Chapter 5
Intersex: protection of rights and best practice in health
The role of the courts and tribunals in the healthcare of intersex people
5.1
For many intersex people, important decisions are made on their behalf
regarding sex assignment and medical treatment, during the first years,
sometimes the first weeks, of their lives. Submitters asked the committee to
consider the most appropriate ways in which these decisions should be made.
5.2
The position adopted by the committee in the first report (the 'Sterilisation
Report') of this inquiry into the Involuntary or coerced sterilisation of
people with disabilities in Australia was that the proper jurisdiction for
consideration of sterilisation cases for those unable to consent should remain
with the Family Court of Australia but with improved criteria. This chapter
explores whether it remains the proper forum for consideration of intersex
cases.
5.3
While decision makers in cases involving potential sterilisation have to
be cognisant of a range of ethical and medical issues, the sheer range of
conditions that fall within intersex medical diagnoses, and the potential
outcomes in response to any type of treatment or medical procedures,
substantially complicate how decisions are made.
5.4
Sterilisation is only one of the possible consequences of medical
treatment of intersex people. Not all intersex medical interventions are
sterilising and those that are not would not fall under the decision-making criteria
that the committee suggested apply in sterilisation cases.[1]
However the treatments are still major with the capacity to impact a person's
life in a variety of ways, and therefore carry significant risks. The
Victorian Department of Health's recent Guidelines described some of the risks:
-
risk of assigning the 'wrong' sex of rearing, meaning a gender
that the child will later reject or feel uncomfortable with, potentially
leading to depression or other mental health problems
-
risk that the child will not be accepted by parents in the chosen
sex of rearing, leading to impaired bonding and associated negative
consequences
-
risk of social or cultural disadvantage to the child, for
example, reduced opportunities for marriage or intimate relationships, or
reduced opportunity for meaningful employment and capacity to earn an income
-
risk of social isolation, restrictions or difficulties, for
example, caused by embarrassment or social stigma associated with having
genitalia that does not match the gender in which the person lives.[2]
5.5
As discussed above, intersex medical interventions are broader and often
substantially different from sterilisation cases. The question of which forum
is best suited to considering these cases must take these differences into
account. Aside from the healthcare differences, the capacity to consent is an
example of a legal issue that is likely to be more conspicuous in sterilisation
cases. The assessment of 'Gillick competence', or capacity to consent, is less
likely to be central to the consideration of many intersex cases because
decisions are frequently made during infancy. Instead, consideration of the various
options for medical intervention and their consequences are more likely to be
the main issue being considered by decision makers.
5.6
While the assessment of capacity to consent may not be the principal
issue in intersex cases, OII's representatives submitted that every individual
member of their organisation had been subjected to some form of non-consensual
medical intervention, including:
-
Involuntary gonadectomy (sterilisation) and clitorectomy
(clitoris removal or reduction) as an infant, child or adolescent.
-
Medical and familial pressure to take hormone treatment.
-
Medical and familial pressure to undertake genital
'normalisation' surgery.
-
Surgical intervention that went outside the terms of consent,
including surgery that was normalising without consent.
-
Disclosure of non-relevant medical data to third parties without
consent.[3]
5.7
OII commented that most medical treatment decisions for those with an
intersex diagnosis 'do not progress to the Family Court, but are managed
according to standard therapeutic protocols. It is in this area that we have
the most significant concerns.'[4]
The Family Court or Tribunals?
5.8
Both Tribunals and the Family Court have areas of expertise borne from
experience. This committee's Sterilisation Report discussed the processes and
procedures of Tribunals and the Family Court in relation to sterilisation
cases.[5]
In a complex analysis of the relative merits of the Tribunals and the Family
Court to deal with these cases, the committee made a number of recommendations
to improve processes in both forums.
