The committee makes recommendations to the federal health minister about items to be taxpayer funded on the Medicare Benefits Schedule.
It wanted to see more evidence about a number of aspects of gender-affirming care, including the βnatural historyβ of gender incongruence and dysphoria, more information about the distress experienced by some people before and after surgery, about regret and detransition rates, and the preferences for non-binary individuals in the absence of surgery.
Multidisciplinary teams should be involved in the diagnosis of gender incongruence, as well as any decision to undergo surgery.
βMore work needs to be done,β the committee said.
The committee has asked the Department of Health to gather this extra information.
The MSAC advice comes after the federal government asked the National Health and Medical Research Council to review the Australian Standards and Treatment Guidelines for Trans and Gender Diverse Children and Adolescents to develop new national guidelines.
A spokesperson for the health department said that while the MSAC was βcognisantβ of the review into child and adolescent treatments, the surgery funding application for adults was being considered separately.
Dr Nicola Dean, immediate past president of the Australian Society of Plastic Surgeons.
The Medicare application was backed by groups including the Royal Australian College of Surgeons and the Australian Medical Association.
The Australian Society of Plastic Surgeons immediate past president, Associate Professor Nicola Dean, who oversaw the application, welcomed the committeeβs recognition that more needed to be done for those with gender incongruence.
βItβs important because gender incongruence is a real phenomenon, and it is a condition which is not common. Itβs probably around 1 per cent of the population, and only a subgroup of that population who will want surgical intervention,β Dean said.
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βItβs a condition which has been associated with all sorts of disadvantages in terms of mental health and suicidality, and the evidence shows that if people are offered surgery it can improve their health-related quality of life, and they can then often become much more healthy and productive as members of society.β
The plastic surgeonsβ society said 51 studies and more than 156,000 individuals spoke to the safety, effectiveness, and life-changing impact of gender-affirming surgery.
The applicationβs consultation received 2706 responses, with the majority being from people with health conditions that could benefit from the surgery, and 92.5 per cent of responses in favour of public funding.
Dean said a further examination of the long-term impacts of gender affirmation surgery would focus on all aspects of its outcomes.
βThereβs regret for specifics of a surgical procedure, and that is different than regretting embarking on a surgical process,β she said.
βThe regret rate for choosing to undergo surgical procedures at all is very low. The regret rate is often to do with people wishing theyβd chosen βsurgery Aβ versus βsurgery Bβ, or they wish theyβd chosen it at a slightly different time in their life. So trying to understand the nuance around that is really useful.β
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