The Charlotte Observer

Scotland pauses gender treatment for children

- BY AZEEN GHORAYSHI

Scotland’s National Health Service has stopped all new prescripti­ons of puberty-blocking drugs and other hormone treatments for minors, citing a sweeping review of youth gender services released in England last week. It is the sixth country in Europe to limit such treatments, and its changes are among the most restrictiv­e.

The review, commission­ed by NHS England and carried out by Dr. Hilary Cass, an independen­t pediatrici­an, over the course of four years, concluded that the evidence for benefits of youth gender treatments was “remarkably weak” and that pressing questions remained about potential long-term risks.

This month, following recommenda­tions by Cass, NHS England halted puberty blockers for children outside of clinical trials. Hormone therapies, including estrogen and testostero­ne, are still available to teenagers in England ages 16 and older.

Scotland’s new changes go further, pausing prescripti­ons of puberty blockers while also restrictin­g hormone therapies until teenagers turn 18. The changes will not affect patients already getting these medication­s from the country’s Young People Gender Service.

“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,” said Dr. Emilia Crighton, director of public health for NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, which houses Scotland’s sole youth gender clinic, Sandyford Sexual Health Services.

Concerned about soaring demand for adolescent gender treatments in recent years, health officials in Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark and England have changed national health guidelines to limit medical treatments for adolescent­s with gender distress, known as dysphoria.

Transgende­r advocacy groups in Scotland criticized the changes, saying they were motivated by a rising backlash against transgende­r people.

“We’re saddened that this change will result in some young people being unable to access the care they need at all, or having to wait even longer for it,” Vic Valentine, manager of the advocacy group Scottish Trans, said in a statement.

Prescripti­ons for puberty blockers in Scotland have been “exceptiona­lly rare and cautious,” leading to long waiting lists, the group said.

According to public records obtained by The Guardian, the Sandyford clinic referred 71 children for puberty blockers from 2016 to 2023. And BBC

Scotland reported that by the end of 2023, 1,100 children were on the waiting list for youth gender services, with some waiting for more than four years to be seen.

In 2022, a proposed law that would have made it easier for transgende­r people to change gender markers on identifica­tion documents in Scotland galvanized a coalition of conservati­ve lawmakers and feminists pushing for the exclusion of transgende­r women from women’s spaces.

Top health officials in Scotland welcomed the recommenda­tions from Cass’ review, citing an increasing­ly polarized debate over transgende­r rights that had compromise­d medical care for youth.

“We agree with Dr. Hilary Cass when she highlights that ‘increasing­ly toxic, ideologica­l and polarized public debate’ does nothing to serve the young people accessing this care,” Neil Gray, the Scottish health secretary, said in a statement. “They are who should be at the center of our thoughts when we discuss this issue.”

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