5.9
The procedures of the Family Court were criticised by a number of
submitters who thought that they were essentially adversarial in approach. The
court prefers that parties to proceedings have legal representation, which
submitters indicated is costly; there was also discussion of the formality of
proceedings and the use of external experts. An application for sterilisation,
for example, is heard by a single judge. The judge decides whether to authorise
the sterilisation on the basis of arguments put by the applicant and other
parties to the application. Appeal of a decision is made to the Full Bench of
the Family Court.[6]
5.10
Because some medical decisions affecting intersex children may have
sterilising effects, the Family Court may have jurisdiction to consider the
decisions, and similar principles would be involved.[7]
A Gender Agenda submitted that the court's procedures, particularly the
granting of amicus curiae status, prevented full participation for the
intersex person or their representative:
It is important to note that the adversarial nature of the
court process privileges the voices of the immediate parties to the dispute;
specifically, the medical practitioners and parents, to the detriment of
intersex people, who may only be heard if the court grants leave to the
intersex person or representatives to intervene as amicus curiae or otherwise. The costs and administrative burden of
intervening in proceedings, combined with the traditionally strict approach of
the courts to granting leave to intervene, make it unlikely that intersex
people will have a voice in such matters.[8]
5.11
While the committee accepted that there were improvements required in
all of these areas, it also felt that the procedures of the court were not
fully understood. The committee also acknowledged that the Family Court has
made significant efforts to adopt a less adversarial approach in children's
cases with the introduction of the Less Adversarial Trial (LAT), introduced in
2006, provided as an example:
proceedings are managed in a way that considers the impact of
the proceedings themselves (not just the outcome of the proceedings) on the
child.[9]
5.12
The Family Court also has extensive experience in considering complex issues
in areas that have some similar characteristics to intersex cases. In recent
years the Family Court has considered a number of cases that have considered sterilisation
as well as gender identity disorders and transgender issues. The capacity to
consent has featured heavily in these cases. The most significant of these was
Re: Marion.
Re: Marion
5.13
Marion's case is a complex legal judgment. The central theme was
whether the Family Court should have the authority to override parental
authority and decide on medical treatment that is 'an interference with the
right to bodily inviolability and the right to decide whether or not to
reproduce,' and is also 'irreversible'.[10]
5.14
Re: Marion concerned the sterilisation of a 14 year old girl with
multiple disabilities. The High Court, on appeal, found by majority that
parental authority was insufficient due to the seriousness of the treatment,
and that it was the court's role, under section 67ZC of the Family Law Act 1975
to make orders relating to the welfare of children.[11]
The High Court judges described the proposed procedure as involving the:
...'immediate and serious invasion of physical integrity with the
resulting grave impairment of human dignity' (Brennan J at 322) and 'the
destruction of a natural human attribute and the removal of an integral part of
complete human personality' (Deane J at 331).[12]
5.15
The recent case of Re: Jamie confirmed the position established
in Re: Marion that because of the serious and invasive nature of the
procedure, and that 'the consequences of a wrong decision are particularly
grave',[13]
the issue of the capacity to consent 'to treatment which has irreversible
effects...must remain a question for the court'.[14]
5.16
Justice Finn in Re: Jamie explicitly states that procedures of
the type that may apply to intersex cases are beyond the bounds of a parent to
consent on behalf of a child. He says they are:
'special medical procedures', being procedures which, in her
Honour’s words, 'fall beyond [the bounds of a parent's responsibility to be
able to consent to medical treatment for and on behalf of their child,] and
require determination by the court, as part of the court's parens patriae or welfare
jurisdiction'. Her Honour cited the High Court decision in Secretary,
Department of Health and Community Services v JWB and SMB (1992) 175 CLR 218 ('Marion’s
case') in support of this proposition.
...
I have reservations concerning the usefulness of the
expression 'special medical procedure'. I consider that it would be preferable
to refer to a 'medical procedure which requires court authorisation'.[15]
Guardianship Tribunals
5.17
The Guardianship Tribunals have a different sphere of expertise than the
Family Court. While assessing capacity is a feature of their deliberations,
they also approach cases in a markedly different way.
5.18
Tribunals are characterised as having an 'inquiring' or inquisitorial approach.
