Science Trans kids’ treatment can start younger, new guidelines say

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Trans kids’ treatment can start younger, new guidelines say​

A leading transgender health association has lowered its recommended minimum age for starting gender transition treatment, including sex hormones and surgeries.

The World Professional Association for Transgender Health said hormones could be started at age 14, two years earlier than the group’s previous advice, and some surgeries done at age 15 or 17, a year or so earlier than previous guidance. The group acknowledged potential risks but said it is unethical and harmful to withhold early treatment.

The association provided The Associated Press with an advance copy of its update ahead of publication in a medical journal, expected later this year. The international group promotes evidence-based standards of care and includes more than 3,000 doctors, social scientists and others involved in transgender health issues.

The update is based on expert opinion and a review of scientific evidence on the benefits and harms of transgender medical treatment in teens whose gender identity doesn’t match the sex they were assigned at birth, the group said. Such evidence is limited but has grown in the last decade, the group said, with studies suggesting the treatments can improve psychological well-being and reduce suicidal behavior.

Starting treatment earlier allows transgender teens to experience physical puberty changes around the same time as other teens, said Dr. Eli Coleman, chair of the group’s standards of care and director of the University of Minnesota Medical School’s human sexuality program.

But he stressed that age is just one factor to be weighed. Emotional maturity, parents’ consent, longstanding gender discomfort and a careful psychological evaluation are among the others.
“Certainly there are adolescents that do not have the emotional or cognitive maturity to make an informed decision,” he said. “That is why we recommend a careful multidisciplinary assessment.”

The updated guidelines include recommendations for treatment in adults, but the teen guidance is bound to get more attention. It comes amid a surge in kids referred to clinics offering transgender medical treatment, along with new efforts to prevent or restrict the treatment.

Many experts say more kids are seeking such treatment because gender-questioning children are more aware of their medical options and facing less stigma.

Critics, including some from within the transgender treatment community, say some clinics are too quick to offer irreversible treatment to kids who would otherwise outgrow their gender-questioning.

Psychologist Erica Anderson resigned her post as a board member of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health last year after voicing concerns about “sloppy” treatment given to kids without adequate counseling.

She is still a group member and supports the updated guidelines, which emphasize comprehensive assessments before treatment. But she says dozens of families have told her that doesn’t always happen.

“They tell me horror stories. They tell me, ‘Our child had 20 minutes with the doctor’” before being offered hormones, she said. “The parents leave with their hair on fire.”

Estimates on the number of transgender youth and adults worldwide vary, partly because of different definitions. The association’s new guidelines say data from mostly Western countries suggest a range of between a fraction of a percent in adults to up to 8% in kids.
Anderson said she’s heard recent estimates suggesting the rate in kids is as high as 1 in 5 — which she strongly disputes. That number likely reflects gender-questioning kids who aren’t good candidates for lifelong medical treatment or permanent physical changes, she said.
Still, Anderson said she condemns politicians who want to punish parentsfor allowing their kids to receive transgender treatment and those who say treatment should be banned for those under age 18.

“That’s just absolutely cruel,” she said.
Dr. Marci Bowers, the transgender health group’s president-elect, also has raised concerns about hasty treatment, but she acknowledged the frustration of people who have been “forced to jump through arbitrary hoops and barriers to treatment by gatekeepers ... and subjected to scrutiny that is not applied to another medical diagnosis.”

Gabe Poulos, 22, had breast removal surgery at age 16 and has been on sex hormones for seven years. The Asheville, North Carolina, resident struggled miserably with gender discomfort before his treatment.

Poulos said he’s glad he was able to get treatment at a young age.

“Transitioning under the roof with your parents so they can go through it with you, that’s really beneficial,” he said. “I’m so much happier now.’’
In South Carolina, where a proposed law would ban transgender treatments for kids under age 18, Eli Bundy has been waiting to get breast removal surgery since age 15. Now 18, Bundy just graduated from high school and is planning to have surgery before college.

Bundy, who identifies as nonbinary, supports easing limits on transgender medical care for kids.

