U.S. parents accept children's
transgender identity by age three
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[December 22, 2016]
By Daniel Trotta
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Jodie Patterson's
3-year-old, Penelope, was brooding and angry until one day she asked her
child what was wrong.
Penelope, who was assigned female at birth, was upset "because everyone
thinks I'm a girl," but he said he was really a boy.
"I said, 'However you feel inside is fine.'" Patterson recalled from
their home in Brooklyn, New York. "And then Penelope looked at me and
said, 'No mama, I don't feel like a boy. I am a boy.'"
Almost immediately, Patterson embraced the reality that Penelope was a
transgender boy, and by age 5 he was going to school as a boy. Today, at
age 9, Penelope is happy and healthy as a boy who loves karate and super
heroes and decided to keep his birth name.
Increasingly across the United States, doctors and parents of
transgender children are embracing their identity as soon it starts
becoming obvious, sometimes around age 3. Many say they are finding much
greater chances of happiness and well-being when children are nurtured
in their new gender identity at such a young age.
Although there is not a consensus on the issue, some clinicians who work
with transgender children have concluded that when children persistently
identify as the nonconforming gender, the best course is to socially
transition, or live as the other gender, even at age 3.
Other specialists in the field advocate a more cautious approach because
the long-term psychosexual results for young children can vary widely
and unpredictably.
In Penelope's case, his behavioral problems disappeared as soon as his
family affirmed his new gender identity, said Patterson, who has five
children. "That whole grumpy face became happy face," Patterson said.
Whatever the age, parental support is crucial.
Fifteen percent of transgender Americans say they ran away from home or
were kicked out of the house, according to a survey released on Dec. 8
of nearly 28,000 transgender adults.
The same study, by advocacy group the National Center for Transgender
Equality, found transgender adults were nine times more likely than the
general population to attempt suicide.
But transgender people with supportive families were far less likely to
attempt suicide, be homeless or experience serious psychological
distress - by nearly 20-point margins compared with those who lacked
family support, the survey said.
With better education, today's transgender children generally receive
much more support than those surveyed adults did in their youth.
The question remains, though, around embracing gender nonconformity: How
young is too young?
"WATCHFUL WAITING"
Researchers have long established that children acquire gender identity
starting around 3 years old, and for the vast majority who are not
transgender, or cisgender, such an identity is unremarkable.
While transgender people may realize their identities at any age, some
firmly establish a transgender identity in early childhood, even by age
3.
Some of the pioneering research on transgender issues has come from
psychiatrists at VU University Medical Center in the Netherlands,
sometimes called "the Dutch group."
Advocating "watchful waiting," the Dutch group urges caution in leading
pre-adolescent children into a social transition, in part because a
significant though undetermined percentage will revert back to the natal
gender, or gender assigned at birth. The Dutch group sees potential harm
in putting a teenager through a second gender transition. They also
raise concerns that transition at a young age can distort a child's
sense of reality, requiring later treatment.
But some Americans psychiatrists who work directly with transgender
youth have argued that those who are consistent in their gender identity
be allowed to transition because they are suffering in the natal gender.
"I support a social transition for a kid who is in distress and needs to
live in a different way. And I do so because I am very focused on what
the child needs at that time," said Johanna Olson-Kennedy, medical
director of the Center for Transyouth Health and Development at
Children's Hospital Los Angeles, the largest transgender youth clinic in
the United States with some 750 patients.
A social transition to the other gender helps children learn, make
friends, and participate in family activities. Some will decide later
they are not transgender, but Olson-Kennedy says the potential harm in
such cases may be overstated.
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Jodie Patterson (L) and Penelope give an interview at their home in
Brooklyn, New York, U.S. December 13, 2016. Picture taken December
13, 2016. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Because prepubescent transgender children require no more physical
change than a new hairstyle and clothes, the initial transition is
completely reversible, Olson-Kennedy said.
Of some 1,000 patients she has dealt with, only one switched back to the
natal gender, and without any harm, she said.
David Breland, who works with transgender adolescents as director of the
Gender Clinic at Seattle Children's Hospital, offers simple advice for
parents: "Listen to the child."
"They tell us who they are. We don't force anything on them," Breland
said. "By affirming who they are, there's definitely better evidence
that they do well mentally and physically. So, how could that be wrong?"
LONG-TERM STUDY
One long-term study under way by the University of Washington's
TransYouth Project is attempting to establish the stability rates of
transgender identity among youth and the correlation between family
acceptance and well-being.
Led by psychology professor Kristina Olson, the study aims to follow 350
transgender kids for 20 years, starting from the ages of 3 to 12.
So far, her team's research has found that transgender children who
transition at a young age do remarkably well as long as the family is
supportive. Transgender children aged 3 to 12 who live as the other
gender have shown levels of depression equal to a control group of
cisgender children, and the transgender group had only minimally more
anxiety.
Moreover, observation of a group of 5- to 12-year-olds who were allowed
to transition found that they tended to be clear about their gender
identity and maintained it as deeply held. A third look at 9- to
14-year-olds concluded that "We found remarkably good mental health
outcomes in socially transitioned children." The long-term study
continues, but Olson's team has published these initial findings in
research papers.
DeShanna Neal, a mother of four from Delaware, can attest to the
benefits of embracing her young child's transgender identity.
Her child Trinity, now 13, was determined to be a boy at birth but began
identifying as female by age 3. By 4, Trinity was living as a girl at
home, but when she started school she went dressed as a boy.
Still, she identified as a girl at school, troubling her teachers and
leading to stress for Trinity. A school psychologist determined she
suffered from depression.
Neal found a therapist who told her and her husband to fully embrace
Trinity's female identity. She said that the therapist also gave
strikingly blunt advice.
"She said, 'Your daughter already knows who she is. Now you have to
decide. Do you want a happy little girl or a dead little boy?'"
They went straight from the therapist to the store to buy Trinity a
dress and pink pajamas, and they noticed an immediate change. Their
depressed child became happy.
"She saw her dress and she put it on immediately. And she would not take
it off," Neal said. "We never swayed in our love and support for her."
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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