The Thoughtful Therapists' letter to the Lancet, published today:
As a group of psychotherapists working in the area of gender, we have concerns about the arguments and statistics presented in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health's Editorial.(1)
We believe that using the outdated statistic that 1% of people who transition will regret their decision is highly irresponsible, and lacks the rigour for which the Lancet group of journals is known.
This 1% refers primarily to studies of adults who transitioned in an era when medical transition was only taken under strict protocol.(2) We now find ourselves in a markedly different era, characterised by a 1727% rise in the numbers of children seeking to transition,(3)
and a gender-affirmative approach, which has been adopted almost universally, making the proffered 1% statistic anachronistic.(4) We do not believe puberty blockers are a safe and appropriate option, as supported by a blog by Carl Heneghan and Tom Jefferson,(5)
especially given that the use of this highly experimental treatment path is being reconsidered by progressive countries in Europe. The Karolinska Institute in Sweden, long considered gold-standard in providing transgender health care, no longer uses puberty blockers;(6)
nor does Finland promote their use.(7) Additionally, a judicial review in the UK found puberty blockers to be an inappropriate option for most children younger than 16 years.(8)
We urge The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health to take this opportunity to engage with this issue, rather than publishing, in our opinion, inaccurate and careless Editorials.
We declare no competing interests.
1/ In the UK the number of young people with gender dysphoria is increasing, access to gender related
medical treatments is decreasing and a new law might make routine therapy with gender questioning people difficult or illegal.
2/ Following recent court rulings, it has been acknowledged that ‘additional safeguards when making clinical decisions about puberty blockers for under-16s’ are necessary england.nhs.uk/commissioning/…
3/ The NHS has realised that gender affirming medicine does not have the robust evidence base that is usually necessary for them to offer a treatment. evidence.nhs.uk/document?id=23…
1/ petition.parliament.uk/petitions/5820…
At first glance it may appear strange that we, a group of therapists, are against the governments current plans to make conversion therapy illegal in the UK.
2/ Have no doubts, we think that everyone should be free to live their lives as they wish. People must feel safe at home, on the streets, online, and - particularly important for us - with their therapists.
3/ However, the government’s current plans are based on a flawed Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), a document that has been hastily signed by 20 health, counselling and psychotherapy organisations in the UK bacp.co.uk/events-and-res…