder sexuality, providing information regarding the usual physical
changes of aging and the human sexual response cycle across the life
span, and offering interventions that address sexual expression in
cases of physical disability may also be particularly useful for social
workers and other professionals who provide care to older adults.
The needs of older members of the gender minority
community are similar to those of their nontransgendered peers with
respect to the significant life transitions of the elder years. Loss
of a spouse or significant other (and long-standing friendship group)
due to death, decreased ability to maintain a private residence, loss
of driving capability, and transition from an independent residence
to an assisted-living environment (and ultimately to dependent nursing
care) serve to erode personal control and are significant issues in
the lives of all persons who survive to become the “oldest old.”
In the case of transsexual-, transgendered-, and cross-dressing–identified
elders, these challenges are compounded by issues regarding disclosure,
privacy, isolation from transgendered peers, specialized healthcare
needs, and the potential for ostracization and judgment by the healthcare
professions and other care providers.
Within the gender minority community, transsexuals
who have undertaken sex reassignment surgery at earlier life stages
may not experience these difficulties due to congruence between gender
presentation combined with elimination of historical ties to the pretransition
life that occurs with the passage of time. However, transgenders,
cross-dressers, and transsexuals who undertake transition during the
elder years must make numerous decisions with regard to sharing confidential
personal information with their caregivers. In addition, postoperative
transsexuals must confide in their physicians and other healthcare
professionals with regard to past medical history or risk later exposure.
Social workers and geriatric care managers can assist
older gender minority clients by providing them with information regarding
the importance of routine healthcare (including preventive services),
arranging referrals to providers who are empathetic and supportive
to members of the gender minority community, and educating others
involved in the clients’ care with respect to the realities
of human gender diversity.
Intergenerational dialogue must be established. The
young transgendered must be made aware of the life course issues of
aging. The additional stigma of being “old,” coupled with
any sort of variance with respect to sexuality and/or sexual preference,
significantly exacerbates the problems of elder transindividuals.
Invisibility
The intersex elder community remains invisible, and there is no literature
available on elder issues and intersex. Attention to the needs of
the gender and intersex communities with respect to biological, medical,
psychological, and socio-cultural facets can be best served through
a comprehensive and holistic approach, including family, provider,
and community education and the development of appropriate professional
and community networks. Health and social policy development on behalf
of both the transgendered and intersex elder (including the assurance
of nondiscrimination with regard to quality healthcare services, privacy,
confidentiality, respectful treatment and caregiving, and personal
safety) is also strongly needed.
— Tarynn M. Witten, PhD, MSW, FGSA, is the senior fellow
and executive director of TranScience Research Institute, Richmond,
VA. She can be reached at transcience@transcience.org
or transcience@earthlink.net.
Due to space limitations, we were unable to include
this article’s references. However, the references are available
upon request by e-mailing SWTeditor@gvpub.com.
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