Sterilisation
The sterilisation of girls
        and young women with intellectual disabilities in Australia: An audit
        of Family Court and Guardianship Tribunal cases between 1992-1998. 
This paper was presented at
        International Conference Disability With Attitude :Critical Issues
        20 years After International Year of Disabled Persons on 16th-17th
        February 2001 Parramatta Campus, University of Western Sydney, Australia
        and has been reproduced with the authors permission. 
Susan M Brady
        School of Social
        Work & Social Policy 
        University of Queensland 
        Brisbane, Qld 4072 
        Australia 
        s.brady@social.uq.edu.au
        
        
漏Susan Brady 2001
Abstract
This paper will highlight
        the findings of research examining Family Court and state Guardianship
        Tribunal's originating materials and written reports from 'experts' and
        family members. It includes all sterilisation cases involving minors that
        have proceeded to legal judgment in Australia between 1992-1998. The central
        assertion is that non-consensual sterilisation continues to be framed
        as a medical problem to be 'cured' for family and social reasons. The
        findings raise systemic questions about the continuing social obstacles
        of discrimination, prejudice, and oppression facing girls and women with
        intellectual disabilities in Australia. Identified is a silence about
        individual competencies, a receding acknowledgment of the rights of the
        individual, and a declining focus on developmental and inclusive approaches
        to disability issues. On the basis of empirical findings the legal trend
        in decision-making in Australia is not towards a more restrictive approach
        to the sterilisation of children but a more relaxed one. 
Note: In this paper
        one application made to the Guardianship Tribunal forum for sterilisation
        by way of hysterectomy is not included in this audit. The application
        was withdrawn prior to medical and non-medical reports being filed. It
        therefore provided no data on reporter involvement, opinion and/or recommendation.
        Thus although there are 'officially' 20 applications for sterilisation
        to the Guardianship Tribunals only 19 have been included in the analysis.
        
Introduction
 In Australia during
        the 1980's the legal and ethical issues surrounding the sterilisation
        of girls and women with intellectual disabilities was debated within disability
        advocacy, legal, and medical contexts. At the same time the emergence
        of Guardianship Tribunals in most Australian States advanced the rights
        and interests of adult women by requiring tribunal authorisation for a
        sterilisation procedure. It was not until 1992 that girls and young women
        had equal legal protection. In a landmark decision by the High Court of
        Australia called Marion's Case the court held that the right to authorise
        the sterilisation of a minor is not within the ordinary scope of parental
        power (Secretary, Dept of Health and Community Services v JWB and SMB
        (1992) 175 CLR). Today the Family Court of Australia and the Guardianship
        Tribunals of New South Wales and South Australia can authorise the sterilisation
        of girls and young women under 18 years. All sterilisation cases have
        involved females thus it is a gendered issue. 
The Principles for Decision-Making
 The High Court said
        the decision to sterilise must be a step 'of last resort' in other
        words that '.alternative and less invasive procedures have all failed
        or it is certain that no other procedure or treatment will work.' and
        '.in all the circumstances of the particular child the procedure is in
        the child's best interests'. (Marion at 259-60). 
The High Court made
        it clear that consideration should be given to; ".hearing from those
        experienced in different ways in the care of those with intellectual disabilities
        and from those with experience of the long term social and psychological
        effects of sterilisation" (Marion at p259).
 The approach taken
        by the High Court signalled that non-consensual sterilisation is not simply
        a medical decision. These decisions are moral decisions of a fundamental
        sort arising within the broader context of societal values and norms,
        and are about the rights and dignity of people with disabilities more
        generally. Decisions made by the court and tribunals may impact on the
        development of social values and social policy and therefore can have
        wide ranging effects beyond the individual concerned. Progressive decision-making
        can promote the rights and interests of people with disabilities. Equally,
        paternalistic decisions can oppress rights through the application of
        prejudicial values and attitudes, and can give an approval for the state
        and professionals to relax on principles of human rights, inclusion and
        equality.
The Data in the Study
The data is derived
        from court and tribunal files involving 38 sterilisation applications
        for girls and young women with intellectual disabilities between 1992-1998.
        There have been 19 applications for sterilisation in the Family Court
        and 19 applications in the Guardianship tribunals. These 38 cases have
        involved approximately 300 individual experts, writing 420 reports for
        the decision-maker/s. In this paper 'experts' are called 'reporters' because
        it was, in most instances, difficult to establish what might be considered
        expertise in disability related issues.
 Most commentary
        about sterilisation cases involves a 'content analysis' of legal judgements.
        This data is important because it is 'raw material' collected from the
        rank and file of those involved (professional and non-professional) and
        forms the information base provided to the court and tribunals. The data
        gives an insight into the reporters - their occupations, views and recommendations
        - moving discussion beyond the limits of the judgment. What must be acknowledged
        is the relative silence from the girls and young women. Their 'right to
        be heard' is through separate legal representation in the legal process.
        