They take a more active role in shaping how a matter develops, what information
needs to be collected, and how it is to be collected. They do not require legal
representation and charge no fees.
5.19
Two States, New South Wales and South Australia,[16]
enacted legislation prohibiting sterilisation of children (emergencies aside)
without the approval of their respective Guardianship Tribunals in accordance
with specific legislative criteria. Guardianship Tribunals in all Australian
States deal primarily with adults with impaired decision making abilities, but
in NSW and South Australia, they exercise concurrent jurisdiction alongside the
Family Court in relation to the sterilisation of children.[17]
5.20
Appeals of Tribunal decisions are to the Supreme Court in NSW, and to the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal in South Australia. Alternatively aggrieved
applicants may take the matter to the Family Court for 're-hearing' because the
tribunals exercise concurrent jurisdiction. However in the event of a dispute the
Family Court's decision takes precedence.[18]
5.21
The Tribunals comprise of people from multi-disciplinary backgrounds.
Multi-disciplinary evaluation has been identified as 'one of the most
controversial yet one of the most important protections that can be extended'
to marginalised groups like people with disabilities. Tribunal members are
mostly part-time and appointed by the State government for fixed terms, usually
three years.[19]
5.22
Aspects of the tribunal system were considered in chapter 5 of the Sterilisation
Report. The general consensus in the evidence received was that the procedures
in tribunals were less formal, and more flexible in terms of how evidence is
gathered and how parties can be represented and supported. In addition, the low
or no costs for participants compared to those for applications to the Family
Court enhance the case for tribunals to be the primary forum for consideration
for intersex cases.
5.23
In the Sterilisation Report the committee was concerned about the lack
of uniformity across various jurisdictions and the capacity of tribunals to
access and appraise the necessary breadth of medical advice available.[20]
A number of recommendations were made in the report to address these issues.
5.24
The Victorian Office of the Public Advocate (OPA) in a supplementary
submission promoted the idea that all intersex medical interventions should be
subject to some form of oversight or authorisation:
Court authorisation is already (or ought to be) required
whenever the performance of an intersex medical intervention upon a child is
being proposed.[21]
It argued that state tribunals should be given authority to
consider these cases by being given concurrent jurisdiction with the Family
Court:
While the Family Court of Australia does have current
jurisdiction on these matters for persons under eighteen-years old, state
administrative tribunal systems should be given concurrent jurisdiction with the
Family Court to determine authorisation for intersex medical interventions
proposed for a child in a more accessible way.[22]
5.25
The OPA argued that tribunals offer advantages over court proceedings 'because
of the more accessible nature of the venue, and the increased capacity for an
inquisitorial approach that tribunals can provide',[23]
but they also flagged that this would require additional resources and changes
to state legislation:
With additional resources, this existing administrative
tribunal approach could be used nationally in relation to an intersex medical intervention
proposed for a child, sharing the jurisdiction of the Family Court.
...
We further note that the definition of
medical treatment under the GAA [Guardianship and Administration Act
1986 (Vic)] is not consistent with definitions contained in
other Victorian legislation. These sorts of issues will need to be addressed as
new provisions are considered. An example of particular relevance is that under
the guardianship act the administration of pharmaceuticals is not considered
'medical treatment'. [24]
Committee view
5.26
The issue of access to relevant advice, including medical advice, is
crucial in contemplating which forum would be the most appropriate for
decisions on intersex cases to be considered. Because intersex cases require
consideration by an extensive number of medical, psychological and psychosocial
professionals, the capacity to access that expertise is a key requirement of
any forum. The multi-disciplinary composition of tribunals would assist in
drawing in the required expertise.
5.27
The committee is supportive of the proposal from
the OPA that all intersex medical interventions should require
authorisation beyond the managing clinicians. The volume of cases that this
may involve has implications for whether the court or a tribunal would be the
most appropriate forum. As discussed in the next section, the committee
recommends that a two tier approach be considered where more common or routine
procedures would have to adhere to agreed national guidelines before being
authorised. More complex cases would be considered with the assistance of a
national Special Medical Procedures Advisory Committee. In these circumstances
the committee view is that the flexibility of tribunals is a significant
benefit.