“Those decisions are best made by patients and patient families and medical professionals,” they said. “It definitely makes sense for there to be fewer restrictions, because then kids and physicians can figure it out together.’’

Dr. Julia Mason, an Oregon pediatrician who has raised concerns about the increasing numbers of youngsters who are getting transgender treatment, said too many in the field are jumping the gun. She argues there isn’t strong evidence in favor of transgender medical treatment for kids.

“In medicine ... the treatment has to be proven safe and effective before we can start recommending it,” Mason said.

Experts say the most rigorous research — studies comparing treated kids with outcomes in untreated kids — would be unethical and psychologically harmful to the untreated group.
The new guidelines include starting medication called puberty blockers in the early stages of puberty, which for girls is around ages 8 to 13 and typically two years later for boys. That’s no change from the group’s previous guidance.

The drugs delay puberty and give kids time to decide about additional treatment; their effects end when the medication is stopped.

The blockers can weaken bones, and starting them too young in children assigned males at birth might impair sexual function in adulthood, although long-term evidence is lacking.

The update also recommends:

—Sex hormones — estrogen or testosterone — starting at age 14. This is often lifelong treatment. Long-term risks may include infertility and weight gain, along with strokes in trans women and high blood pressure in trans men, the guidelines say.

—Breast removal for trans boys at age 15. Previous guidance suggested this could be done at least a year after hormones, around age 17, although a specific minimum ag wasn’t listed.

—Most genital surgeries starting at age 17, including womb and testicle removal, a year earlier than previous guidance.

The Endocrine Society, another group that offers guidance on transgender treatment, generally recommends starting a year or two later, although it recently moved to start updating its own guidelines. The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Medical Association support allowing kids to seek transgender medical treatment, but they don’t offer age-specific guidance.

Dr. Joel Frader, a Northwestern University a pediatrician and medical ethicist who advises a gender treatment program at Chicago’s Lurie Children’s Hospital, said guidelines should rely on psychological readiness, not age.

Frader said brain science shows that kids are able to make logical decisions by around age 14, but they’re prone to risk-taking and they take into account long-term consequences of their actions only when they’re much older.

Coleen Williams, a psychologist at Boston Children’s Hospital’s Gender Multispecialty Service, said treatment decisions there are collaborative and individualized.

“Medical intervention in any realm is not a one-size-fits-all option,” Williams said.
 
So you’re too young to consent to sex at 17, but you can have your sex organs removed?
WPATH are a lobby group, determined to warp standards of care to whatever they demand. When people read articles about them they assume they’re the same as other groups who look at things like chemotherapy regimes and collate reviews/studies to determine best practice. WPATH are more like a bunch of junkies out in charge of opiate prescribing guidelines. They are an incredibly malign group and they’ve managed to push a standard of care that’s completely at odds with medical ethics, moral ethics and an kind of evidence base.
Bundy, who identifies as nonbinary, supports easing limits on transgender medical care for kids.
‘Brienne, who is a heavy user of heroin, supports unlimited prescriptions of opiates for free.’
That’s the level of involvement. That they’ve had such success in changing treatment standards which breach all kind of ethical guidelines in the age of consent is staggering, and extremely worrying. Who funds WPATH? This article is a good one about the funding behind all this . https://archive.ph/dFfh3
 
Coleen Williams
1655322425083.png

Interviewed as "Col Williams"

NPI: 1144763780
Provider Name: DR. COLEEN R WILLIAMS, PSY.D.
Classification:Psychologist - 103TC0700X
Entity Type: Individual
Specialization: Clinical

PECOS Registration: Yes
Address:
300 LONGWOOD AVE
BOSTON, MA
ZIP 02115
Phone: (617) 919-1765

Harvard Catalyst Profile
Title
Instructor of Psychology in the Department Psychiatry
Institution
Boston Children's Hospital
Department
Psychiatry
Address
Boston Children's Hospital
Endocrin, LO 6
300 Longwood Ave
Boston MA 02115
Phone
617 355 4758
Email
1655322906395.png

Edit to fix email image + add article
 
Última edición:
Two years from now:

The World Professional Association for Transgender Health said hormones could be started at age 2, two years earlier than the group’s previous advice, and some surgeries done at age 4 or 6, a year or so earlier than previous guidance. The group acknowledged potential risks but said it is unethical and harmful to withhold early treatment.


