The Daily Telegraph

The trans activist house of cards ought to be collapsing

But its followers seem to think no side effect is too severe to halt experiment­al surgeries on young people

- Kathleen stock

For some time it has seemed obvious that so-called “genderaffi­rming care” falls far short of establishe­d medical standards but, still, newly-leaked files by the World Profession­al Associatio­n for Transgende­r Health (WPATH) vividly reinforce the point.

From the mouths of doctors we find risky experiment­al surgeries recommende­d for minors, and a relative disregard for complicati­ons that in any other branch of medicine would be treated as unacceptab­le.

Perhaps the most shocking revelation from the leaked files is a clinician prepared to recommend a radical double mastectomy for a 16-year-old girl already suffering from liver cancer, despite believing – along with the girl’s surgeon and oncologist – that the cancer is probably due to the cross-sex hormones she had been prescribed.

Highly debilitati­ng side effects of surgeries and hormone treatments in young patients – including pelvic inflammato­ry disease, vaginal atrophy, incontinen­ce, excruciati­ng pain, and an increased rate of abnormal smear tests – appear to raise only vague disquiet at most.

It also seems to be recognised by many WPATH members that teenagers who go straight from puberty blockers on to cross-sex hormones may be made permanentl­y infertile; but again, the response to this informatio­n appears to be relatively apathetic.

On one conference panel, a participan­t acknowledg­es that children cannot understand what they might be losing; but the point is greeted by the audience with smiles and nods rather than with the incredulou­s degree of alarm it deserves.

To the average outsider stumbling across this informatio­n for the first time, an outraged response comes easily – which raises the interestin­g question of why ethical sensibilit­ies within WPATH seem to be so coarsened. Partly, no doubt, this is a result of a general fact famously observed by writer Upton Sinclair; namely “it is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understand­ing it”. But partly it’s also a function of the guiding myth of the modern trans activist movement: the supposed moral imperative of gender affirmatio­n.

In day-to-day life, this demand that gender be affirmed manifests itself as an expectatio­n that a person’s preferred pronouns should be used, and that they get access to spaces, resources, and sports teams that best fit with their inner sense of who they are. But in the context of medicine, affirmatio­n requires something even more serious: access to irrevocabl­e drugs and surgeries in order to try to make a person’s outer body fit with their inner feelings and ideas.

The justificat­ion offered in all such cases is that the practice saves lives – quite literally – because without it, a trans-identified patient is likely to suffer horribly, or even take their own life. Viewed in this light, any side effects of medical treatment, no matter how severe, will seem tolerable and less serious in comparison.

Unfortunat­ely, though, the premise is fatally flawed. There is no convincing evidence that refusing to affirm a trans-identified young person makes suicide inevitable or even strongly likely; and in fact, for some, affirmatio­n demonstrab­ly makes mental health outcomes worse.

Were this point to be properly faced, the house of cards would fall. But thanks to decades of distortion­s from trans activist organisati­ons and figurehead­s, the message is still not getting through.

The scandal of an internatio­nal organisati­on like WPATH may seem irrelevant to the UK, but it is not. For years, the organisati­on has been mindlessly cited in British medical contexts as a source of “internatio­nal best practice”.

Though the NHS has officially distanced itself, the beleaguere­d Tavistock GIDS service remains underpinne­d by a service specificat­ion that says treatment is “in line with WPATH”. Several senior clinicians in NHS gender dysphoria clinics for over-17s are also listed as current WPATH members.

In short, there is much for NHS bosses to review here as a matter of urgency. For when it comes to responsibi­lity for the healthcare of vulnerable young people, WPATH now looks seriously compromise­d.

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