Reported November 17, 2007
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - Brazil’s public health
system will begin providing free sex-change operations in compliance with a
court order, the Health Ministry said Friday.
Ministry spokesman Edmilson Oliveira da Silva said the government would not
appeal Wednesday’s ruling by a panel of federal judges giving the government
30 days to offer the procedure or face fines of $5,000 a day.
“The health minister was prompted by the judges’ decision,” Silva said. “But
we already had a technical group studying the procedure with the idea of
including it among the procedures that are covered.”Federal prosecutors from
Rio Grande do Sul state had argued that sexual reassignment surgery is
covered under a constitutional clause guaranteeing medical care as a basic
right.
On Wednesday the 4th Regional Federal Court agreed, saying in its ruling
that “from the biomedical perspective, transsexuality can be described as a
sexual identity disturbance where individuals need to change their sexual
designation or face serious consequences in their lives, including intense
suffering, mutilation and suicide.”
The Health Ministry said it would be up to local health officials to decide
who qualifies for the surgery and what priority it will be given compared
with other operations within the public health system.
Patients must be at least 21 years old and diagnosed as transsexuals with no
other personality disorders and must undergo psychological evaluation for at
least two years, the ministry said.
Gay activists applauded the decision.
“Transsexuals represent about 0.001 percent of the Brazilian population, but
for this minority, sexual reassignment surgery is a question of life and
death,” said Luiz Mott, founder of the Bahia Gay Group. “It is unjust and
cruel to argue that the health system should concern itself with other
priorities.”So far the measure has not prompted any opposition.
Brazil’s public health system offers free care to all Brazilians, including
a variety of surgeries and free AIDS medication. But long lines and poorly
equipped facilities mean that those who can afford it usually choose to pay
for private hospitals and clinics.
The health ministry said that since 2000, about 250 sexual reassignment
surgeries considered experimental have been performed at three university
hospitals.
Brazil is generally more tolerant of homosexuality than other Latin American
countries, with transvestites featured prominently in celebrations like
carnival, but discrimination still exists.
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