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Still, Leclair said most of the largest U.S. insurers don't cover the surgery. Cuba won't say how much its sex change costs, but doctors earn state salaries worth an average of about $20 per month. Despite a global recession that has hit Cuba especially hard, prompting Raul Castro to announce unspecified cuts in health-care spending, his daughter says the state can't afford not to perform the surgeries. Gonzalez said opponents "don't know what a person who is transsexual suffers. It's a prison you can't get out of." Gonzalez knew she was different almost from birth. By 4, she was already so partial to girl's clothing and toys that her parents put her in therapy. The government formally designated her transsexual in 2000. Six years later, Mariela Castro won approval to restart the procedures, and Gonzalez was among the first recipients. Gonzalez refused to say the exact date of the operation or how she was chosen. Two specialists from Belgium performed it over eight hours with a team of Cuban doctors. Leclair said 40 percent of transsexuals become suicidal. But Gonzalez says her boyfriend of seven years kept her from getting depressed. "He always saw the woman in me and accepted me how I was," she said, "but we couldn't have sex in a complete way until now." Gonzalez can't get married, however, as she is still waiting for permission to change the name on her government ID card. Until then, she also cannot work in another wedding venue, though she would like to, or go back to school because her name no longer fits the woman she has become. It's a problem that Cuban Olivia Lam knows all too well. She was born Alfonso Manuel but has been waiting for sex-change surgery for two years. While her name has not been changed, authorities allowed her to take a new picture for her ID card
-- one where she is dressed as a woman. "The picture is me, even if the name is not," said Lam, a gregarious 43-year-old who waves her arms when she talks, making her ever-present hoop earrings dance on her earlobes. Both women say they think the delay in getting ID cards is because of the slow Cuban bureaucracy and not any kind of government resistance. Lam, who works as a hairdresser out of her two-room apartment, first began cross-dressing at 21. Though she has been formally classified as transsexual since 2008, she has no way of knowing when
-- or if -- approval for sex-change surgery will come. And though the government now accepts her, Lam acknowledged that getting her own family to has not been easy. "I don't think any parent wants their son to be different," she said, "but they understand that you're not like this because you want to be."
[Associated
Press;
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