Healthcare for children and young people grappling with gender identity issues should be “holistic” and providers should exercise “extreme caution” around prescribing hormone treatments to older teens, an eagerly awaited independent English review said yesterday.
The four-year probe of gender identity services for the cohort, led by retired pediatrician Hilary Cass, makes dozens of other recommendations, ranging from more research to reform of the referrals system.
It was commissioned in 2020 by England’s state-run National Health Service (NHS), following a rise in the number of children and young people questioning their gender and seeking healthcare support.
Photo: Adrian Dennis, AFP
Running to almost 400 pages, the report urges the NHS to review its policy on giving children masculinizing or feminizing hormones from age 16, urging “extreme caution.”
There “should be a clear clinical rationale for providing hormones at this stage rather than waiting until an individual reaches 18,” the report said in one of the key recommendations.
Concerns have grown around the introduction of medical interventions, such as puberty blockers, amid a lack of evidence on their use and long-term impacts.
The issue has become contentious in the UK, as elsewhere, with Cass calling the “toxicity” of the debate “exceptional.”
She noted that she had faced criticism for engaging both with groups keen on gender affirmation and those wanting a more cautious approach.
A former Royal College of Paediatrics president, Cass concluded children have been let down by the dearth of evidence on medical interventions, and “caught in the middle of a stormy social discourse.”
She added that many healthcare professionals are afraid to openly discuss their views, and that bullying behavior “must stop.”
Her report comes just weeks after the NHS in England confirmed that puberty blockers would no longer be given to under-16s outside of research trials.
However, 16 and 17-year-olds can still be given hormones in the form of testosterone or estrogen.
Meanwhile, the UK’s first gender identity development service for children, run by the Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust, closed last month after years of criticism that it was too quick to prescribe puberty blocking treatment.
Two new regional hubs opened in London and northern England have been seen as an effort to move away from a single-service model.
Cass’ recommendations include that services should operate “to the same standards” as other health provision for children and young people, with “a holistic assessment” of those referred.
That would involve screening for neurodevelopmental conditions such as autism, alongside a mental health assessment.
The report said that a “more cautious approach” must be taken for children than for adolescents when it comes to social transitioning, which is where someone might change their pronouns, name and/or clothing.
In such cases, it is important “parents are not unconsciously influencing the child’s gender expression,” it said.
The review said the use of hormones should be part of a research program alongside a puberty blocker trial which is expected to be in place by December.
Meanwhile, young people aged 17 to 25 should have a “follow-through” service for care instead of going straight into adult services, it added.
This would “ensure continuity of care and support at a potentially vulnerable stage in their journey,” the report said.
NHS England said it would detail “a full implementation plan” after “careful consideration” of the recommendations.
Management has written to local leaders to pause first-appointment offers at adult gender clinics to young people before their 18th birthday, it said.
It is “bringing forward its systemic review of adult gender services,” it added.
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak welcomed Cass’ work, which he said had shone “a spotlight on the fact that we need to exercise extreme caution when it comes to these issues.”
“It’s clear that these things are not neutral acts whether that is social transitioning or any kind of medical intervention. We simply do not know the long-term effects,” he told LBC Radio.
Sunak added that the government had already acted on some of Cass’ interim findings, including stopping the routine use of puberty blockers for young people being treated in the state-funded NHS.
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