SHARE
COPY LINK

POLITICS

‘Homosexuality is not an illness’: Germany plans to ban conversion therapy

German Health Minister Jens Spahn said Tuesday he plans to write a law this year to ban so-called conversion therapies that aim to make gays and lesbians heterosexual.

'Homosexuality is not an illness': Germany plans to ban conversion therapy
Health Minister Jens Spahn at a press conference on Monday. Photo: DPA

“My position is clear: homosexuality is not an illness, which is why it does not need to be treated,” said Spahn, who is gay and married to a man.

“I would very much like to have a bill this year that could then be presented to parliament,” he told a Berlin press conference.

READ ALSO: Germany joins push to ban gay conversion therapies

Medical experts consider psychological or spiritual interventions to change someone's sexual orientation pseudo-scientific, ineffective and often harmful.

The most controversial techniques involve administering electric shocks as subjects view images of homosexual acts, or injections of the male hormone testosterone.

In Germany, there are an estimated 1,000 attempts a year to “re-educate” homosexuals – from family members, “coaches” and therapists, and sometimes involving prayers and even exorcisms, said Jörg Litwinschuh-Barthel of the anti-discrimination Magnus Hirschfeld Foundation.

Germany's LGBT community, which has long been calling for a ban, welcomed Spahn's announcement.

“This ban would, of course, be a signal to the people who propose (conversion therapies), but also to those affected who will know: 'what is being done to me is wrong',” said Markus Ulreich, a spokesman for the Lesbian and Gay Federation in Germany (LSVD).

Early last year the European Parliament adopted a non-binding text that called on EU members to ban the practice, something that so far only Malta and some Spanish regions have done.

READ ALSO: German priest calls homosexuality a sickness

Ban is possible

Spahn has commissioned two reports and a 46-member expert panel which have concluded that a ban is both “medically necessary and legally possible,” his ministry said.

Several people who underwent such therapies testified about their suffering to the panel, said the ministry in a statement.

One gay patient reported how during standard psychotherapy, the doctor suddenly declared sexual conversion a “therapy goal” and pursued it through “indoctrinating conversations”.

When electric shock treatment was also proposed, the patient terminated the treatment.

The health ministry said it plans to release a final report in August, to pave the way for a law to be written before the end of the year.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

HEALTH

Germany sees spike in summer flu and Covid infections

According to official data released by the Robert Koch Institute, instances of respiratory infections like coronavirus are unusually high for this time of year.

Germany sees spike in summer flu and Covid infections

There’s a common joke in Germany, normally made during the winter flu season: “Husten (cough), we have a problem.” But this year the number of respiratory infections, causing coughs, fevers and aches, is rising in the middle of summer.

According to the Robert Koch Institute’s (RKI) most recent respiratory infection statistics (ARE), the number of Covid-19 infections in Germany has been rising steadily over the past weeks to reach 500 cases per 100,000 residents in the week beginning June 17th. This increase follows a drop-off at the turn of the season.

READ ALSO: Flu cases on the rise in Germany – When (and how) should you take sick leave?

In Berlin, meanwhile, the number of Covid infections recorded in the laboratories and by local authorities has doubled within a week, the RKI told regional newspaper Tagesspiegel.

This reflects a general trend of rising flu-like infections this summer, with viruses like rhinovirus and enterovirus among the most commonly recorded. 

The past week saw an increase in the incidence of this type of infection rom 1,200 to 1,300 per 100,000 people.

Meanwhile, the overall incidence of respiratory viruses hit 5,900 per 100,000 residents, which equates to around five million cases in the population as a whole.

READ ALSO: Who should get a top-up Covid jab in Germany?

In its weekly infection report, the RKI states that this type of virus is “currently at a comparatively high level for this time of year”, but adds that severe cases remain rare so far.

The health authority advises people with symptoms of an acute respiratory infection to stay home for three to five days or until their symptoms have improved significantly. 

Self-reported data

Since the end of the coronavirus pandemic, the public health authority has been relying heavily on data self-submitted through its GrippeWeb portal to monitor the prevalence of flu-type viruses in Germany.

This data is then extrapolated out to the general population to create estimated incidences for society as a whole.

Infections are also partially monitored through local health authorities and lab reports, as well as through samples from waste water plants that contain traces of the virus.

According to the RKI, water from around 100 waste plants was available for the latest report, covering around 19 percent of the population.

New viruses 

Though Covid has been far less prevalent since the pandemic became endemic, top Berlin virologist Christian Drosten has recently issued warnings that other new virus could potentially spark a new global health crisis.

Speaking to RND at the end of June, Drosten cited the MERS virus and the H5N1 bird flu virus – the first human case of which was recently recorded in the US – as possible triggers for a new pandemic. 

According to the Charité virologist, there have even been traces of H5N1 in wholesale milk from the US that has come from infected cows.

“There has never been anything like this before, such extremely large outbreaks in cows – all the experts are worried,” he said, adding that the outlook was still unclear.

“We don’t really know what will happen now because we don’t have very good insight into the data,” Drosten said. 

SHOW COMMENTS