Hannah Barnes Profile picture
Oct 2, 2020 25 tweets 5 min read Read on X
THREAD: In May '19 @BBCNewsnight requested a copy of a 2005 review of the Gender Identity Development Unit - now GIDS - via the FOI Act. Many months later, we’ve now published some its findings and recommendations:
WATCH: bbc.in/33ixth5
READ: bbc.in/30vvJiO
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The review was carried out by Dr David Taylor, then medical director of the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, between May and October 2005. Its findings were published internally in January 2006. He spoke with members of the team, the wider Trust & endocronologists
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Dr Taylor stresses that staff were doing all they could to help their patients, who were often very distressed. They took the work very seriously. But, his report went on to detail several areas that he believed needed addressing.
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These included: 1) A number of children referred to the service had experienced trauma through “deprived or injurious upbringings - child abuse, multiple caregivers etc.”
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2) There were “pressures upon staff to comply with the demands and expectations of patients [for puberty blockers], and sometimes of their parents, in ways that may not always be in their long-term best interest.”
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3) There wasn't a robust evidence base underpinning the use of puberty blockers for the treatment of this patient group. Dr Taylor writes, “as far as we could tell they are relatively untested and un-researched.”
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4) Staff disagreed about the best way to treat these young people, with “differences about the best way of translating theoretical models and clinical understanding into the most effective approaches to assessment, management and treatment.”
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The 2005 service was much smaller than today’s, receiving a fraction tens of the referrals. Young people had to be 16 before a referral for puberty blockers. They can now be as young as 9. The evidence base for these drugs has still not been resolved.
bit.ly/3l6zfaZ
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The reports findings haven’t been made public before, and the Tavistock Trust turned down our attempts for them to be disclosed. It argued that the report’s “disclosure could adversely impact on the Trust’s ability to provide effective and safe services to its patients.”
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Ultimately, the Information Commissioner ruled that - on balance - it was in the the public interest to release the document. The ICO’s full ruling can be found here:
bit.ly/2ETZe69
10/
She noted that while some parts of the report may now be out of date (as the Tavistock argued), “some aspects of the care and treatment discussed in the report (such as medication) are still relevant and are being offered today.”
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ICO: “It is also important that those directly affected by these issues, either because they have been patients, the parents of patients, or prospective patients should be able to see this information and the extent or otherwise that current practices have emerged from it.”
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Dr Taylor called for the service to follow-up patients, for more research, and for staff to be supported if under pressure: “It should be possible for the GIDU to feel that its staff have the clinical authority to decline these physical interventions [blockers],” he writes.
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Dr Taylor said puberty blockers should still be available, and might be the best course of action for some, but in his view all young people needed explorative therapy first.
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For those young people who were referred on for treatment with puberty blocker, the report says, “serious consideration needs to be given to individuals capacity to make an informed decision - to give informed consent.”
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The report also notes the need for flexibility, it being “very likely that there will be no single, obvious treatment of choice. It is likely to be a package comprised of thorough assessment followed by a variety of therapeutic options.”
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Taylor writes: “It is likely that some of the improvements to the service will be resisted by some of the patients hitherto referred to it ... even while they are to their long-term benefit. This may reduce referral rates and the risk attached to this needs to be estimated.”
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We asked Dr Taylor to elaborate. He said, “if you try to set out to please or comply with someone, whether you're a parent or a clinician,  then you won't be helping them ...I do think that maybe the service as it developed to some extent, lost its compass in those respects.”
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It is unclear why some of the report’s recommendations weren't implemented, but Dr Taylor told Newsnight there may be several reasons. He said :“The demand for these services was greater than the capacity of the unit to cope.“
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Shifting attitudes towards gender identity & underfunding of other mental health services also important, he said. "Many patients would have been better served referred to other services. But underfunding of Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services made that impossible."
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The Tavistock Trust said the report "is not relevant to the circumstances and issues faced by the GIDS service today."
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"The service had been nationally commissioned since 2009, with NHS England (NHSE) taking responsibility for it in 2013. The service specifications were reviewed in 2016 and are currently under review again, as scheduled,” it explained.
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"Some of the young people we see in the service experience difficulties which may or may not be related to gender dysphoria. GIDS is a specialist service and relies on an integrated care model in which it works closely with local CAMHS to support ongoing difficulties.”
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"It is important to recognise that not all co-occurring difficulties will be resolved by accessing specialist psychosocial exploration of gender identity and related issues," the Trust said.
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The Trust welcomed the NHS review of gender services, to be conducted by Dr Hilary Cass, the former President of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, and hope it will lead “to better and quicker access to support for these young people.”
bit.ly/3iptT9c
END

