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Healing Psychiatry’s Wounds: Affirming the LGBTQIA+ Community - DocIndia

Healing Psychiatry’s Wounds: Affirming the LGBTQIA+ Community - DocIndia
July 09, 2025

Written by: Dr. Athul Raj E R - (MBBS, DNB - Psychiatry)

Introduction

Psychiatry has inflicted significant harm on the LGBTQIA+ community through practices like pathologizing gender identities and conversion therapy. This troubling legacy demands humility and reflection.

For decades, non-heterosexual orientations and gender identities were erroneously considered pathologies. Homosexuality, in particular, was declared a "disorder," a profound moral failing masked by medical authority, shattering lives. Love, innocently expressed, was seen as a disease. This article explores moving forward, embracing affirming care for healing and equity.

Gender Identity and Psychiatric Manuals: A Shifting Understanding

Diagnostic and Statistical Manuals (DSM) long fuelled misunderstanding of gender identity. Initial silence evolved into "Transsexualism" (DSM-III), conflating identity with sexual deviation. "Gender Identity Disorder (GID)" (DSM-IV) continued to imply pathology. While "Gender Dysphoria" (DSM-5) shifted focus to distress and separated it from sexual disorders, its inclusion in a mental health manual still carries stigma. This history within foundational texts highlights psychiatry's struggle to affirm gender diversity, often medicalizing authentic self-validation.

Conversion Therapy: A Harmful Illusion

Perhaps the most damning chapter in psychiatry's troubling past with the LGBTQIA+ community is the unspeakable atrocity known as "conversion therapy." This practice, also referred to by pseudoscientific terms such as Sexual Orientation Change Efforts (SOCE), Gender Identity Change Efforts (GICE), or "reparative therapy," is fundamentally not a form of therapy at all. In its true medical and psychological context, therapy is a process of healing and growth, grounded in scientific evidence, ethical principles, and aimed at alleviating distress and improving well-being. It respects and supports an individual's authentic self.

Conversion therapy, conversely, is a practice based on the false and harmful premise that an individual's sexual orientation, romantic orientation, gender identity, or gender expression can or should be changed to align with heterosexual and cisgender norm.Under the guise of "healing," psychiatry sanctioned practices to "correct" identity. These were brutal assaults, from twisted psychoanalysis to aversion therapy, Sedative injections ,ECT, and forced institutionalization. The human cost is profound, exemplified by tragic cases like Anjana Hareesh in Kerala, whose life was cut short by despair and self-loathing induced by these practices. These betrayals of our ethical oath must never be forgotten.

Neuroscientific Evidence for Diversity: Debunking Conversion Therapy

The insistence that sexual orientation or gender identity can be "changed" contradicts compelling scientific evidence of their deep biological underpinnings. Neurobiological correlates increasingly explain human gender and sexuality.

Neuroanatomy reveals subtle yet significant brain structure differences, particularly in the hypothalamus, between cisgender and transgender, and heterosexual and homosexual individuals. For instance, hypothalamic regions like the interstitial nucleus of the anterior hypothalamus (INAH-3) show size differences aligning with experienced gender, not assigned sex. Other brain regions involved in emotional processing and sexual arousal also show distinct patterns. These findings suggest gender identity and sexual orientation are deeply wired aspects of human neurodevelopment. Attempting to "convert" identity through coercive practices is akin to reprogramming an inherent biological blueprint. Consistent neuroscientific findings unequivocally debunk conversion therapy, confirming its ineffectiveness and profound harm, working against the biological realities of human diversity.

A Shifting Legal Landscape in India: From Criminalization to Affirmation

India's socio-legal landscape profoundly impacted LGBTQIA+ mental well-being. For over a century, Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code criminalized consensual same-sex acts, fostering immense fear, shame, and distress.

However, significant shifts are underway. The Indian Psychiatric Society (IPS) in 2018 declared homosexuality is not a disease, condemning "conversion therapies." The Madras High Court issued landmark orders prohibiting medical attempts to "cure or change" sexual orientation or gender identity, directing disciplinary action against offending professionals. These legal and professional interventions dismantle past shadows, building an affirming mental healthcare environment for the LGBTQIA+ community in India.

Towards Queer-Affirmative Care: A Future of Hope and Humility

The future lies in queer-affirmative care: mental health support built on radical respect, unconditional validation, and a profound commitment to the flourishing of every LGBTQIA+ individual. This means actively creating spaces where authenticity is celebrated and the queer community's resilience is recognized.

Affirming care involves understanding minority stress, recognizing diverse gender identities and sexual orientations as healthy aspects of self, and collaborating with clients for self-acceptance and empowerment. It requires continuous learning, deep cultural competence, and an unwavering ethical compass from practitioners. In India, organizations like the Mariwala Health Initiative (MHI) pioneer this shift, building accessible, non-discriminatory mental health services and training queer-affirmative therapists.These efforts demonstrate that a future of genuine partnership, where psychiatry allies with the community for mental well-being and liberation, is a tangible reality being built in Kozhikode and beyond.

Conclusion: The Transformative Power of Affirming Care

Psychiatry's journey from past harms towards healing lies in affirming care. This commits to repairing trust and creating change by prioritizing LGBTQIA+ voices and needs. It demands humility and re-examination of traditional practices.

Affirming care extends beyond clinical settings, informing advocacy, ethical policy-making, and broader cultural change for an inclusive society. Moving from shadow to light requires vigilance, reflection, and lifelong learning from the communities we serve, ensuring every person is seen, heard, and affirmed—a fundamental recognition of their inherent worth and humanity.

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