50 years of sex changes, mental disorders, and too many suicides
![Image](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgBBehtHxxjst3p_1P0EfXvZLHAaShL200Eb-uU33A-oB0p4iA3Z9Lw9axAMfB7I-eaaSwFaS-T5Ke3rWUQUZIdRezo-hpn3GZHp6S01qx4ZRknyb8CihPmLE8UWvNNypOwv8rI2z4zcis/s640/depressed_man_810_500_55_s_c1.jpg)
The New York Daily News gossip column reported a girl was making the rounds in Manhattan clubs who admitted to being a man in 1965. She had undergone a sex-change operation in Baltimore at the Johns Hopkins gender clinic. By 1979, thirteen years later, enough gender surgeries had been performed to evaluate the results. It was time for a report card based on actual patients. 1970s: How effective was the change surgery? What were the outcomes for transgender people? The first report comes from Dr. Harry Benjamin , a strong advocate for cross-gender hormone therapy and gender-reassignment surgery, who operated a private clinic for transsexuals. According to an article in the Journal of Gay & Lesbian Mental Health , “By 1972, Benjamin had diagnosed, treated, and befriended at least a thousand of the ten thousand Americans known to be transsexual.” Dr. Benjamin’s trusted colleague, endocrinologist Charles Ihlenfeld administered hormone ther...