Britain indefinitely bans puberty blockers for children with gender
dysphoria
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[December 12, 2024]
By BRIAN MELLEY
LONDON (AP) — The British government on Wednesday indefinitely banned
puberty blockers for children with gender dysphoria after independent
experts found there was an unacceptable safety risk in prescribing the
medication.
The decision, which will be revisited in 2027, effectively bans a common
approach to medical gender transitions for youths. It also goes against
standards held by medical groups elsewhere, including the European and
World Professional Associations for Transgender Health, as well as the
American Medical Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics.
The ban will prevent prescribing medications that can suppress or pause
puberty in children with gender dysphoria, providing more time to
consider options that could include gender reassignment.
The announcement comes after a judge this summer upheld an emergency ban
in a ruling that said the treatment was potentially harmful. The
emergency ban was put in place by the center-right Conservative
government and has now been extended by the center-left Labour
government.
The ban does not apply to those already receiving puberty blockers for
gender dysphoria, to their use in clinical studies or in treatment of
children with precocious puberty, an uncommon medical condition that
causes puberty to begin abnormally early.
It applies across the United Kingdom after consultation with the
Scottish and Welsh governments, and an agreement with Northern Ireland.
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 Health Secretary Wes Streeting said
a clinical trial will be set up next year to better evaluate use of
the drugs.
“We need to act with caution and care when it comes to this
vulnerable group of young people, and follow the expert advice,”
Streeting said.
The National Health Service in England stopped
prescribing puberty blockers at gender identity clinics last year,
saying there was not enough evidence about the benefits and harms.
In July, Justice Beverley Lang said a review commissioned by the NHS
found “very substantial risks and very narrow benefits” to the
treatment. She concluded that gender care is an area of “remarkably
weak evidence” and young people have been caught up in a “stormy
social discourse.”
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The British Medical Association, which noted that the NHS review was
controversial and included patients, academics, scientists and legal
experts among its critics, voted to carry out an evidence-led
evaluation of that report.
The court challenge was brought by the group TransActual and a youth
who cannot be named, according to a court order.
TransActual criticized Wednesday's decision, saying that evidence of
danger from 40 years of puberty blockers remains elusive.
“Banning medicines with no evidence of serious harm, only for trans
people … is discrimination plain and simple,” said Keyne Walker, the
group’s strategy director. “Evidence of the harm of the temporary
ban continues to emerge, and will grow now that it has been made
permanent.”
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