5.28
The committee is persuaded that tribunals are a
more accessible and cost-effective option to hear these cases. They will also
be able to act quickly, and be more responsive to the needs of intersex people
and their families.
5.29
However there may be cases of particular legal
complexity that would be properly considered in the Family Court and the
committee would not wish to close this avenue of expertise. The committee
therefore supports the proposal that tribunals should be given concurrent
jurisdiction with the Family Court, and that participants in the case should
decide which jurisdiction would best address their needs.
Recommendation 6
5.30
The committee recommends that all proposed
intersex medical interventions for children and adults without the capacity to
consent require authorisation from a civil and administrative tribunal or the
Family Court.
Recommendation 7
5.31
The committee recommends that the Standing
Committee on Law and Justice consider the most expedient way to give all civil
and administrative tribunals in all States and Territories concurrent
jurisdiction with the Family Court to determine authorisation for intersex
medical interventions proposed for a child.
Recommendation 8
5.32
The committee recommends that civil and administrative
tribunals be adequately funded and resourced to consider every intersex medical
intervention proposed for a child.
Special medical procedures advisory
committee
5.33
The Sterilisation Report recommended that a new special medical
procedures advisory committee (SMPAC) be established to assist the Family Court
in its decision making. The recommendation is as follows:
Recommendation 4
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth government
establish a special medical procedures advisory committee, to provide expert
opinion to the Family Court upon request in relation to specific cases, and to
other statutory decision-makers and government as appropriate on best practice
in relation to sterilisation and related procedures for people with disability;
and that the committee must include non-medical disability expertise as well as
medical expertise.[25]
5.34
The SMPAC would have the role of an assessor under section 102B of the Family
Court Act 1975. This section allows the court to 'get an assessor to help
it in the hearing and determination of the proceedings, or any part of them or
any matter arising under them.'[26]
The committee suggested that the SMPAC would be funded and administered by the
Department of Health and Ageing and comprise of both medical and non-medical
experts.
5.35
While the committee deliberations were concerned with the SMPAC being a
resource to the Court in sterilisation cases, it also suggested that it could
provide 'similar assistance to other jurisdictions'.[27]
The expertise required for membership of the committee could also be utilised
in the consideration of intersex cases. It could be argued with some force that
due to the range and variation of diagnoses associated with intersex
conditions, the need for a multidisciplinary committee to advise decision
makers is even stronger in intersex cases than it is in sterilisation cases.
5.36
The committee supports the measures discussed in the following section
that have been introduced by the Victorian Department of Health through their Decision-making
principles for the care of infants, children and adolescents with intersex
conditions. The systematic and expansive approach taken by the Royal
Children's Hospital in Melbourne is also supported. There are elements in both
of these approaches that could be adopted in guidance developed by SMPAC. The
emphasis on ethical and human rights principles, as well as the desire to
ensure a uniform approach in the health care management of intersex people, are
positive developments that should be rolled out at a national level.
5.37
The committee suggests that the remit of SMPAC should be expanded to
include the provision of advice on intersex cases. However it may not be
reasonable for it to provide advice on each intersex that occurs in every
hospital in Australia. The committee accepts that there are standard
uncontroversial procedures that take place on a fairly routine basis. These
include treatments for clear clinical reasons that have an immediate health
impact on the patient. To ensure consistency across the country in the
treatment of these cases it is suggested that one of the roles SMPAC should be
to draft guidelines for the treatment of each condition. These guidelines
should be reviewed regularly. In the drafting of these guidelines the SMPAC
should be cognisant of all relevant research data and clinical outcomes, and
should be guided by principles similar to those utilised by the Victorian
guidelines.
Recommendation 9
5.38
The committee recommends that the special medical procedures advisory
committee draft guidelines for the treatment of common intersex conditions
based on medical management, ethical, human rights and legal principles. These
guidelines should be reviewed on an annual basis.
