Re Alex
Re Alex[1] was a legal case decided in the Family Court of Australia on 13 April 2004. It examined the rights of a thirteen-year-old adolescent affirming his maleness and seeking hormonal medical treatment "Sex Affirmation Treatment." CaseAn application was made concerning a thirteen-year-old referred to as "Alex". Alex was a ward of the State of Victoria. Alex was diagnosed as experiencing the condition called "gender identity disorder" (often experienced by transgender people) controversially contained in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders ("DSM IV") maintained by the American Psychiatrists Association. The key issue was whether the Victorian State Government Department having the responsibility for Alex's care and welfare or the Family Court of Australia should have responsibility for the authorisation of medical treatment involving the administration of hormonal therapies to assist Alex to have a body with secondary sexual characteristics most appropriate to his innate affirmed maleness and, in so doing, relieve him of the extreme suffering he was experiencing as a result of female pubertal development. At birth and, at the time of the case, Alex was, in the eyes of the law, a female. JudgmentChief Justice Nicholson ruled as follows:[2]
Subsequent caseIn 2004, it was not contemplated that Alex would undergo any surgical intervention while he was under the age of at least 18 years.[1] In 2007 when Alex was 16 years old, the State guardian made a further application to the Family Court of Australia to obtain the court's authorisation for a double mastectomy. Chief Justice Bryant authorised the procedure in October 2007 however her reasons for judgment were not published until 2009.[4][5] References
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