The Decision-Making Forums
        
The Family Court
        is a federal court, essentially adversarial in approach and prefers parties
        involved to have legal representation which is costly. The state-based
        Guardianship Tribunals are 'inquiring' in approach, require no legal representation
        and charge no fees in relation to applications. Thus the process and procedure
        of each decision-making forum is different. Both forums have open hearings
        that may be closed at the discretion of the decision-makers.
The Decision-Makers
 The Australian 'guardianship
        tribunal' is not constitutionally protected like the Family Court. Judges
        in the Family Court are given life long appointments. One judge hears
        the application for sterilisation, and the majority of them are male.
        The guardianship tribunal has panels of lay people from multi-disciplinary
        backgrounds with experience in disability issues, they are mostly part-time
        and appointed by the state government for fixed terms, usually three years.
        In sterilisation cases there is a requirement for a minimum of three tribunal
        members with at least one being female. Each tribunal comprises of a chair
        person who is a lawyer versed in human rights law, a professional member
        usually a doctor, and a 'community' member with a social science background
        or a person who has direct experience with disability, as persons with
        disabilities themselves, as advocates or carers. Some board members have
        both a professional background and personal experience. 
The Girls and Young Women
The age of the girls
        and young women subject to sterilisation applications ranged between 10
        to 17 years. It has been reported in socio-legal commentary reviewing
        Family Court sterilisation judgments that the girls and young women have
        severe intellectual disabilities (Nicholson, Harrison & Sandor, 1995).
        The data has shown this is not an entirely correct appraisal. 
The Family Court
        (unlike the guardianship tribunals) tends to continue to apply tests for
        IQ as a measurement of capacity and then relegates capacity to measurement
        in terms of mental age. This is long recognised as discredited practice
        (Brantlinger, 1992). There appears to be a lack of appreciation in the
        Court about assessment based on adaptive skills. Notwithstanding the issue
        of 'measurement' it is clear that some of the girls are characterised
        as having severe intellectual disabilities when they do not. The Family
        Court has more applications where young women have a mild-moderate intellectual
        disability compared to the guardianship tribunals. All guardianship approvals
        include girls with both intellectual and physical disabilities and all
        have high support needs. Thus, the Family Court hears applications that
        involve young women with a wider range of individual competencies compared
        to the guardianship tribunals. 
The Decisions
The Family Court
        has approved proposed hysterectomies in 17 out of 19 cases. One application
        was withdrawn prior to hearing. The only case not approved involved a
        young woman of 14 years who since infancy resided in a state institution.
        Her parents made the application. The judge in his summing up said;
         ".the parents wishes did not carry significant weight.their wishes
        did not impact on her at all. The child had no concept of their wishes
        and no feelings about whether their wishes were met or not. The parents
        were not involved in her daily care and there was no suggestion that their
        attitudes to or interaction with the child would change in any way dependent
        upon the outcome of their application." (re:Sarah, L and GMvMM; the Director-General,
        Department of Family Services and Aboriginal and Islander Affairs (1994)
        FLC 92-449). 
The wishes of the
        parents is a fundamental factor considered in Family Court matters. In
        all other Family Court matters the girl's primary carer has been her mother.
        