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More from @hannahsbee

May 1
Extraordinary details in this case from the family court, highlighting just how badly gender-questioning young people are being let down: lack of NHS provision has led them to private providers. Here there was no physical examination before prescribing… bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/…
“Dr Hewitt's principal criticism of Gender GP's intervention, however, relates to the dose of testosterone that was prescribed….[it] was at the level that one would administer to an adult only after a course of treatment … built up …over the course of two or three years.”
“Not only did Gender GP prescribe this top-end dosage to a testosterone-naïve child, but they did so by directing a 'loading' (double) dose at the commencement of the treatment.”
Read 5 tweets
Apr 20
I wrote in this week’s @NewStatesman about the entirely false claim being spread by some that the Cass review excluded 100 studies on puberty blockers and hormones to reach its conclusion. The report and systematic reviews set out clearly what they’ve done… Image
Today, Dr Cass tells the Times, “If you deliberately try to undermine a report that has looked at the evidence of children’s healthcare, then that’s unforgivable. You are putting children at risk by doing that.”
Read 4 tweets
Apr 15
Health Secretary Victoria Atkins making a statement on Cass Review on gender identity services for children says: "professionals were not asking the right questions of themselves or of their patients"
Praises Hilary Cass and her team, who have "meticulously unpicked what went wrong, what the evidence actually shows, and how to design a fundamentally different service that better serves the needs of children."
Atkins also thanks "those who raised the alarm and contributed to the review". This includes, "the clinicians who spoke up against their peers to blow the whistle about what was happening at the Tavistock clinic, even though it risked their careers"…
Read 13 tweets
Mar 21
NEW: NHS England has announced that new youth gender services will provide masculinising and feminising hormones to children from ‘around their 16th birthday.’ This goes further than GIDS ever did: YPs cld only access hormones at 16 if they’d been on puberty blockers for 1 year🧵
Just last week, it seemed that the new services would have no medical pathway, with NHSE ending the routine prescription of puberty blockers. Today’s announcement, which was not put out to consultation, appears to signal a move in the opposite direction.
NHSE says it’s considered whether ‘scientific research has shown the treatment to be of benefit to patients’ & if it represents best use of NHS resources. Three documents have informed the policy, dating from 2013, 2016 & 2018 – two apply to adults only.
england.nhs.uk/wp-content/upl…
Read 10 tweets
Mar 12
NEW: Today's announcement from NHS England on ending the prescription of puberty blockers for children with gender-related distress goes further than before (we've known of their intention to end their use in routine clinical practice for a while) 🧵
news.sky.com/story/children…
NSHE consulted on plans to only allow the prescribing of puberty blockers as part of clinicals research or in 'exceptional cases' last summer. Today they've said there will no exceptional cases, as it wouldn't be workable in practice...
Instead, a child's clinician will have to apply under NHSE's 'Individual Funding Request' process. They would have to demonstrate why they believed the case was exceptional and 'why a treatment that is not routinely commissioned by the NHS is an appropriate treatment option.'
Read 8 tweets
Mar 5
As more information comes to light on WPATH, English health authorities have sought to distance themselves from the organisation. The Dept of Health told the Mail NHS England ‘moved away from WPATH guidelines more than five years ago’.... Some context 🧵

dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1…
It's true NHSE has said WPATH was irrelevant to its recommendation that puberty blockers no longer be part of routine clinical practice: 'NHS[E] does not commission based upon guidelines or treatment protocols eg WPATH 8.0 or practices in other countries' tinyurl.com/26afb54h
It's also true that the Tavistock's GIDS always took a more cautious approach than WPATH.
But, the 2016 service spec (still underpinning GIDS despite expiring in 2020) says explicitly: 'The service will be delivered in line with' WPATH 7 and other sources
tinyurl.com/4kwa68nw
Read 4 tweets

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