5.39
The committee believes that more
complex cases should be referred to the SMPAC for their advice. Not only would
this provide oversight, but it would also help to ensure that decisions are
taken with recourse to the broadest pool of knowledge, both nationally and
internationally. This would benefit the intersex person and their family, as
well as the health care professionals engaged in the case.
5.40
The decision on whether a
referral is required should be taken by whoever is considering the case. The
committee envisages that this would normally be a tribunal, but in some complex
cases could be the Family Court. In the committee's view this procedure would
assist in objectivity in the decision-making process, as well as providing the
opportunity to ensure that international best practice was followed.
Recommendation 10
5.41
The committee recommends that complex intersex medical interventions be
referred to the special medical procedures advisory committee for consideration
and report to whichever body is considering the case.
Case management
5.42
Before any intersex case gets as far as requiring authorisation for a
medical intervention, the complex path from diagnosis to proposed treatment has
many different facets that can significantly impact on the intersex person and
their family.
5.43
The Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome Support Group Australia (AISSGA) submitted
a number of recommendations that would govern aspects of an intersex diagnosis
and ensure that appropriate support and decisions around proposed treatment
were made with recourse to all available evidence:
- The AISSGA calls for the human rights of intersex people
to be identified and protected at every level of legislation and society.
- Intersex people remain 100% consensual with regards to any
surgical or pharmacological intervention of their body and that these
procedures be indicated by documented long-term medical benefit.
- The AISSGA calls for a moratorium on non-urgent medical
intervention. This includes gonadectomies on intersex children and clitoral
recession.
- Reproductive freedoms for intersex people be maintained in
terms of access to any future reproductive technologies.
- The AISSGA supports the full disclosure of an intersex
diagnosis to the parents and the affected individual at the earliest possible
appropriate time.
- That disclosure of intersex diagnosis be accompanied by a
complete explanation of a full range of treatment options available, either for
treatment or the likely outcome of non-intervention.
- That parents and affected individuals should be advised of
the existence of the support group and medical practitioners should recommend
and explain the benefits of contact with the group.[28]
5.44
There is consensus around support for multidisciplinary teams of
specialists to be preferred in cases requiring medical attention, and for
counselling to be available from the outset. The 2006 Consensus Statement argues
for this:
Optimal care for children with DSD requires an experienced
multidisciplinary team which is generally found in tertiary care centres.
Ideally, the team includes paediatric subspecialists in endocrinology, surgery
or urology or both, psychology/psychiatry, gynaecology, genetics, neonatology,
and, if available, social work, nursing, and medical ethics.[29]
5.45
Some of those who have been to varying degrees critical of the 2006 Consensus
Statement approach are nevertheless supportive of multidisciplinary teams and
counselling.[30]
5.46
The emphasis on multidisciplinary teams in the diagnosis and health care
management of intersex people is welcomed across the spectrum of stakeholders.
However APEG submitted that international practice in the creation and funding
of multidisciplinary groups is further advanced than it is in Australia:
Current consensus recommends expert specialist
multidisciplinary management groups to be established to case conference the
accurate diagnosis and management of children with DSD. Multidisciplinary
groups have now been established and properly funded throughout the world. The
composition of the multidisciplinary group may include endocrinologists, urologists,
gynaecologists, psychologists, geneticists, biochemists, and bioethicists
amongst others.