The guardianship
        tribunals have approved 10 out of 19 cases. As noted above this jurisdiction
        tends to hear applications involving girls and young women with severe
        intellectual disabilities and high support needs. In 2 of the 10 cases
        the tribunal decided in favour of a less invasive procedure than hysterectomy
        and approved tubal ligation. 
The decisions illustrate
        that multi-disciplinary guardianship forums are less likely to approve
        a sterilisation procedure compared to a single judge in the court-based
        forum. They are also more likely to approve less invasive procedures like
        tubal ligation. There is a trend developing (decisions from 1995 onwards)
        that suggests that guardianship tribunals are becoming more likely to
        authorise sterilisation procedures. It is particularly evident in New
        South Wales. 
The Reporters
 Gynaecologists and
        paediatricians are the most frequently used medical reporters in sterilisation
        applications. The Family Court has a higher number of paediatricians and
        neurologists providing reports compared to the guardianship tribunal/s.
        
Table 1: Comparison
        between Family Court and Guardianship Tribunal/s by occupation of Medical
        Reporters in sterilisation cases between 1992-1998. 
| Reporter | Family Court | Guardianship | Total | 
| Gynaecology | 41 | 31 | 72 | 
| Neurology | 15 | 3 | 18 | 
| Psychiatry | 5 | 1 | 6 | 
| Paediatrics | 20 | 8 | 28 | 
| Surgery | 3 | 3 | 6 | 
| Genetics | 5 | 3 | 8 | 
| Family doctor | 7 | 12 | 19 | 
| Total | 96 | 61 | 157 | 
n= 38 applications
        for sterilisation comprising 19 in the Family Court and 19 in the guardianship
        tribunal/s. 
 Table
        2: Comparison between Family Court and Guardianship Tribunal/s by occupation
        of Non-Medical reporters in sterilisation cases between 1992-1998.
        
| Reporter | Family Court | Guardianship | Total | 
| Allied Health | 8 | 5 | 13 | 
| Social Work | 3 | 4 | 7 | 
| Psychology | 20 | 16 | 36 | 
| Education | 18 | 12 | 30 | 
| OPA/ILO* | 1 | 18 | 19 | 
| Home help | 7 | 4 | 11 | 
| Govt Dept | - | 1 | 1 | 
| Parents | 21 | 7 | 28 | 
| Total | 78 | 67 | 145 | 
 n= 38 applications
        for sterilisation comprising 19 applications in the Family Court and 19
        applications in the guardianship tribunal/s. * OPA in South Australia
        is the Office of the Public Advocate an independent statutory agency for
        people with disabilities, and in NSW the ILO is the Investigation and
        Liaison Officer with the Guardianship Tribunal. 
Both the Family Court
        and the guardianship tribunals use psychologists and special education
        teachers as a main source of non-medical information. In the guardianship
        tribunals the statutory investigator (ILO) or advocate (OPA) also provide
        an 'investigation' report which comprehensively outlines the issues and
        the views of the family, professionals and non-professionals involved.
The Family Court
        has more reports from family members than the guardianship tribunal. This
        is a procedural issue. In the court-based system affidavits (sworn written
        statements) are the method by which information is passed to the court.
        In the tribunal system family members participate in the process by talking
        directly to the tribunal. This procedural difference may in part also
        explain the lesser number of professional reports collected by the tribunal
        compared to the court. The tribunal process is participatory and informal
        in its approach and the multi-disciplinary composition of the board enables
        it to ask relevant questions and to clarify evidence with participants,
        including the young woman during the hearing. 
Recommendations made by Reporters
 Table 3 (below)
        provides an overview of the recommendations made by reporters. It excludes
        family members because they are not 'service providers' and because family
        members always support the proposed sterilisation. Reporters in the Family
        Court are more likely to make a recommendation in support of a sterilisation
        compared to reporters in the guardianship tribunals. Medical reporters
        are more likely to support a sterilisation compared to non-medical reporters.
        
Table 3 : Comparison
        between Family Court and Guardianship Tribunal/s by recommendation by
        reporters in sterilisation cases between 1992-1998. 
| 
 | GUARDIANSHIP TRIBUNERAL | |||||||
| Reporter | Support | Oppose | No | Total | Support | Oppose | No | Total | 
| Medical | 77 | 3 | 16 | 96 | 47 | NIL | 14 | 61 | 
| Non-Medical | 21 | 8 | 29 | 58 | 18 | 2 | 40 | 60 | 
| Total | 98 | 11 | 45 | 154 | 65 | 2 | 54 | 121 | 
n= 275 reporters.
        *no rec = no recommendation is made by the reporter. 
The non-medical reporters
        who do provide a recommendation in support of the proposed sterilisation
        are mainly psychologists with 42% supporting the procedure and 52% of
        special education teachers, while 56% of home help and paid carers also
        support the procedure. Special school teachers, home help and paid carers
        are all highly likely to know the family and continue to provide an ongoing
        service after the hearing of the application. 
The Reports
 Space does not allow
        for a wide selection of examples however those cited are fairly 'commonplace'.
        Verbatim quotes from reports are used and identified after each quote
        in brackets, is the occupation of the reporter, the year of the report,
        and the age of the young woman. All these young women were sterilised
        by hysterectomy. 
Reasons given for
        hysterectomy: 
"[she] exhibits
        the following maladaptive behaviours. Poor concentration, attention seeking,
        distractability, non-compliance, biting and picking her fingernails, poor
        eye contact, stubbornness, impulsivity, running away and stealing.." (Psychologist,
        1997; aged 12 years).
 ".she has impulsive
        behaviour .the time is well past when she should undergo a hysterectomy
        ." (Gynaecologist, 1995, aged 13 years)
 Menstruation apparently
        turns her into someone else and negates her capacity to think:
 "I have noticed
        that when she has her period she is not in control of her thought ."
        (Mother, 1997; aged 14 years)
 ".failure to
        carry out the surgery could significantly reduce her ability to participate
        thus impeding future progress or even causing deterioration in her level
        of functioning.." (Teacher, 1995, aged 15 years). 
Menstruation thus
        defined is an 'illness' changing her personality, and impacting upon her
        capacity to learn and develop.
 Social taboos and
        notions of responsible womanhood are linked to capacity to self-care:
'.if a girl is
        unable to manage her menstruation either physically by herself or by indicating
        her needs then menstruation itself must be seen as a disability" (Paediatrician,
        1994; aged 13 years). 
".a toilet hysterectomy
        would solve the problems of menstruation and contraception".( Gynaecologist,
        1992; aged 14 years). 
".she becomes
        embarrassed if other people know that she is menstruating." (Mother,
        1994, aged 15 years)
 The focus on dis-inhibition,
        lack of social norms and 'normal' adult behaviour highlights the social
        symbols attributed to menstruation: ".there's six girls in that house
        - there's six babies in the cottage menstruating..." (Mother, 1994;
        aged 15 years).
 ".she is dis-inhibited
        and unable to feel any embarrassment with her actions. She is unable to
        understand concepts of cleanliness ." (Psychiatrist, 1992; aged 14).
 ".she will never
        be able to manage her menstruation unaided. She has not and will never
        have any intellectual appreciation of normal adult female behaviour."
        (Psychiatrist, 1996; aged 13).
 A common theme is
        the need for a final solution to fertility, an approach considered by
        medical reporters as a less restrictive option: 
        ".if a hysterectomy is not performed she is faced with the need for
        support for her reproductive health for the next 35 years or longer."
        (Gynaecologist, 1996; aged 12 years) 
Vulnerability to
        sexual abuse is a major theme in all applications. 'Inappropriate' behaviour,
        and good looks is considered a major determinant of sexual activity or
        abuse.
 ".body-wise she's
        a lovely looking girl, she's affectionate, she's caring but she's three
        in the mind." (Father ,1994; aged 15 years) 
".since the onset
        of sexual maturity she displays an affectionate promiscuity which is the
        characteristic of women with intellectual disability' (Paediatrician,
        1998; aged 12 years).
 ".whilst I understand
        from previous reports that this young lady is not sexually active sexual
        exploitation of the disabled remains a probability during the course of
        their life time." (Gynaecologist, 1993, aged 15 years)
Dominant Discourse
The dominant approach
        to sterilisation is the medical approach (Schu, 1997). It conceptualises
