Daily Mail

Ex-patient: Children are trans drugs guinea pigs

NHS medication court fight

- By Xantha Leatham

A YOUNG woman has joined a landmark High Court fight to stop the NHS prescribin­g ‘powerful and experiment­al’ puberty blockers to children who want to change gender.

Keira Bell, 23, began hormone treatment to become a boy at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust in London – but now ‘seriously regrets’ the process.

The legal action has been brought against the trust – which runs Britain’s only gender identity developmen­t service (GIDS) for children – over concerns that youngsters, including those under 12, are being treated without proper assessment.

The case is being brought by a woman known only as Mrs A, the mother of a 15-year-old autistic girl who is on the waiting list for treatment at the service. Mrs A has spoken of her ‘deep concerns that my daughter will be subjected to an experiment­al treatment path that is not adequately regulated’. The action was also brought by Susan Evans, 62, who previously worked at the Tavistock as a psychiatri­c nurse.

But at a court hearing in London yesterday barrister Jeremy Hyam QC asked for Mrs Evans’s place as a claimant to be taken by Miss Bell.

Mr Hyam said Miss Bell ‘underwent the treatment that is in issue in the proceeding­s’, adding: ‘She now very seriously regrets the process.’

He described the service’s transgende­r treatment as a ‘serious interventi­on’. ‘That treatment is given to

High Court bid: Keira Bell and nurse Susan Evans yesterday children – not just under the age of 16, but under 12 – on the basis that those children themselves consent to the treatment,’ he added.

Mr Justice Supperston­e ruled that Miss Bell should be a claimant.

Miss Bell, from Cambridge, said afterwards: ‘I do not believe children and young people can consent to the use of powerful and experiment­al hormone drugs like I did.

‘The current affirmativ­e system put in place by the Tavistock is inadequate as it does not allow for exploratio­n of gender dysphoric feelings, nor does it seek to find the underlying causes of this condition.

‘Hormone- changing drugs and surgery does not work for everyone and it certainly should not be offered to someone under the age of 18 when they are vulnerable.’

In a statement after the claim was filed this month, a spokesman for the trust said: ‘Our clinical interventi­ons are laid out in nationally­set service specificat­ions.

‘NHS England monitors our service very closely. The service has a high level of reported satisfacti­on and was rated good by the Care Quality Commission.’

‘Seriously regrets the process’

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