Gobsmacking that the British Medical Journal is advocating doctors not keeping a record of patients' sex (or what they call sex assigned at birth, fgs). They appear to be advocating, instead of asking women if they may be pregnant (before some relevant medical care), asking everybody whether they may be pregnant. Can you imagine the (further) disrepute the profession will be brought into if doctors ask bearded men whether they think they might be pregnant! And rather than having a record of someone's sex, if they need to know someone's sex, apparently doctors are supposed to ask each patient whether they have a certain sexual organ. The full article isn't visible, so that's based on the comments. Like this one:
Dear Editor
The authors identify several different reasons that information on patients’ sex is collected, recorded and used in healthcare:
Identification
Inpatient care (e.g. which wards to house people in)
Policy enforcement
Preventative care
Differential diagnosis in acute settings
Knowing what pronouns to use
They note that because of changes over a lifetime (such as hysterectomy and orchidectomy) and intersex conditions (which they wrongly state as meaning that 2% of people have bodies that do not fit sexual classification[1] ), the data field of sex (male or female) offers incomplete or obsolete information to answer specific questions about an individual such as would this person need a cervical smear test?
They say that using data on sex “as a proxy for more specific questions about anatomy and hormone levels” has the potential to harm patients.
Therefore they reach the astounding conclusion that sex of patients should not be recorded.
It should immediately be obvious that not having a field in which to record patient sex would do much greater harm. To take the cervical smear test example, while not every female patient will need one, no males do. Targeting all patients for testing is a wasteful, pointless exercise, while only asking “people with a cervix” to attend for screening will lead to many patients who do not have detailed knowledge of their own anatomy being missed. This can be repeated for any number of other medical risks and conditions. Are the risks from COVID different for males and females? The authors say this is not a question worth asking, and all the data which might answer it should be thrown away.
Instead it states that a question about “gender identity” should be used.
However gender identity solves none of the weaknesses they identify for the sex question - for example knowing that someone identifies as non-binary does not tell you whether they might need prostate or cervical screening, whether they might be at risk of getting or being pregnant, or whether they would be alarming to other patients if put in a shared bay of an inpatient ward. It does not even tell you what pronouns to use for them.
It is a principle of data management that each field should be used for one piece of data only, and they shouldn’t be confused or mixed together. It is clear and obvious that data on sex should be collected and recorded for every patient.
Recognising and respecting transgender people’s identity and privacy (where possible) is not in conflict with this, but this identity should not be confused with their sex, nor should other people’s sex be regarded as a gender identity, as this opens up the data to corruption.
As to the question of what pronouns to use for people, most people are comfortable with the grammatical pronouns associated with their sex, for those who are not, an additional note can be made in a separate data field (and honorific such as Ms, Mrs and Mr which also give an indication need not be tied to a person’s sex). Knowing that someone prefers to be referred to as he/him, she/her, they/them, she/they, he/they zie/zer tells you precisely that. It contains no reliable information of clinical or epidemiological relevance. To replace the reliable recording of sex with this social nicety in healthcare is dangerous and unjustified.
[1] Leonard Sax (2002) How common is lntersex? A response to Anne Fausto‐Sterling, The Journal of Sex Research, 39:3, 174-178, DOI: 10.1080/00224490209552139