🧵Minors cannot consent to receiving puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones, which pose the risk of rendering them infertile and with lifelong sexual dysfunction. They are too young to be able to predict their future fertility desires or even to know how an orgasm feels and to be able to weigh those future needs against their desire to treat their current gender dysphoria. Only their parents or guardians may consent on their behalf. Therefore adults must decide on behalf of children whether the presumed benefits of this treatment outweigh the risks, known and unknown. These decisions must be made even with an evidence base that can provide no clear conclusions as to the actual benefits of treatment, according to a half-dozen systematic literature reviews—the gold standard of scientific evidence. Also, the one study that directly assessed whether these treatments were tied to a difference in the suicide death rate found they were not. Therefore the claim that the treatments are a matter of life and death is not evidence-based. @KristopherWells makes such a claim despite being an academic who is well versed in evidence-based-medicine principles. @tylerblack32
Here is Marci Bowers, the president of @WPATH, describing how natal males with gender dysphoria who under go pubertal suppression and estrogen treatment have no sexual function whatsoever. This child was going in for a vaginoplasty and didn’t even know what an orgasm was. alabamaag.gov/wp-content/upl…
Tyler Black, however, says that “Parents do not have absolute rights” when their kid wants gender-transition treatment. He dismisses various qualms about such treatment, such as the fact that its efficacy is unknown. And he makes a false comparison to cancer care, neglecting to note that absent treatment, cancer is typically certifiably fatal; whereas the same cannot be said about pediatric gender dysphoria. There is considerable evidence, in fact, that most minors with GD will grow out of it. Also, cancer surgery, such as an orchiectomy (testicular cancer does occur in teenage boys), removes a part of the body that is diseased. Gender-transition surgery removes a healthy part of the body that might have been used for a specific purpose if left in place (eg: sexual reproduction, breastfeeding). Lastly, saying that “Parents do not have the right to do whatever they want to kids” is moot when parents are arguing *against* doing something to their child and *for* leaving their child’s body alone to experience its own endogenous puberty.
@wpath New Evidence Challenges Institutionalized Belief That Transgender Teens Become Transgender Adults, Undermining Core Defense of Medical Gender Transitions for Minors nysun.com/article/new-ev…
@wpath None of the examples that Black provides in this thread are fair comparisons to gender-transition treatment for minors. And yet he concludes the thread suggesting that he’s just proven that minors have the capacity to consent to such treatment. He absolutely has not.
@TylerBlack32 is insinuating that either doctors or the state have the right to overrule parents who object to their child’s wish to undergo a gender-transition treatment. This poses the question of how these external authority figures can be certain they know better than the parents what is best for their child. Based on what research? We have established that the efficacy of this treatment remains unknown and that the known risks, saying nothing of the unknown risks, are severe. So how is this dynamic so exceptional that outside forces may be permitted to overrule the parents and put a child under a medical treatment that has very intense, irreversible, lifelong impacts?
Dr. @TylerBlack32's scenario in which parents' refusal to consent to gender-transition treatment for children is overruled by an outside authority is, in fact, supported by the American Academy of Pediatrics. After acknowledging what Dr. Black does not, that parental or guardian consent is required for such treatment, the @AmerAcadPeds then strongly suggests that pediatricians should look into having the state seize control of the child in question if the parents refuse to consent to a medical gender transition.
This screen shot is from the AAP's 2018 policy statement on gender-affirming care, which is thus far the subject of a detransitioner lawsuit and will likely soon be the subject of a lawsuit from Republican attorneys general, who suggested in a recent letter to the AAP that it violates consumer protection laws. publications.aap.org/pediatrics/art…
@tylerblack32 WPATH President Marci Bowers acknowledges that gender transition treatment can destroy the capacity for natal males to have an orgasm. @tylerblack32 insists that parents cannot always be trusted should they deny consent for such treatment.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
BREAKING: The State of Texas has sued Dr. May C Lau, a pediatrician at UT Southwestern for allegedly prescribing testosterone to at least 21 natal girls under the age of 18 contrary to state law.
🧵The stage alleges Dr. Lau "has engaged in deceptive trade practices, including by misleading pharmacies, insurance providers, and/or patients by falsifying medical records, prescriptions, and billing records to represent that her testosterone prescriptions are for something other than transitioning a child’s biological sex or affirming a child’s belief that their gender identity is inconsistent with their biological sex."
The state of Texas alleges that since the state's ban of pediatric gender-transition treatment went into effect, Dr. May C. Lau, "has violated the law by providing, prescribing, administering, or dispensing testosterone to minor patients for the purposes of transitioning their biological sex or affirming their belief that their gender identity is inconsistent with their biological sex."
