Heino Meyer-Bahlburg Explained

Heino F. L. Meyer-Bahlburg
Birth Date:1940
Nationality:German
Field:Psychology
Work Institutions:University of Hamburg, University of Düsseldorf, State University of New York, Buffalo, Children’s Hospital in Buffalo, New York, New York State Psychiatric Institute, Columbia University
Thesis Title:Dr. rer. nat. in Psychology
Thesis Year:1970
Known For:Work on biology of sexual orientation, gender identity, intersexuality, and HIV

Heino F. L. Meyer-Bahlburg (born 1940) is a German-born psychologist best known for his work on biology of sexual orientation, gender identity, intersexuality, and HIV.

Education and career

Meyer-Bahlburg earned his Diplom from University of Hamburg in 1966 and his Dr. rer. nat. in Psychology from University of Düsseldorf in 1970. He took a position at State University of New York, Buffalo and at Children’s Hospital in Buffalo, New York in 1970. Since 1977 he has held appointments at New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University where he has been Professor of Clinical Psychology since 1990. In 1978, he took a position at New York Presbyterian Hospital and has been a Full Professional Psychologist there since 1990. Since 1987, he has been affiliated with the HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies.

Meyer-Bahlburg believes homosexuality may be an issue of brain chemistry.[1] He has observed that women who took the synthetic estrogen Diethylstilbestrol when pregnant were more likely to have daughters with bisexual or homosexual tendencies.[2] His research interests include the effect of biological factors, medical treatments, gender assignment, and rearing conditions in the development of gender-related behavior, temperament, sexual orientation, and gender identity in various forms of intersexuality. He has published on the effect of genital ambiguity and genital surgery on later sexual functioning in 46,XX congenital adrenal hyperplasia. Meyer-Bahlburg published with John Money and others on the topic of psychoneuroendocrinology and its effects on sexual orientation and gender identity. In collaboration with Maria New, Meyer-Bahlburg published a long term analysis of the psychological effects of the use of prenatal dexamethasone to treat Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia.

Meyer-Bahlburg served on the American Psychiatric Association DSM-III Gender Identity Disorder Committee, and the DSM-IV Subcommittee on Gender Identity Disorders.[3] He was also Adviser to the Sexual Disorder Text Revision Work Group for DSM-IV-TR. He treats gender identity disorder in children, taking about ten cases a year in the 1990s.[4] He has written that gender identity depends largely on postnatal environmental influences, while sex-dimorphic behavior and temperamental sex differences appear to be modified by prenatal sex hormones.[5] Meyer-Bahlburg notes that when parents bring in children for treatment, the “basic fear in this homophobic country is usually homosexuality."[4]

His research interests in the field of HIV include psychosexual assessment, development and determinants of sexual risk behavior, and the effects of HIV on sexual functioning.

Meyer-Bahlburg was President of the International Academy of Sex Research from 1990 to 1991 and since 2002 has served on the Committee on Intersexuality for the Harry Benjamin International Gender Dysphoria Association.

Selected publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Kotulak, Ron (November 17, 2003). Homosexuality may be issue of brain chemistry. Chicago Tribune
  2. Staff report (February 5, 1995). Estrogen medication linked to homosexual tendencies. St. Louis Post-Dispatch
  3. [Susan Bradley|Bradley SJ]
  4. Osborne, Duncan (October 28, 1997). An Attack On Our Most Vulnerable: The Use and Abuse of Gender Identity Disorder. Lesbian and Gay New York
  5. AA Ehrhardt and HF Meyer-Bahlburg (March 1981). Effects of prenatal sex hormones on gender-related behavior. Science 20 March 1981: Vol. 211. no. 4488, pp. 1312–1318