Evidence around youth gender care 'remarkably weak', says major English
review
Send a link to a friend
[April 10, 2024]
By Jennifer Rigby
LONDON (Reuters) -Medical evidence underlying gender care for
adolescents is “remarkably weak” and provides little clarity on
long-term outcomes, according to an in-depth review of care commissioned
by England’s state-funded National Health Service.
Gender care can include anything from counseling to medications related
to gender issues, including drugs that can pause puberty.
The final report of the Cass Review, led by prominent pediatrician Dr.
Hilary Cass and which includes research from independent academics at
the University of York as well as input from families and clinicians was
released on Wednesday.
The report concludes that young people with gender dysphoria - the
distress of identifying as a gender different from the one assigned at
birth - deserve better care but stresses that there is a lack of good
evidence about how best to provide that.
The review was commissioned by the National Health Service in 2020,
after the service – in line with other countries in Europe as well as
the United States – saw increasing numbers of young people seeking
gender care and differing opinions among experts about how best to help
them.
The NHS has already announced that, in future, puberty-blocking drugs in
England will only be available for young people experiencing gender
distress in the context of a clinical trial. It acted after the Cass
Review published interim recommendations in 2022. There is little detail
yet on how this trial may work.

[to top of second column]
|

A person wears pins as people gather before the Trans Pride March in
London, Britain, July 8, 2023. REUTERS/Anna Gordon/File Photo
 As part of plans to widen access to
gender care and broaden the professionals involved, the NHS has also
closed the previous provider of gender care for young people and
replaced it with two new services in London and northwest England.
However, there is a huge backlog of cases after
delays in getting services operational, and several thousand young
people remain stuck in limbo on years-long waiting lists.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said he welcomed the “care and
compassion” of the review.
“We simply do not know the long-term impacts of medical treatment or
social transitioning… and we should therefore exercise extreme
caution,” he said.
The Cass Review urges extreme caution around providing masculinizing
or feminizing hormones before the age of 18.
But on social transition - changing names or pronouns - it concludes
there is a lack of good evidence on the impact. It recommends
professionals are consulted early on for pre-pubertal children, but
for adolescents, “exploration is a normal process and rigid binary
gender stereotypes can be unhelpful.”
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby, editing by Deepa Babington)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |