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GF10000312377 Dr. Richard Redett is shown in this undated photo released by Johns Hopkins Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, on February 16, 2016. A U.S. soldier wounded in an explosion will be the first person in the United States to receive a penis transplant, doctors at Johns Hopkins Hospital said, which could open the way for about 60 other servicemen with genital injuries to have this surgery. Redett, a plastic surgeon at Johns Hopkins Hospital, will help perform the operation. REUTERS/Johns Hopkins Medicine/Handout via Reuters ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS PICTURE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. REUTERS IS UNABLE TO INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE AUTHENTICITY, CONTENT, LOCATION OR DATE OF THIS IMAGE. EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVE. THIS PICTURE IS DISTRIBUTED EXACTLY AS RECEIVED BY REUTERS, AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS
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GM1DWNIDONAA Hussein Rabei, 33, who underwent a sex change surgery, speaks to journalists in the Bahraini capital of Manama October 26, 2007. Formerly known as Zaineb, Rabei was raised as a girl after being born with genitalia that more closely resembled a vagina than a penis. Rabei returned recently from an operation in Thailand to correct his gender --a procedure for which he obtained consent from both Sunni and Shi'ite clerics, and is the first Bahraini to go public with news of such an operation. To match feature INTERSEX-ARAB/ REUTERS/Hamad I. Mohammed (BAHRAIN)
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GM1DWNIDOKAA Hussein Rabei, 33, shows a photo of himself in traditional women's wear before he underwent a sex change surgery, in the Bahraini capital of Manama October 26, 2007. Formerly known as Zaineb, Rabei was raised as a girl after being born with genitalia that more closely resembled a vagina than a penis. Rabei returned recently from an operation in Thailand to correct his gender --a procedure for which he obtained consent from both Sunni and Shi'ite clerics, and is the first Bahraini to go public with news of such an operation. Picture taken October 26, 2007. To match feature INTERSEX-ARAB/ REUTERS/Hamad I. Mohammed (BAHRAIN)
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GM1DWNIDOIAA Hussein Rabei, 33, shows a photo of himself in traditional women's wear sitting on a Saudi-registered car with his brother before he underwent a sex change surgery, in the Bahraini capital of Manama October 26, 2007. Formerly known as Zaineb, Rabei was raised as a girl after being born with genitalia that more closely resembled a vagina than a penis. Rabei returned recently from an operation in Thailand to correct his gender --a procedure for which he obtained consent from both Sunni and Shi'ite clerics, and is the first Bahraini to go public with news of such an operation. To match feature INTERSEX-ARAB/ REUTERS/Hamad I. Mohammed (BAHRAIN)
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RP2DRHYBOMAC TO MATCH FEATURE STORY BC-HEALTH-SEX CHANGE - Brenda Reimer was an awkward child, who did not engage in girlish activities and was mercilessly teased by schoolmates for her gunslinger stride and lack of interest in boys. Doctors told her that her discomfort was due to a passing phase of "tomboyishness." What they didn't tell her was that she had in fact been born "Bruce" and had been subjected to gender reassignment surgery at 18 months, 10 months after doctors botched a circumcision and destroyed most of his penis. Instead of raising their child as a boy, Bruce's young parents took the advice of a famous American medical psychologist, John Money of Johns Hopkins Medical Center in Baltimore, who said that Bruce could be a happy "Brenda" with the proper treatment and hormones. He was later known as David Reimer.FG
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RP2DRHYBOAAA TO MATCH FEATURE STORY BC-HEALTH-SEX CHANGE - Brenda Reimer was an awkward child, who did not engage in girlish activities and was mercilessly teased by schoolmates for her gunslinger stride and lack of interest in boys. Doctors told her that her discomfort was due to a passing phase of "tomboyishness." What they didn't tell her was that she had in fact been born "Bruce" and had been subjected to gender reassignment surgery at 18 months, 10 months after doctors botched a circumcision and destroyed most of his penis. Instead of raising their child as a boy, Bruce's young parents took the advice of a famous American medical psychologist, John Money of Johns Hopkins Medical Center in Baltimore, who said that Bruce could be a happy "Brenda" with the proper treatment and hormones. He was later known as David Reimer.FG
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PBEAHULNCBL Brenda Reimer was an awkward child, who did not engage in girlish activities and was mercilessly teased by schoolmates for her gunslinger stride and lack of interest in boys. Doctors told her that her discomfort was due to a passing phase of "tomboyishness." What they didn't tell her was that she had in fact been born "Bruce" and had been subjected to gender reassignment surgery at 18 months, 10 months after doctors botched a circumcision and destroyed most of his penis. Instead of raising their child as a boy, Bruce's young parents took the advice of a famous American medical psychologist, John Money of Johns Hopkins Medical Center in Baltimore, who said that Bruce could be a happy "Brenda" with the proper treatment and hormones.
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Total de Resultados: 7

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