The classification of homosexuality as a mental illness was finally removed in 1973, but the stigma has continued. In 1968, it recategorized it as a form of sexual "deviation." The American Psychiatric Association listed it as a "sociopathic personality disturbance" in 1952. Not too long ago being gay was considered a medical disorder and mental illness. The common misperceptions of homosexuality were that it was caused by biological changes during fetal development and psychological disorders. "Many of them ask if we can do any tests to see if their children are gay."Ī 2014, study by UNDP found that 29 percent of people believed it was an illness or contagious disease, 54 percent believed it was caused by a lack of parental care/love/guidance and 48 percent believed LGBTQ+ people could be "cured." Vu Duc Cong, an andrologist at the Men's Health Clinic in HCMC, said he gets around 20 cases of parents bringing their children to the clinic to cure their "gay disease" every year. "Even now I sleep in a fetal position and avoid straightening my leg because of this childhood trauma."Īccording to Luong The Huy, iSEE's director, many parents' first reaction when learning their children are gay is to assume they are sick and need to be cured by doctors, therapists or andrologists. He says his high school years were a nightmare because his father would wake him up in the middle of the night, pull him off the bed and hit him repeatedly. I told them I would stab anyone who hurt me." "I had no choice and had to grab a knife to defend myself. Though the test result showed there was nothing unusual, his aunts beat him, removed his shirt, verbally abused him, and threw him out of the house. My father even took me to a hospital for a chromosome test." Nguyen Nhu, a transgender in HCMC who now identifies as a man, still remembers vividly what happened when he revealed his gender identity at 15.
She has moved out of her house to avoid discrimination from her family.Īccording to the iSEE study, more than 62 percent of LGBTQ people were forced by their relatives to change their appearance and gestures, and 13-14 percent said they were physically assaulted, confined or restrained and told to leave the house. "It is like I am invisible and don’t exist in their eyes." Relatives on my father’s side do not want to talk or even come close to me for bringing shame and dishonor to the family. "My father thought I had a psychological disorder. Like Minh, Nguyen Quynh Nghi, a lesbian in HCMC, faced a backlash from her parents and relatives after cutting her long hair. He later got one of his friends at Bach Mai Hospital to come and explain to his parents that being gay is not a disease, and they have slowly accepted him for who he is. But because of the constant pressure, I still went to see the doctor to make my mother happy." "I told them that my health is fine and it can’t be cured. Though his mother did not believe the man’s claim, she still considered homosexuality "abnormal" and wanted him to get checked at a hospital. "The telepathist told her that a long-lost family member died when he was young, and put a curse on me," Minh says. Nguyen Thanh Minh of Hanoi, who came out to his mother at 22, said she forced him to see a telepathist to "dispel" all homosexual thoughts in him. Many of them were subjected to intense pressure from their families to visit doctors or so-called reparative therapists for therapy or spiritual counseling, believing these "treatments" could convert their children's sexual orientation back to being straight. More than 60 percent of them said they were scolded or verbally abused by their families, according to a 2015 study by the Institute for Studies of Society, Economy and Environment (iSEE), an NGO group that works for the rights of minority groups.
Though WHO stopped classifying homosexuality as a mental illness and took it off the International Statistical Classification of Diseases in 1990, many LGBTQ people in Vietnam are still being rejected, stigmatized and discriminated against even by their own families. He moved out and decided to stay out of touch with his family, which has kept rejecting him. They even prevented him from talking to his younger brother, worrying he would "transmit the gay disease to him." They believed I had mental health issues." "My father got angry, and my mother burst into tears. The resident of HCMC's District 5 says he will never forget the day when he came out to them three years ago.