The Guardian Australia

Scottish gender clinic pauses prescribin­g puberty blockers to under-18s

- Libby Brooks Scotland correspond­ent

Scotland’s only clinic to offer treatment to gender-questionin­g young people has paused prescribin­g puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones in light of last week’s Cass review.

The Sandyford clinic, based in Glasgow, which offers a range of services including emergency contracept­ion, abortion and support for sexual assault victims as well as transgende­r healthcare, posted a service update online on Thursday morning.

It stated: “Referrals from the Sandyford sexual health services to paediatric endocrinol­ogy for the prescripti­on of puberty suppressin­g hormones have been paused for any new patients assessed by our young person’s gender service.

“Patients aged 16 to 17 years old who have not been treated by paediatric endocrinol­ogy, but who are still seeking treatment for their gender incongruen­ce, will no longer be prescribed gender-affirming hormone treatment until they are 18 years old.”

Last week, a landmark review by the paediatric­ian Dr Hilary Cass that was commission­ed by NHS England found “weak evidence” for the use of puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones to treat young people experienci­ng gender incongruen­ce and said that this vulnerable cohort had been “let down” by the “toxicity” of the debate surroundin­g their care.

The move follows weeks of attacks on the clinic for not immediatel­y following the effective ban on puberty blockers imposed by NHS England in March.

But on Thursday NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde revealed it had already paused starting new patients on the treatments since mid-March, in response to the NHS England decision and while awaiting publicatio­n of the Cass review.

Earlier this week, the first minister, Humza Yousaf, said Scottish heath boards would give the “utmost considerat­ion” to Cass’s 388-page report. He added: “When it comes to the prescribin­g of medicine, clinicians are best placed – not politician­s, government ministers or myself as first minister.”

While critics have described the clinic as “the tartan Tavistock”, the Guardian understand­s that the Sandyford does not follow a strictly affirmativ­e model of care for young people, an approach that Cass called into question.

According to FoI data, between 2016 and 2023, 71 under-18s received prescripti­ons for puberty blockers after referrals from the clinic.

The Sandyford emphasised that existing patients who were already receiving hormone suppressan­ts or gender-affirming hormones were not affected by this pause.

The clinic said: “We are committed to providing the best possible clinical care for young people accessing and understand the distress that gender incongruen­ce can cause. While this pause is in place, we will continue to give anyone who is referred into the young people gender service the psychologi­cal support that they require while we review the pathways in line with the findings.”

Dr Emilia Crighton, the NHSGGC director of public health, said: “The next step from here is to work with the Scottish government and academic partners to generate evidence that enables us to deliver safe care for our patients.”

“We echo the views of Dr Hilary Cass that toxicity around public debate is impacting the lives of young people seeking the care of our service and does not serve the teams working hard to care and support them.”

Vic Valentine, the manager of Scottish Trans, said they were “saddened” that the decision would result in “some young people being unable to access the care they need at all, or having to wait even longer for it”.

A statement added: “This decision has been taken within the context where the reality of trans people’s experience­s and lives is questioned almost daily in some of the media and some political circles. This makes us worry that the decision has been influenced by that context rather than solely through considerat­ion of the best interests of trans children and young people.”

 ?? Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images ?? A transgende­r rights protester in Edinburgh earlier this month.
Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images A transgende­r rights protester in Edinburgh earlier this month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia