San Diego Union-Tribune

STUDY: EARLY TRANSGENDE­R IDENTITY TENDS TO ENDURE

- BY AZEEN GHORAYSHI

Young children who transition to a new gender with social changes — taking on new names, pronouns, haircuts and clothing — are likely to continue identifyin­g as that gender five years later, according to a report published Wednesday, the first study of its kind.

The data come from the Trans Youth Project, a wellknown effort following 317 children across the United States and Canada who

underwent a so-called social transition between ages 3 and 12. Participan­ts transition­ed, on average, at age 6 1⁄2.

The vast majority of the group still identified with their new gender five years later, according to the study, and many had begun hormonal medication­s in adolescenc­e to prompt biological changes to align with their gender identities. The study found that 2.5 percent of the group had reverted to identifyin­g as the gender they were assigned at birth.

As tension mounts in courtrooms and statehouse­s across the country about the appropriat­e health care for transgende­r children, there’s been little hard data to draw on about their longterm developmen­t. The new study provides one of the first large data sets on this group. The researcher­s plan to continue following members of this cohort for 20 years after their social transition­s began.

“There’s this sort of idea that the kids are going to be starting those things and that they’re going to change their minds,” said Kristina Olson, a psychologi­st at Princeton University who led the study. “And at least in our sample, we’re not finding that.”

Olson and other researcher­s pointed out, however, that the study may not generalize to all transgende­r children. Two-thirds of the participan­ts were White, for example, and the parents

tended to have higher incomes and more education than the general population. All of the parents were supportive enough to facilitate full social transition­s.

And because the study began nearly a decade ago, it’s unclear whether it reflects the patterns of today, when many more children are identifyin­g as trans. Two-thirds of the study’s participan­ts were transgende­r girls who were assigned boys at birth. But in the past few years, youth gender clinics worldwide have reported a swell of adolescent patients assigned girls at birth who had recently identified as trans boys or nonbinary.

This group also has a high rate of mental health concerns, including autism and ADHD, noted Laura Edwards-Leeper, a clinical psychologi­st in Oregon who specialize­s in the care of transgende­r children. “That’s really the group I’m most concerned about these days,” she said.

“I would say that this study tells us nothing about those kids,” EdwardsLee­per added. “It’s just that different.”

The Trans Youth Project researcher­s began recruiting participan­ts in 2013, traveling to more than 40 states and two Canadian provinces to interview families. Such in-depth data is rare in this type of research, which is often sourced from online surveys or through children referred to specific gender clinics, who are typically older and often from more limited geographic areas.

Previously published work from the project showed that the children who were supported by their parents during social transition­s were roughly equal to non-transgende­r children in terms of rates of depression, with slightly elevated rates of anxiety.

The new study, published in the journal Pediatrics, followed these children as they reached a milestone roughly five years out from their initial social transition­s. The study found that 94 percent of the group still identified as transgende­r five years later. An additional 3.5 percent identified as nonbinary, meaning they did not identify as boys or girls. That label wasn’t as widely used when the researcher­s began the study as it is today.

By the end of the study period, in 2020, 60 percecnt of the children had started taking either puber ty-blocking drugs or hormones. The researcher­s are still collecting data about how many of the teenage participan­ts had undergone gender surgeries, Olson said.

Eight children, or 2.5 percent, had switched back to the gender they were assigned at birth. Seven of them had socially transition­ed before the age of 6 and transition­ed back before the age of 9. The eighth child, at 11 years old, reverted after starting on puberty-blocking drugs. The new study could suggest that transgende­r children, when supported by their parents, thrive in their identities. But it’s also possible that some of the children who still identified as transgende­r by the end of the study — or their parents — felt pressure to continue on the path they started.

“I think depending on your perspectiv­e, people will probably interpret this data differentl­y,” said Amy Tishelman, a clinical psychologi­st at Boston College and lead author of the World Profession­al Associatio­n for Transgende­r Health’s standards of care chapter on children.

“Some people may say that kids get on this trajectory of developmen­t and they can’t get off and that the medical interventi­ons may be irreversib­le and they may come to regret it,” she said. “Other people will say kids know their gender, and when they’re supported in their gender, they’re happy.”

While most clinicians agree that social transition­s can be helpful for some children who are questionin­g their assigned gender, Tishelman said, it’s also important to give support to those who change their minds. “It’s just really important that kids can continue to feel like it’s OK to be fluid, to continue to explore,” she said.

 ?? ERIC GAY AP ?? Supporters of transgende­r rights speak about legislatio­n affecting transgende­r youths in Texas in 2021. A study published Wednesday suggests transgende­r children tend to retain that identity at least five years.
ERIC GAY AP Supporters of transgende­r rights speak about legislatio­n affecting transgende­r youths in Texas in 2021. A study published Wednesday suggests transgende­r children tend to retain that identity at least five years.

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