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You are here: Home > Community Health > HOAP > LGBTIQ > Intersex


Intersex

Technically, intersex is defined as “congenital anomaly of the reproductive and sexual system.” Intersex people are born with external genitalia, internal reproductive organs, and/or endocrine system that are different from most other people.

There is no single “intersex body”; it encompasses a wide variety of conditions that do not have anything in common except that they are deemed “abnormal” by the society. Most intersex people identify as men or women.

Are intersex conditions harmful?

In general, intersex conditions do not cause the person to feel sick or in pain; however, some intersex conditions are associated with serious health issues, which need to be treated medically. Surgically “correcting” the appearance of intersex genitals will not change these underlying medical needs.

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How common are intersex conditions?

No one knows exactly how many children are born with intersex conditions because of the secrecy and deception surrounding it, and also because there are no concrete boundaries to the definition of “intersex.” It is nonetheless estimated that about 1 in 2,000 children, or 5 children per day in the United States, are born visibly intersex and receive early intervention.

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How do we know the correct gender of a child with an intersex condition?

We won’t know the child’s gender until she or he is old enough to communicate to us. It is recommended that the child be assigned a gender non-surgically based on medical and mental health providers and the parents' best prediction, and allow her or him to determine for herself or himself once she or he is old enough to do so. Irreversible, nonconsensual surgeries on infants should be avoided in order to give them the widest range of choices when they are older.

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Can’t they just do a test to find out babies’ true sex?

Medicine cannot determine the baby’s “true sex.” For example, chromosomes do not necessarily dictate one’s gender. Science can measure how large a clitoris is, but cannot conclude how large or small it needs to be. That is social determination.

There is a growing trend within the medical community to reconsider the surgical concealment of intersex bodies, although the official protocol has not yet changed.

There is an increasing number of follow-up studies that show that, not only are surgeries detrimental to the child’s emotional and sexual functioning, but they do not even deliver what they are intended to, which is the genital that looks “normal” and enables the individual to engage in “normal” heterosexual intercourse.

These web pages discuss some of these health concerns, as well as the things you can do to reduce or eliminate your risk for these health problems:

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Q & A

Are intersex conditions harmful?

How common are intersex conditions?

How do we know the correct gender of a child with an intersex condition?

Can’t they just do a test to find out babies’ true sex?


Health Issues

LGBTIQ Health


 


Health Outreach & Advocacy Program (HOAP)
Boulder County Public Health (BCPH)
529 Coffman, Suite 200, Longmont, CO 80501
(303) 678-6164

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Boulder County Public Health would like to thank Seattle & King County for allowing the adaptation of this information from their website: www.metrokc.gov/health/. We would also like to thank the many community partners and agencies that helped compile this information for Boulder County Public Health (BCPH).


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