Debunking Sex and Disentangling Gender From Oncology
Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) Podcast01/25/24 • 23 min
Dr. Shannon Westin and her guest, Dr. Ash Alpert and Spencer Adams, discuss the paper "Debunking Sex and Disentangling Gender From Oncology" recently published in the JCO.
TRANSCRIPT
The guests on this podcast episode have no disclosures to declare.
Shannon Westin: Hello and welcome to JCO After Hours, the podcast where we get in depth on manuscripts published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. I'm your host, Shannon Westin, Social Media Editor and GYN oncologist by trade. I'm so excited to be discussing a very important manuscript. This is "Debunking Sex and Disentangling Gender from Oncology," which was published in the JCO Online on May 26, 2023. So I'm joined by two of the authors here today on the podcast. First is Dr. Ash Alpert. They are an instructor of medicine and hematology at Yale Cancer Center. Welcome.
Dr. Ash Alpert: Thank you.
Shannon Westin: And we also have Spencer Adams. They have a bachelor's in public health, are a certified health education specialist, and are currently pursuing a master's in public health at Western Michigan University. Welcome, Spencer.
Spencer Adams: Thank you for having me.
Shannon Westin: So let's get into it. I'm so excited. First off, I just want to say thank you because I learned a ton from this paper, and I'm hoping to be able to implement some of these changes that we're going to discuss over the next few minutes at my own institution. So I wanted to just make sure we kind of level set and everyone's on the same page. So let's start off by discussing ontological oppression. Can you explain to the listeners what this means and how it relates to sex and gender and oncology?
Dr. Ash Alpert: Sure. So, ontological oppression is actually a concept from one of my colleagues at Yale, Robin Demroff, who's a philosopher. Ontology is a way of thinking about what exists and how we categorize what exists. And so ontological oppression is discrimination or stigma that happens because of the ways people imagine us fitting or not fitting into social categories. For example, if we think that people are women or men based on their sex assigned at birth, then it makes sense that we would think of transgender people and nonbinary people as abnormal, weird, or pathologic. In oncology, if we think of ovarian cancer as something that happens to women and a man with ovarian cancer comes into our clinic, we may be confused or uncomfortable. We may respond to those feelings by denying his identity, for example, thinking he's actually a woman or using the wrong pronouns or name for him or even potentially denying him care. And we have some data to suggest that clinicians respond to lack of knowledge about transgender people by treating them as abnormal, weird, or bad in some way.
Spencer Adams: Yeah. And to add to that, when we consider how we classify people, first, there's a problem within that. There's an ethical problem within that, but it's an idea or a construct that society has created and wants people to fit into these nice little boxes just because it's easier to digest, or you make the person more palatable if they're able to do these things. And life is not like that. We have differences, and we have things that make people fit outside the box. And I believe that when we keep reminding people that a box exists or a social construct exists, you're stifling who they are, their personality, their guiding light. You're stifling a lot of things about that person and ignoring something that's incredibly important to them.
Shannon Westin: I think that along those lines, kind of taking that to the next step, it would be really helpful to discuss a little bit more around this interaction between sex assigned at birth and gender and what assumptions are made. And I think you kind of started along this, like, how that impacts oncology care. But in your paper, you did, I think, a really great job of really laying out a lot of the problems that happen in this space, and I'd love to explore that more right now.
Dr. Ash Alpert: So sex is a designation made when a baby is born by somebody viewing that baby's external genitalia. And so I think we all, as doctors, know that that designation doesn't necessarily tell us what that person's karyotype is, what their later hormonal milieu will be, what their internal anatomy is, and it certainly can't tell us anything about their gender, which is how someone sees themselves as a man, woman, nonbinary, or something else, and usually develops around the age of four. And even though I think that we all know that, we're so used to sex and gender being used interchangeably, not just in the ways that we talk to...
01/25/24 • 23 min
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