Informal multidisciplinary management groups have been
established in Australia, however unlike those established overseas, none have
received discrete health funding, and they often do not have participation of
all the specialists listed above. At present there is no formal process
requiring expert multidisciplinary management team review of children with DSD,
and thus not all patients receive review by such an expert group.[31]
5.47
OII also cited comments from a paper by Alice Dreger and others, who
critiqued 2010 papers by Gillam, Hewitt and Warne in Hormone Research in
Paediatrics, and questioned whether the multidisciplinary healthcare
management model is actually established in Australia:
the environment for shared decision making – the
highly integrated, interdisciplinary healthcare team that includes behavioral
health services called for in the DSD consensus – that makes possible such good
decision-making remains elusive...[32]
5.48
The committee also received a submission from the Disorder of Sex
Development multidisciplinary team at Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne (RCH)
that outlined discussed their systematic approach to decision making in
intersex cases. The submission emphasised their view that there have been
substantial changes to the health care management of intersex people and this
is not limited to clinical considerations:
As with many facets of society and medicine there have been
substantial changes in the care of children and people with DSDs over the last
few decades. This relates not only to increased medical knowledge and better
surgical techniques, but also different societal attitudes and perspectives. In
the past, clinical care and practices which were in keeping with medical and
societal attitudes were less sensitive to the psychosocial impact of the
diagnosis on the young person and their family. These practices have evolved
over time as community and medical attitudes has progressed. From a medical
perspective, improved knowledge regarding cancer risks of different DSDs, as
well as improved capacity to measure the hormonal production and potential
fertility of gonads have been particularly seminal changes. Health care
provision needs to encompass sensitivity to the families and the individual.[33]
5.49
The Melbourne team's approach includes referral to RCH's Clinical Ethics
Response Group (CERG).[34]
The development of CERG is discussed by Gillam and others in Disorders of
Sex Development: An Integrated Approach to Management.[35]
CERG was introduced in 2011 as a forum that considers the management of
intersex treatment after 'diagnosis has been made or confirmed, appropriate investigations
and assessments have been completed and a management plan formulated in
consultation with the parents, and patient, if old enough to participate'.[36]
CERG has now been in place for 2 years and considers every new case in the RCH.
It is estimated that the number of referrals is around a dozen per year.
Use of principles of health care
management
5.50
CERG decisions are informed by seven ethical principles that have been
developed from a philosophical and ethical perspective.[37]
The principles are:
-
Minimising Physical Risk to Child
-
Minimising Psycho-Social Risk to Child
-
Preserving Potential for Fertility
-
Preserving or Promoting Capacity to Have Satisfying Sexual
Relations
-
Leaving Options Open for the Future
-
Respecting the Parents' Wishes and Beliefs
-
Consider the Views of Children and Adolescents.[38]
5.51
According to Gillam and others, the CERG principles are 'general enough
to be applicable to any individual case, are not condition-specific and are not
specific to the current state of medical knowledge and technical capacity'.[39]
5.52
The ethical principles that underpin CERG considerations have informed
the principles adopted by the Victorian Department of Health in their 2013
Guidelines. However as discussed in Chapter 3 the Victorian Guidelines go much
further than ethical principles and include: principles for supporting patients
and parents; medical management principles; human rights principles; and legal principles.[40]
5.53
The inclusion of ethical and human rights principles that go beyond the
medical and legal spheres is particularly welcome. The consideration of the
human rights of the intersex person, and the complex and contentious ethical
considerations that accompany any decisions regarding their welfare, are the
reasons that oversight beyond a clinical perspective is required. The
prevailing view of the Family Court since Re: Marion supports this
proposition.
5.54
The committee was concerned about the application of the legal
principles used in the Guidelines to inform whether or not a case requires
authorisation through the courts. The Guidelines state that:
Court authorisation is required for decisions made on behalf
of infants, children and adolescents with intersex conditions, who cannot give
consent if all of the following four threshold questions apply to a particular
treatment, being that:
-
the proposed treatment is non-therapeutic; and
-
the proposed treatment is invasive, irreversible and considered
'major' treatment; and
-
there is a significant risk of making the wrong decision about
the best interests of the child; and
-
the consequences of a wrong decision are particularly grave.
Court authorisation may also be required where there is
disagreement between decision-making parties about the characterisation of a
particular treatment against these principles.[41]
All four of these thresholds need to be met for a case to
require authorisation from the court.