“Medical intervention in any realm is not a one-size-fits-all option,” Williams said.

Except that it seems that is literally the path that 100% of these kids are put on as soon as Mom tries to troon them out, or as soon as a teacher tries to troon them out. Puberty blockers that will fuck you up for life, cross sex hormones that will fuck you up even more, and then getting the chop before you're old enough to sign a legal contract.
 
Coleen Williams
Ver archivo adjunto 3390980

NPI: 1144763780
Provider Name: DR. COLEEN R WILLIAMS, PSY.D.
Classification:Psychologist - 103TC0700X
Entity Type: Individual
Specialization: Clinical

PECOS Registration: Yes
Address:
300 LONGWOOD AVE
BOSTON, MA
ZIP 02115
Phone: (617) 919-1765

Harvard Catalyst Profile
Title
Instructor of Psychology in the Department Psychiatry
Institution
Boston Children's Hospital
Department
Psychiatry
Address
Boston Children's Hospital
Endocrin, LO 6
300 Longwood Ave
Boston MA 02115
Phone
617 355 4758
Email

Blue hair dye is neurotoxic.
 
This is beyond irresponsible, even if they meant what they said about 'psychological readiness' (they don't) this is just going to increase demands on doctor's time, leading to even more pressure to rush assessments
 
I found a Col Williams experiment patient
1655325197812.png
Through Boston Children’s Gender Multispecialty Service, Leven sees psychologist Col Williams, who also happens to be non-binary. “It’s really cool to be able to talk to someone who understands what it’s like,” says Leven. Here, the family shares some of what they’ve learned throughout Leven’s gender affirmation: http://ms.spr.ly/6188TZcIG
https://archive.ph/wip/lISgS

At just 13, Leven Ford has more knowledge about who they are than many adults do about themselves. That wisdom includes the understanding that they don’t fall in the classic gender binary of exclusively male or female.

“When Lev told us about their gender identity, we bought every book that we could find on the topic and read them together,” remembers their father, David. “That really helped us better understand how Lev was feeling.” David and Leven’s mom, Susan, also reached out to the Gender Multispecialty Service (GeMS) at Boston Children’s Hospital for additional support. “We’d had good experiences at Boston Children’s in the past and some of Leven’s gender-diverse friends recommended it,” says Susan.
 
I found a Col Williams experiment patient
Ver archivo adjunto 3391141
Through Boston Children’s Gender Multispecialty Service, Leven sees psychologist Col Williams, who also happens to be non-binary. “It’s really cool to be able to talk to someone who understands what it’s like,” says Leven. Here, the family shares some of what they’ve learned throughout Leven’s gender affirmation: http://ms.spr.ly/6188TZcIG
https://archive.ph/wip/lISgS

At just 13, Leven Ford has more knowledge about who they are than many adults do about themselves. That wisdom includes the understanding that they don’t fall in the classic gender binary of exclusively male or female.

“When Lev told us about their gender identity, we bought every book that we could find on the topic and read them together,” remembers their father, David. “That really helped us better understand how Lev was feeling.” David and Leven’s mom, Susan, also reached out to the Gender Multispecialty Service (GeMS) at Boston Children’s Hospital for additional support. “We’d had good experiences at Boston Children’s in the past and some of Leven’s gender-diverse friends recommended it,” says Susan.
I can’t believe they have a whole hospital specialty wing for the study and support of Not Being Like Other Girls. I guess all the kids with cancer didn’t need that much money.
 
Through Boston Children’s Gender Multispecialty Service, Leven sees psychologist Col Williams, who also happens to be non-binary. “It’s really cool to be able to talk to someone who understands what it’s like,” says Leven.
This is the mental health equivalent of the FBI investing themselves and concluding that they were not guilty.
 
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