Families, communities, states, and nations will be stronger when they have correct information about gender transition. One of President Donald Trump’s recent executive orders cut federal funding for gender transitioning of minors. Trump’s action shows the effects coming from questions about medical interventions that may be harming children. Camille S. Williams claims that the “body of work supporting this position is significant and growing” from “health care professionals, whistleblowers, and detransitioners who are questioning” the impact of such actions.
One scholarly critique challenges the myth
of “reliable research” in pediatric gender medicine, contending that medically
modifying the bodies of gender dysphoric children entered clinical practice
worldwide without “the necessary rigorous clinical research” to confirm that “robust
and lasting psychological benefits” outweigh the burdens of “lifelong
dependence on medical interventions, infertility and sterility, and various
physical health risks.”
James M. Cantor’s fact-check of the
American Academy of Pediatrics’ policy on gender care concludes that the
academy advocates “for something far in excess of mainstream practice and
medical consensus” and that its statement “is a systematic exclusion and
misrepresentation of entire literatures.”
Despite that thin evidence base, as
Jennifer Block reports, “More adolescents with no history of gender dysphoria –
predominantly birth registered females – are presenting at gender clinics.”
Some “121,882 children ages 6 to 17 were diagnosed with gender dysphoria from
2017 through 2021,” with at least 18,000 of them beginning treatment with
puberty blockers or hormones….
While the question before the Supreme
Court in the United States v. Skrmetti was whether Tennessee’s ban on medical
body modification for minors with gender dysphoria is sex discrimination, the
justices seemed troubled by the conflict between therapists and doctors who
consider medical body modification for minors to be ethical and clinically
indicated, and psychological and medical professionals disputing such claims.
The liberal justices seemed more willing
than their conservative colleagues to minimize the risks of gender medical
treatments and to create a new class of transgender persons.
That reluctance is reasonable. As the
editors of The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry have stated, “distorted
body image is common … in all age groups,” and “there has been a steady
increase in the number of people undergoing medical body modification to alter
their physically healthy bodies in invasive and nearly irreversible ways.”
Both gender dysphoria and body dysmorphic
disorder involve a perceived “mismatch” between the physical body and how the
individual views their body.
Yet, according to a 2016 review, for the
majority of those with gender dysphoria diagnosed in childhood, feelings of
gender discomfort “remit around or after puberty without the need for any
intervention.
Traditionally medical body modification has not been used for body dysmorphic disorder since it doesn’t address the root cause of the disorder. Instead, psychiatric treatments, including psychotropic drugs and cognitive behavioral therapy, have been used.
However,
psychotherapy for gender dysphoria has been hindered by concerns about coercive
conversion efforts when the therapy is perceived as not “affirming” enough….
Certainly, treatments for other body
dysphoric conditions do not follow the autonomy-based model. For example,
surgeons don’t generally amputate the healthy limbs of people with body
integrity identity disorder, nor perform, as Erika Bachiochi has pointed out,
anorexia-affirming bariatric surgery….
Because none of us enters this world
without a body, Ryan T. Anderson and Robert P. George contend that “Our bodies
are essential aspects of ourselves as the kind of entity we are – a certain
type of animal with a rational nature, a human being. We … are personal bodily
organisms. And the sex of an organism is determined by how that organism is
organized with respect to sexual reproduction. As there are two complementary
ways of being sexually organized, so there are two sexes: male and female.”
Anderson and George maintain that “Children
who feel deep discomfort with their bodily sex should be treated with kindness,
respect, compassion, and love. They need toe be protected from bullying,
teasing, discrimination, and any form of mistreatment…. This includes providing
counseling for any underlying trauma or for social dynamics at home or school
that may play a role in the dysphoria. And it includes helping them to break
down misguided sex stereotypes or cultural expectations that may underlie their
dysphoria.” …
… We should be wary of warring against our
own bodies psychologically or medically. That’s why Tennessee, Utah and 23
other states are right to try to prevent what some refer to as “medically
assisted self-harm” to minors, and are instead encouraging appreciation for the
human body, and noninvasive psychological care to address minors’ gender/body
dysphoria.
Parents
should do all that they can to teach their children that their bodies are gifts
from God. This teaching should begin in infancy and continue through emerging
adulthood. By thus instructing their children, parents can strengthen their
family, community, state, and nation.
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