Dr. Lau is a pediatrician at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (“UT Southwestern”) in Dallas, Texas, who holds hospital privileges at Childrens Medical Center Dallas and Children’s Medical Center Plano. texasattorneygeneral.gov/sites/default/…
The state of Texas alleges that Dr. May C. Lau, a pediatrician at UT Southwestern,
"has in the course of trade and commerce engaged in false, misleading, and deceptive acts and practices declared unlawful in violation of" state law.
"Lau deceptively misleads pharmacies, insurance providers, and/or the patients by falsifying patient medical records, prescriptions, and billing records to indicate that the use of puberty blockers for minor patients are for something other than transitioning their biological sex or affirming their belief that their gender identity is inconsistent with their biological sex," the state alleges. texasattorneygeneral.gov/sites/default/…
The summary of the argument in the Alabama attorney general’s scathing amicus brief to the Supreme Court regarding the case over Tennessee’s pediatric gender-transition treatment. The document rakes @WPATH over the coals. supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/23/2…
🚨Fact Check🚨
Activist-blogger Erin Reed has made a series of *false claims* about pediatric gender-transition surgeries.
Here are the actual facts:
▶️Only 2 states had no such surgeries from 2019-2023: Alaska and Wyoming, per @DoNoHarm.
▶️At least 5,747 minors had such surgeries during this time in the U.S., per DNH.
▶️Kentucky had 25 such surgeries.
▶️26 states have recently banned such surgeries, which is the only reason why by 2023 most weren’t performing them, including KY.
▶️@LeorSapir estimates that from 2017-2023, 5,288 to 6,294 minor natal girls got double mastectomies for gender dysphoria-related diagnoses.
Therefore, these surgeries are absolutely not “extremely rare,” as @ErinInTheMorn claims, in particular considering that Do No Harm and Sapir’s estimates are each very conservative. The true figures are likely quite a bit higher.
The only reason why such surgeries are “not a thing” in Kentucky is because the state banned them and the law ended such surgeries only last year.
This is from a Canadian senator. Sallie Baxendale’s review paper on puberty blockers found that much remains unknown about their neuropsychiatric impacts. And while blockers do not sterilize, starting them at puberty’s immediate onset and then starting cross-sex hormones raises the risk of infertility, in particular for natal males. Without a male puberty, their testicles might never produce viable sperm. This introduces an ethical dilemma, because puberty can start for natal males as young as 11 or 12. Is such a child ready to make this decision? And would the puberty blocker prevent the cognitive advancement of puberty that would lend them the maturity to be able to decide?
Senator @KristopherWells’s claim that “all medical professional” know these things about puberty blockers is demonstrably false, since there are many doctors who have concluded that their risks tends to outweigh their benefits given the current research base. This includes medical authorities in five European nations.
The AAP Files: Inside Feud Within American Academy of Pediatrics, Torn Over Transgender Issues, About Group’s Decision To Hold Meeting in ‘Anti-LGBTQ’ Florida of Ron DeSantis
🧵My investigation for @NewYorkSun, based on hundreds of internal @AmerAcadPeds emails obtained via public-records requests: "By contrast, the AAP has tapped Biden health official Rachel Levine as a keynote speaker, even after revelations that they both meddled in the drafting of another organization’s transgender-care guidelines."
PAYWALL-FREE LINK:
The AAP Files: Inside Feud Within American Academy of Pediatrics, Torn Over Transgender Issues, About Group’s Decision To Hold Meeting in ‘Anti-LGBTQ’ Florida of Ron DeSantis
Rachel Levine is the keynote speaker. nysun.com/article/the-aa…
My investigation on internal tensions at the @AmerAcadPeds over transgender issues is based upon 100s of internal emails and documents I obtained via public-records requests. I have published a wide selection of these documents in this appendix: benryan.substack.com/p/the-aap-file…
NEWS: 20 Republican State Attorneys General Send Aggressive and Probing Letter to the American Academy of Pediatrics Regarding Its Policies on Pediatric Gender Transition Treatment
The letter suggests that the the @AmerAcadPeds may not be in compliance with state consumer protection laws due to claims made in its 2018 policy statement on the gender-affirming care method, written by Brown University's Dr. Jason Rafferty.
The letter poses 14 questions to the AAP and suggests that the AGs may ultimately sue the organization. In particular, it calls the AAP's claim that puberty blockers are reversible "misleading and deceptive."
Dr. Rafferty and the AAP have already been sued by a detransitioner who alleges that they engaged in a conspiracy to craft the 2018 policy document while using her, her suit alleges, essentially as a guinea pig. The suit alleges that the policy document, which has been subjected to a scathing critique by Canadian psychologist James Cantor, is not evidence based.
Background on the AAP:
Lawsuits by Regretful ‘Detransitioners’ Take Aim at Medical Establishment’s Support for Gender-Transition Treatments for Minors nysun.com/article/lawsui…