A prisoner appeals from the dismissal of a suit in which he claims that the prison’s failure to give him estrogen therapy for a psychiatric condition known technically as gender dysphoria and more popularly as transsexualism is a form of cruel and unusual punishment. A psychiatrist hired by the
The judge was clearly right to dismiss the suit. The psychiatrist does not believe that Maggert suffers from gender dysphoria, although he acknowledges that Maggert’s “sexual identity is polymorphous and his sexual aims ambiguous.” Maggert has not submitted a contrary affidavit by a qualified expert and so has not created a genuine issue of material fact that would keep this case alive.
But there is a broader issue, having to do with the significance of gender dyspho-ria in prisoners’ civil rights litigation, that we want to address. Although gender dysphoria is a rare condition, it has been invoked in enough prisoner cases to give rise to the term “the jurisprudence of transsexualism.” Debra Sherman Tedeschi, “The Predicament of the Transsexual Prisoner,” 5
Temple Polit & Civ. Rts. L.Rev.
27 (1995). The problematic character of this jurisprudence arises from the following considerations. The Eighth Amendment has been interpreted to forbid prisons to ignore the serious medical, including psychiatric, afflictions of prisoners. E.g.,
Estelle v. Gamble,
Does it follow that prisons have a duty to administer (if the prisoner requests it) the standard cure to a prisoner who unlike Maggert is diagnosed as a genuine transsexual? The cases do not answer “yes,” but they make the question easier than it really is by saying that the choice of treatment is up to the prison.
Id.
at 414;
Brown v. Zavaras,
Yet it does not follow that the prisons have a duty to authorize the hormonal and surgical procedures that in most cases at least would be necessary to “cure” a prisoner’s gender dysphoria. Those procedures are protracted and expensive. Even after a person is diagnosed as having gender dys-phoria, treatment protocols require that he complete at least three months of psychotherapy before beginning to take estrogen, and that before undergoing the surgical last stage of the treatment he live for two or three years in the “gender
of
orientation” while taking estrogen; during this period nongenital surgeries and electrolysis are performed as part of the treatment. A prison is not required by the Eighth Amendment to give a prisoner medical care that is as good as he would receive if he were a free person, let alone an affluent free person. See
Wood v. Housewright,
It is not the cost per se that drives this conclusion. For life-threatening or crippling conditions, Medicaid and other public-aid, insurance, and charity programs authorize treatments that often exceed $100,000. Gender dysphoria is not, at least not yet, generally considered a severe enough condition to warrant expensive treatment at the expense of others than the person suffering from it. That being so, making the treatment a constitutional duty of prisons would give prisoners a degree of medical care that they could not obtain if they obeyed the law.
We conclude that, except in special circumstances that we do not at present foresee, the Eighth Amendment does not entitle a prison inmate to curative treatment for his geiider dysphoria. Of course, as the eases have already established, he is entitled to be protected, by assignment to protective custody or otherwise, from harassment by prisoners who wish to use him as a sexual plaything, provided that the danger is both acute and known to the authorities. E.g.,
Farmer v. Brennan,
Affirmed.