        the young woman's disability as an individual pathology and a personal
        tragedy - for her and her family. The sterilisation is characterised as
        a 'simple' and 'common' procedure part of the surgical repertoire of many
        medical specialists. In a technical sense it is portrayed as inconsequential
        and of minimum risk. In a social sense (from a medical perspective) it
        offers a final solution to a myriad of problems potentially encountered
        because of disability. When questions about the potential long-term health
        effects on young women are raised they elicit the following:
        "...it would be very difficult to obtain meaningful information from
        these young women or older women as they may be now which would have any
        significance .I know of no information concerning attempted analysis post
        hysterectomy in the experimental animal on its subsequent physical or
        behavioural development or the incidence of disease. Surgical procedures
        do carry the risks of mortality and morbidity in particular the risk of
        wound infection and gut obstruction but in parallel [for these girls]
        long term drug administration also carries significant risks of side effects,
        in particular that of weight gain." (Paediatrician 1994; aged 12 years)
 The medical reporters
        are privileged in the construction of what is 'authoritative' and by corollary
        what or who lacks credibility (Conklin, 1997). The data suggests that
        other discourses like non-medical are recruited but cannot compete with
        the medical for authority. The dominant discourse silences competing discourses
        casting them as irrelevant, and merit-less and sometimes as harmful to
        the interests of the child or family. Although rare some medical reporters
        question the facts as presented: " .there is clearly a pervasive impression
        that these behavioural difficulties are related to the menstrual cycle.
        There are other possibilities including a heightened general level of
        tension and frustration and issues relating to emerging adolescence such
        as the desire to be more independent and concerns about self image. There
        is little evidence in any of the reports of a broader consideration or
        investigation of behavioural difficulties for example looking for other
        factors which might be contributing." (Paediatrician 1995; aged 15
        years).
 The response to
        his suggestions is telling: 
        ".speculation that there may be some other cause for her distress is speculation
        of not the slightest weight: it is not shared by a single other person:
        he is entirely contradicted by the mother whose evidence is both uncontradicted
        and unchallenged". [They] .would wish the doctors who have treated her
        and know her and her condition to experiment further on her at notwithstanding
        the risk to her identified by those qualified to do so which they dismiss
        without explanation. Their proposals are highly speculative, risky, unexplained
        and unsupported ." (notes from Judges Legal Associate; 1995). 
Such responses close
        down the investigation of less invasive alternatives to hysterectomy.
        The young woman involved had displayed difficult and unsettled behaviours
        since the age of 5 years. The behavioural problems were not subsequent
        to menstruation as suggested in the applicant's medical reports. It is
        not of much assistance to an inquiry to have important evidence not put,
        untested or inconsistencies unexplored or alternative arguments not put
        or limply put. Confounding this is the lack of expertise regarding disability
        issues. Blackwood (1991:151) observes that 
        "...judges will all too often accept or prefer the views of the medical
        profession to the exclusion of other relevant evidence and in some cases
        elevate opinions and assertions to the status of fact".
 Social and psychological
        effects of sterilisation are usually dismissed: 
        "She has no understanding or awareness of the concepts of male/female
        identity femininity or motherhood and she would have no feeling of loss
        as a result of [the] procedure." (Psychiatrist, 1992; aged 12 years).
 Concerns are sometimes
        raised about pessimistic assessments of capacity:
        ".I was struck by the fact that it is claimed she has the reasoning
        of a five year old and in my view I would have thought this was a little
        pessimistic." (Gynaecologist, 1997, aged 14 years). 
Concerns are sometimes
        raised about undue influence: "... a slight unease in this case that
        the pressure is coming from a parental direction." (Paediatrician
        ,1997; aged 14 years). 
Sometimes there is
        concession to the possibility of psychological damage resulting from sterilisation:
        