5.55
The explanatory notes appended to the Guidelines state that '[t]he tests
of Marion's case apply to all intersex conditions and to all contemplated
treatments, not only surgical procedures'.[42]
5.56
While the High Court 'hesitated' to make a distinction between
therapeutic and non-therapeutic in their judgement, they did make a distinction
between surgical intervention that treated 'some malfunction or disease'[43]
and surgery that did not. Chief Justice Alistair Nicholson commented in an
interview in 2003 on the implications of Re: Marion:
...from then on the law effectively has been that a court's
consent is required to perform an invasive and non-therapeutic operation which
covers sterilisation. It's been regarded as covering change of sex operations
as well so it's a very broad principle.[44]
5.57
The explanatory notes appended to the Guidelines discuss the distinction
and state that the judgement in Re: Marion defined the term therapeutic:
In Marion’s Case, the court defined a 'therapeutic' treatment
as a procedure or treatment that is carried out to treat 'a malfunction of
disease', however, this definition is not exhaustive.[45]
5.58
The committee does not share the view that the term or its antonym were
defined, even with the caveat that the definition is not exhaustive. The
committee's understanding is that the term was employed to assist in describing
a distinction in certain cases, but that the emphasis in the judgement was to
consider each case on its merits.
5.59
The committee heard from a number of witnesses who expressed their view
that a definition, and consequent distinction between the terms therapeutic and
non-therapeutic were unhelpful and should be avoided.[46]
For example APEG's submission raised the question of what the threshold should
be for a treatment to be considered 'therapeutic' (and therefore, in most
jurisdictions at least, not requiring court order). The submission asked the
committee to consider the issue of when the courts should be involved in
decisions around gonadectomies in the context of cancer risk, arguing that the
current legal situation is unclear:
In recent years, some doctors have brought cases of DSD to
the Family Court for approval of planned gonadectomy. This was under the
Special Medical Procedures Act, which outlines the requirement for 'non
therapeutic' treatments to be approved by the court.
The ruling of Re: Sally FCA 2010 found that
gonadectomy could occur in a young person who had a cancer risk of 28%, but
that similar cases should be brought before the court. The subsequent ruling of
Re: Sean and Russell 2010 found that gonadectomy could occur in two children
who had a cancer risk of 40%, but that similar cases should be decided with the
parents and doctor, and should not be brought before the court, i.e. they were
therapeutic.
At present it appears that the Family Court of Australia consider
a cancer risk of >28% as 'therapeutic'. Although gonadectomy in cases with
cancer risk of 28% was also deemed therapeutic, further involvement of the
Family Court was recommended for all such cases. International guidelines,
however, recommend surgery for some diagnoses where the cancer risk is below
28%...[47]
5.60
APEG's argument was that in these cases:
The stress and considerable financial cost to families in
seeking legal approval for medical care of their children is detrimental to the
health of the family unit, and is not consistent with holistic or equitable
health care. It is also unnecessary if the approval for surgery occurs in
conjunction with appropriate discussions with an expert multidisciplinary team.[48]
5.61
The committee notes the concern expressed by APEG, and understands the
desire for clarity about the thresholds involved in determining whether a treatment
is therapeutic in nature. For this reason the committee is not supportive of adopting
as a threshold question a requirement that the proposed treatment be
non-therapeutic, as was done in the Victorian Guidelines.
5.62
The committee's principle objection to the terminology being employed is
that it dictates whether or not decision-making is escalated beyond the
authority of the clinician. If a proposed treatment is classified as
therapeutic then no authorisation need be sought from the court. If it were an
independent assessment then this would not necessarily present as an issue, but
the Victorian Guidelines clearly state that the responsibility for deciding
whether or not a proposed treatment is therapeutic is a medical decision that
lies with the person's clinician, at least in the first instance:
The characterisation of a treatment as therapeutic or
non-therapeutic is a medical decision that is the responsibility of the
patient's treating clinician, in collaboration with the multidisciplinary
medical, ethical and legal experts assisting with the development of the
management plan. Consideration of the management plan against the medical
management, human rights and, in particular, the ethical principles in this
resource is likely to assist in the characterisation of a proposed treatment as
therapeutic or non-therapeutic. [49]
5.63
The concern expressed by the intersex community that sex differences are
pathologised sits at the heart of the inquiry. Allowing clinicians to make
decisions on whether treatment is for therapeutic reasons or not, noting that
the consequences of such a designation could entail decision-making authority
is removed from them, does not dispel these concerns.
