Research/Study
Right-wing media are comparing gender-affirming care to lobotomies
The procedure was once used as a “cure” for homosexuality and “transvestism”
Published
Right-wing media have a history of making extreme comments about gender-affirming care, including comparing it to the acts of Nazi doctor Josef Mengele and calling for imprisonment or even execution of doctors providing such care. Now right-wing media — and some politicians — are comparing the essential medical care that trans people receive to lobotomies.
Lobotomies are still technically legal in the United States, although the procedure has not been performed in decades. By comparison, gender-affirming care — now banned for youths in 21 states — has been practiced for about a century, is backed by over 50 peer-reviewed studies, and is endorsed by every major medical association and leading world health authority. Gender-affirming care is also administered with the consent of the patient, whereas people who underwent lobotomies “rarely had a voice in determining whether or not lobotomies would be performed.”
In fact, lobotomies were once used as a means of attempting to convert or “cure” LGBTQ people. The “Father of the Lobotomy,” Dr. Walter Jackson Freeman II, performed almost half of his nearly 3,500 surgeries on gay men to this end.
But being gay or trans is not a mental illness. Gender-affirming care is a means for trans people to pursue lifesaving treatment for gender dysphoria and a way to affirm their identities in everyday life.