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Thomson / Gale

Costly Trans-Action - high cost of sex-change operations - includes related article on gender-reassignment surgeon Stanley Biber

Advocate, The,  May 25, 1999  by Todd Savage,  Lisa Neff

<< Page 1  Continued from page 3.  Previous | Next

In the three decades since his first operation, Biber has performed 3,800 male-to-female procedures and 350 female-to-male operations in Trinidad's 70-bed Mount San Rafael Hospital. "The grapevine is so strong," he says.

Gender-reassignment surgery accounts for only about 20% of Biber's practice, but the doctor who lacked a knowledge of transsexualism in 1969 understands very well the arduous journey his patients make.

"You develop a lot of empathy for these patients," he says. "These people have been in hiding all their life. They've been hit on the head so many times before they come here."

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Biber came to Trinidad in 1954 to work at a United Mine Workers of America clinic after serving as an Army surgeon in the Korean War and at Fort Carson in Colorado Springs, Colo. "I thought I'd be here for a year or two," he recalls.

But Biber remained, building his practice, raising a family of nine children with his wife, and operating a cattle ranch. "I get out in the open country and chase my little cows around," says Biber, whose devotion to ranching is equal to his passion for surgery.

As Biber's reputation as a surgical pioneer has grown, so has the fame of Trinidad. Situated on the front wall of the Rockies about 200 miles south of Denver, Trinidad emerged as a wild cattle town in 1842. Today, with a population of about 9,000, Trinidad is still the Old West. Brochures promote the town as "a pocket of peace, plentiful clean air, and pure Western Americana."

But Trinidad also is known as the "sex-change capital of the world." Biber chuckles at this moniker as well as the nickname so many of his patients adopt for themselves--"Biber girls." "That doesn't emanate from us," he says of the nicknames. He then asserts that Trinidad is not ashamed of his work or its contemporary claim to fame.

"My people are so sophisticated," Biber boasts of Trinidadians. "They're all experts on transsexualism. They understand better than anybody in the world because they live with these people. The understanding came from exposure."

Neff is national news editor at Chicago's Windy City Times.

Savage is a regular contributor to the Chicago Tribune.

COPYRIGHT 1999 Liberation Publications, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group