A court has ruled Ontario must pay for a penis-sparing vaginoplasty for a person who identifies as neither fully female nor fully male
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Ontario has been ordered to pay for unique surgery for a resident who is seeking to have a vagina constructed while leaving their penis intact.
Denying the procedure would infringe on the person’s Charter-protected right to security of the person, an Ontario court said in its ruling.
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The unanimous decision by a three-member panel of judges of Ontario’s Divisional Court could expand access to “bottom surgery” for people who identify as non-binary, meaning neither fully male nor fully female.
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The Ontario resident, identified in court documents as K.S., has been locked in a legal battle with the Ontario Health Insurance Plan since 2022, when OHIP denied a funding request to have a penile preserving vaginoplasty performed at a clinic in Austin, Texas.
The surgery, which is not available anywhere in Canada, involves creating a vaginal canal, or opening, without removing the penis.
K.S. was born male but identifies as female dominant and uses a feminine name.
OHIP denied her request for funding, arguing that the procedure is not included on its list of sex-reassignment procedures, and is therefore not an insured service.
K.S. appealed OHIP’s decision to Ontario’s Health Services Appeal and Review Board, arguing that forcing her to have her penis removed would invalidate her identity and be akin to an illegal act of conversion therapy.
She also worried about the risk of complications and urinary incontinence from the urological rerouting, and the risk of orgasm dysfunction. She argued the procedure she is seeking abroad is like standard vaginoplasties performed in Ontario, but without the additional procedure, namely, the penectomy.
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The appeal board overturned OHIP’s decision, ruling that a vaginoplasty is among the genital surgeries listed for public coverage and need not inherently include removal of the penis. The board therefore ruled the procedure eligible for public funding.
OHIP appealed the board’s decision to the Divisional Court, arguing the review board erred in finding a penis-sparing vaginoplasty is specifically listed as an insured service, and that it failed to consider that the unorthodox procedure is an experimental procedure in Ontario, and, therefore, not eligible for funding.
Just because vaginoplasty is listed as an insured service doesn’t mean any type of vaginoplasty qualifies, OHIP argued in court.
The court dismissed OHIP’s appeal, stating the appeal board was correct to find that vaginoplasty without penis removal is “specifically listed” in OHIP’s schedule of benefits and, because of that, the exclusion for experimental services doesn’t apply.
The court also said the appeal board’s conclusion was consistent with the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) standards of care — influential guidelines that received a scathing review this week by a massive British report into gender-affirming care.
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The WPATH standards “expressly refer to vaginoplasty without penectomy as a surgical option for some non-binary people,” Justice Breese Davies wrote in the court ruling.
While the court said it didn’t need to address Charter arguments, if there was any ambiguity concerning what should or should not be covered, the review board’s interpretation was also consistent with Charter values of equality and security of the person, the court added.
“The Charter-protected right to security of the person safeguards individual dignity and autonomy,” Davies wrote. Requiring a transgender or non-binary person born male “to remove their penis to receive state funding for a vaginoplasty would be inconsistent with the values of equality and security of the person.”
“Such an interpretation would force transgender, non-binary people like K.S. to choose between having a surgery (penectomy) they do not want, and which does not align with their gender expression to get state funding on the one hand, and not having gender affirming surgery at all on the other,” Davies wrote.
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“Such a choice would reinforce their disadvantaged position and would not promote their dignity and autonomy.”
OHIP’s appeal was dismissed, and the province ordered to pay K.S. $20,000 to cover legal costs.
“This is a significant win for the transgender and non-binary communities,” K.S.’s lawyer, John McIntyre, told CTV News Toronto.
“We hope that OHIP decides to accept the decision of the court rather than seeking leave to appeal so that K.S. can move forward with her surgery she has been trying to get for years now.”
In earlier reports, National Post was told that gender-affirming surgeries at the Texas clinic range from US$10,000 to $70,000, depending on what is done.
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