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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

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NHS England: Puberty blockers will only be prescribed to children attending gender identity services as part of clinical research

29 replies

NewBootsAndRanty · 09/06/2023 22:17

Apologies if there's already a thread!

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-65860272

Puberty blockers will only be prescribed to children attending gender identity services as part of clinical research, NHS England has announced.

The move comes after an interim report into children's gender services said there were "gaps in evidence" around the drugs.

Blockers are used to "pause puberty" and work by supressing hormone release.

Dr Hilary Cass's report called for a transformation in the model of care for children with gender-related distress.

Currently, if a child seeks medical help, the drugs are one of the options a doctor could offer to help delay the onset of physical changes that do not match a child's gender identity.

This change will come into effect when new clinics replacing the Gender Identity and Development Service (Gids) begin to open later this year. No patients being treated by the current Gids service will be affected.

Children and their families will also be "strongly discouraged" from obtaining gender-affirming drugs such as hormones, from "unregulated sources" or online providers.

What are puberty blockers?
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A clinical study, run by the new Children and Young People's Gender Dysphoria Research and Oversight Board, will look at the impact of drugs which delay puberty.

Further details on how the study will run will be released in the coming weeks, but only those signed up to take part in the research will be prescribed puberty blockers, except in exceptional circumstances on a case-by-case basis.

It is expected that the study will mostly involve looking at patient data and records.

Recent data from Gids looked at a random selection of 312 patients in one year and found 47 of them accessed hormone suppressants.

An NHS spokesperson said: "The NHS is today publishing an interim specification for gender services for children and young people in line with advice and recommendations from the Independent Cass Review - this will allow the new centres to finalise their preparation for service provision later this year.

"The NHS is now engaging on the proposal that puberty blockers will not be made routinely available outside of research. We will develop a study into the impact of puberty blockers on gender dysphoria in children and young people with early-onset gender dysphoria, which aims to be up and running in 2024."

More than 5,000 people responded to a consultation on the new service specification last year, and the new model will be implemented when the first of the new clinics opens in the south of England this autumn in partnerships with children's hospitals.

The current service, run by the Tavistock and Portman Trust, is to close in March 2024 following an independent review carried out by Dr Cass - the paediatrician found the service is "unsustainable" and said a new model of care is needed.

Dr Cass said many children referred to Gids have complex needs that can be sometimes overlooked and around a third have autism or other types of neurodiversity.

The NHS says a "significant proportion" of young people with concerns related to their gender can also experience other complexities related to mental health, neuro-development and family or social matters.

The new service will take a new "holistic" approach, focusing on the needs of each child individually with "careful therapeutic exploration".

It will be updated further after the final report by Dr Cass is published.

In order to be prescribed puberty blockers on the NHS, a patient would currently need to first be assessed by Gids and referred to an endocrinologist.

More than 7,000 young people under the age of 18 are awaiting their first appointment, with the waiting list thought to be more than three and a half years long.

A picture of the Tavistock's sign

Puberty blockers to be given only in clinical research

NHS England says the drugs will only be prescribed for those signed up to a clinical research programme.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-65860272

OP posts:
Hoardasurass · 10/06/2023 22:18

MissLucyEyelesbarrow · 10/06/2023 21:45

I would like to see PBs totally banned for all patients. However, one of the advantages of only giving them via a clinical trial is that the research ethics committee will be crawling all over the consent form. There will have to be transparency about the risks and the unknowns.

However, as a doctor, it is my experience that, if a patient has made up their mind that they want a treatment, they rarely change their mind, no matter what you tell them about the risks. So, honest consent forms are helpful to inform patients who are undecided or neutral, but not those who have been indoctrinated online that PBs are the answer.

Hopefully, before long the UK will follow Scandinavia in banning PBs for gender dysphoria, and the question will become academic.

Whilst I agree with you you're forgetting that they will need parental consent and no decent parent will read an honest consent form and think yes this is what my child really needs
Yes I know that it won't weed out the bad parents but it will limit the number of kids whose health will be destroyed by them

MissLucyEyelesbarrow · 10/06/2023 22:29

Hoardasurass · 10/06/2023 22:18

Whilst I agree with you you're forgetting that they will need parental consent and no decent parent will read an honest consent form and think yes this is what my child really needs
Yes I know that it won't weed out the bad parents but it will limit the number of kids whose health will be destroyed by them

But the trouble is that we know from the Cass Report and Hannah Barnes that parents are often the drivers of transition. I don't think they can all be characterised as bad, in the sense of having sinister motives, e.g. paedophilia. A lot are bewildered, and a lot are scared for, and of, their children.

LonginesPrime · 10/06/2023 23:51

The NHS interim specification (linked in the BBC article in the OP) certainly goes further than I expected it to, although only time will tell how it plays out in practice.

The specification makes it quite clear that psychotherapy and psychoeducation are the first ports of call and that the affirmation model is out and holistic curiosity is in.

An examination of how the young person's sexual orientation, any sexual encounters, possible neurodivergence, and their family's views on gender might have contributed to the patient's gender incongruence will form part of the standardised assessment, which sounds very sensible.

The specification also makes it clear that children whose parents have obtained puberty blockers privately under conditions which don't align with the NHS protocol won't be provided with puberty blockers on the NHS and their GP will be contacted and advised to consider whether a safeguarding referral needs to be made for the child.

Moonandstarz · 11/06/2023 07:12

@LonginesPrime your third paragraph is very promising.

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