        "It is likely that she will regret the fact that she can not have a
        baby and however transient this regret might be it will nevertheless cause
        her some psychological difficulty." (Psychologist,1998; aged 15 years).
        
Society's interests
        in responsible reproduction above bodily integrity of 'the unfit' remains
        relevant today (Lesli-Miller, 1997). Many of the reports focus on alleged
        'unfitness for motherhood' a factor prevalent in social and judicial thought
        (Graycar, 1995).
 " she would be
        unable to care for a child.would certainly omit to make most critical
        parenting decisions .may commit acts of poor parenting out of frustration.."
        ( Physician, 1994; aged 14 years). 
Assessment of mothering
        abilities and images of perpetual childhood are referred to by mothers:
        "...still functioning at a three to five year old range and I don't
        think its fair to expect any three year old child to carry and care for
        an infant.."  (Mother, 1994; aged 15 years) 
Normalisation is
        re-framed to lend credibility to assertions that sterilisation has facilitated
        the termination of expensive and restrictive institutional care for many
        and that surgical contraception can make an important contribution to
        normalisation policy (Haavik & Menninger, 1981).
"Because of her
        emotional and physical needs she urgently requires an environment which
        can provide sound behavioural management and encourage her to develop
        some skills thus enhancing her self esteem. She also needs the opportunity
        to increase her social circle which is currently very small.hysterectomy
        will provide these opportunities" (Psychologist, 1993, aged 13 years).
        
In a nutshell there
        is an assumption that sterilisation by removing the risk of pregnancy
        will enhance her quality of life because she can lead a 'normalised' life,
        allowed to venture into the community. This is an example of how foundational
        principles in the delivery of services to people with disabilities have
        been re-worked and re-constructed.
 Normalisation is
        about "the use of culturally valued means to enable people to live
        culturally valued lives" (abbreviated Wolfensberger definition cited
        in NIMR, 1985:65). Sterilisation for young women is not culturally valued
        in western societies. 
Discussion
The study findings
        suggest the High Court decision in Marion - essentially a declaration
        that an old practice is wrong - has not produced a reform in attitudes,
        highlights discrepancies in decision-making between the court-based and
        guardianship forums, and identifies the 'reasons' accepted for 'lawful'
        sterilisation and inherent social prejudices. 
Debate about whether
        the decision should be governed by clear and legislated criteria or a
        discretionary one involving indeterminate best interests tests has happened
        in Australia but it has not resulted in reform (FLC, 1994; WALRC, 1994).
        The Family Court has rejected the need for legislation about when a sterilisation
        can be authorised and prefers an 'individualised' case-by-case approach.
        Keays-Byrne (1995) says that as a result the trend is not towards a more
        restrictive approach to the sterilisation of children but to perhaps a
        more relaxed one. The findings confirm this, and the trend is disturbing
        because sterilisation is irreversible and the harms associated with making
        a wrong decision cannot be altered by a subsequent review of decision
        making (Brady, 1995). 
In Australia, multi-disciplinary
        tribunals have provided one way in which non-lawyers can be involved in
        making important decisions for people with decision-making disabilities
        (Tait and Carney, 1994). Experts in the delivery of disability services
        are more likely to insist on "evaluation of .social capability.by qualified
        experts" (UN Declaration on the Rights of Mentally Retarded Persons, 1971
        para 7) in keeping with the principles of least restriction, maximisation
        of self development and community participation. It is important to consider
        the benefits of the tribunal approach compared to the expensive court-based
        system.
Conclusion
It is dangerous for
        decisions to be made justifying sterilisation on grounds that are dismissive
        of human rights and anti-discrimination principles when the decision is
        entirely related to characteristics of being female and having an intellectual
        disability. Unlawful sterilisation is a breach of human rights (Hastings,
        1998) but the trend in lawful sterilisation as currently exists in Australia
        raises equally important questions and a need for further debate.
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