Details of the Times front page in case anyone missed that: www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/3553935-Times-article-calls-to-end-transgender-experiment-on-children?pg=1&order=
Some threads referencing healthcare expert Professors like Susan Bewley and other medical colleagues publishing in medical journals on children and the permanent, unevidenced treatments being given to transition them:
www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/3339177-Excellent-BMJ-Article-Responding-to-Previous-One-Featuring-ATH
www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/3410257-BMJ-article-We-need-research-to-explore-the-interplays-between-gender-identity-mental-health-and-neurodevelopmental-problems-sexual-orientation-autogynephilia-and-unpalatable-gender-roles
www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/3552430-Posible-answer-to-why-arent-more-doctors-speaking-up
Also evidence based medicine specialist Professor Carl Heneghan: speaking out via BBC interview: www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/3518188-BMJ-Prof-Carl-Heneghan-Evidence-Based-Medicine-Oxford-Panorama-Trans-Kids-Gender-affirming-hormone-in-children-and-adolescents-Evidence-review-concludes-There-are-significant-problems
And regarding the stepping up that the UK Parliament needs to do to protect children and young people, (again sorry to recycle my posts from previous) but:
We need Parliament to have a Commons Health Select Committee Inquiry to look at this properly. After examining this properly surely to keep children and young people safe they will HAVE to recommend a statutory regulated system, with licensing, case by case application and frequent regulatory inspection of clinical work in this area.
Clearly this would need to be based on evidence, but you can imagine just from things anecdotally posted on here on FWR threads, that at a minimum to safeguard patients:
-Parliament should make it illegal for anyone but a licensed doctor (whether NHS or private) to give a specific child or person aged under 25 years old, blockers or hormones or surgery except under licensed conditions after a case by case review process. This should be overseen by a regulator with statutory powers (ie legal powers given to them to licence, refuse or revoke a licence)
-Same for surgical egg retrieval and surgical sperm storage and storing of prepubescent children’s and young people’s ovarian or testicular tissue (in hopes that one day mature viable eggs or sperm might be able to be derived from these.)
The law should also require that:
-There should be a duty for the clinicians who do this work to collect and share their outcomes data for all these patients from medical records so it can be properly researched.
Binders should be classed as a prescription-only medical product and again only possible to provide legally under clinical supervision.
Talking therapy must be made more available and there should be statutory maximum of the waiting times any young person should be expected to wait until they can speak to a proper professional about these issues. (And for all other issues while we are at it)
There should be proper government data collection in this space so we know the full picture of what is being provided in both public and private sector.
Criminal sanctions for those who break these laws.
Then a separate campaign to get research funders to fund appropriate professional researchers to properly investigate patient outcomes and to run studies to follow up patients in anonymised ways via medical records.
And also to fund sociological research (like I think James Caspian wanted to do) interviewing de-transitioned people, medically, hormonally and surgically transitioned people, those currently transitioning via services, and young people and children who are having talking therapies only. There’s probably other relevant groups I haven’t thought of.
Research should also be funded to talk to family members so they can talk about their experiences of caring for children and young people in this space.
Also research needs to be funded for the clinical service providers to talk about their professional experience of doing this work.
I’m sure others can think of relevant helpful things to include. My thoughts might not be right either, I am no expert in any of this but this seemed like a good place to start from the things people are worried about on here and might go some way to curbing the TRA lobby trying to inappropriately influence medical services.
Groups with power in this area should all be taking a stand and calling for an inquiry into this NOW. So that would include.
All of the medical and psychological professional societies and royal colleges, the BMA (the doctors’ trade union) and the regulators of medical or psychological practice like the General Medical Council,
Plus any organisation who supports research and evidence based medicine, especially in the NHS- like NICE, the NHS in each UK nation, but also the government departments in health, the medical and scientific research funders,
Plus any childrens’ and young people’s paediatric medical groups and bodies.