5.64
The committee understands that a range of factors can influence the
decision-making process, including the individual views of the health
professional. This issue of objective assessment was raised by Jim Simpson, a
lawyer for the NSW Council for Intellectual Disability who gave evidence to the
committee:
To me that issue of the distinction between therapeutic and
non-therapeutic is problematic. To a fair degree I think it is in the eye of
the beholding gynaecologist. I think the much safer approach is that which you
find in most adult guardianship legislation—that all sterilisations require
approval, but if there is some obvious medical reason then the comparatively
informal, non-adversarial nature of Guardianship Tribunal proceedings compared
with the adversarial formality of the Family Court means that there is no unreasonable
burden on those involved to go through the Guardianship Tribunal.[50]
5.65
The Guidelines state that in order to achieve objectivity and
consistency in diagnoses and treatment, all decisions should be taken with
recourse to the Guidelines. If they are followed it would 'maximise the
likelihood of achieving the best possible outcomes for patients, [allowing
hospitals to] be able explain their decision-making processes and justify any
decision taken.'[51]
5.66
The Guidelines, and their role in clinical decision-making, have been
broadly welcomed by Organisation Intersex International. OII was particularly supportive
of the acknowledgement in the guidelines that 'surgical or other medical
treatment is not mandatory', however it was critical that the inclusion of intersex
support organisations in providing advice to either parents and intersex
children or to healthcare professionals was 'largely optional, medicalised, and
limited in scope'.[52]
5.67
The inclusion of 'principles for supporting patients and parents' are welcomed
by the committee. The Guidelines
state that principles outlined are intended to concur with international best
practice and are should aim to provide patients and parents with:
-
honest and complete disclosure of the diagnosis, risks, options, issues
and treatments
-
sufficient time and opportunity for discussion of all options for
healthcare and a balanced review of risks and benefits
-
intensive support, education and counselling during the
decision-making phase
-
standardised, age-appropriate resources for parents, children and
adolescents that provide education about sex and gender diversity
-
information about, and referral to, support groups for both
parents/families, and the patient
-
assistance for parents with informing their child in stages about
their condition, and with seeking their child’s consent for any medical or
surgical intervention
-
ongoing follow up and referral to psychological support for
patients and their parents throughout the patient's life. [53]
5.68
The significance of access to peer and other support groups is a
principle that is also discussed in the context of the medical management of
intersex cases. The Guidelines highlight their value as a resource for
patients and parents:
In addition, support groups have a particularly important
role in providing information to patients and parents during the
decision-making phase and beyond. The consensus statement encourages dialogue
and collaboration between healthcare professionals and support groups, as
partners in delivery of care to patients and their families. [54]
5.69
The importance of basing decision-making on the wellbeing and needs of
the person, rather than that of their parents or carers, was a recurring theme
across the current inquiry, and has arisen in previous committee inquiries.
Parents need to be given expert and ongoing support in raising a child who is
intersex or has a disorder of sexual development. The committee therefore
welcomes the recognition in the Guidelines of the importance of access to
support groups, reflecting the valuable role they can play. The committee
would like to see this commitment become a central part of the health care
management of intersex cases.
Recommendation 11
5.70
The committee recommends that the provision of information
about intersex support groups to both parents/families and the patient be a
mandatory part of the health care management of intersex cases.
5.71
The intersex community has a number of organisations that have assisted
the committee through their submissions to this inquiry, and would be well
placed to provide the kind of support promoted in the Guidelines. The
committee has been impressed with the policy work and professionalism of the
organisations that appeared before it. However these organisations are largely
volunteer-run and lack the funding and resources to be able to provide the type
of services envisaged by the committee.
Recommendation 12
5.72
The committee recommends that intersex support groups
be core funded to provide support and information to patients, parents, families
and health professionals in all intersex cases.
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