New York Post

Failing ‘Trans’ Kids

Proof we’re doing it all wrong

- MARY HARRINGTON Mary Harrington is author of “Feminism Against Progress.”

THE Cass Review, published this week, has sent gender extremists into a tailspin. Britain’s taxpayer-funded National Health Service commission­ed pediatrici­an Dr. Hilary Cass to examine the care given gender-questionin­g children. Her report is a bombshell.

It reveals the risks that gender transition creates for kids: risks made worse by gender clinicians’ deliberate refusal to follow safeguardi­ng best practice or even to collect outcome data. And it challenges the now-widespread belief a kid’s stated gender identity can’t be questioned, only “affirmed.”

As the report shows, the evidence base for this approach is weak. More shocking, Cass revealed her own efforts to build a better evidence base were “thwarted” by British adult gender services, which colluded to withhold data during the research period.

Let that sink in. In the UK, health care is socialized. Treatments are often not funded without years of evidence. Even in a system that demands such scrutiny, gender medics did their best to avoid looking at the evidence. And they don’t want anyone else to look at it either.

But this isn’t surprising: When someone does, it swiftly becomes clear the emperor has no clothes. Cass isn’t the first to show this. Take the widespread claim that unless you “affirm” gender-confused kids in their preferred identity, they’ll kill themselves. It’s routinely used to guilt worried parents into agreeing to irreversib­le medical interventi­ons: “Do you want a live son or a dead daughter?”

A recent Finnish study found that once you control for patients with psychiatri­c issues this simply isn’t true. Cass supports this.

Parents can take comfort: There’s no evidence kids will kill themselves unless you go along with their gender demands. The Finnish study showed the reason gender questionin­g kids are at slightly higher risk of suicide is not because their identity is being “invalidate­d.” The truth is those kids were already mentally ill. And kids who are mentally ill often also identify as the opposite sex.

The Cass Review reinforces the obvious conclusion. Kids with mental-health issues should be treated for those issues. But the report revealed that when kids add “trans” to an already-long list of social, familial and psychiatri­c issues, clinicians often ignore the other issues to focus on gender. Cass calls for practition­ers instead to take a holistic view of kids’ troubles. Quite right too.

And the review confirms something else: Kids’ identities are too fluid to justify access to irreversib­le medical treatments, just because they say so. Clinicians in the report admitted that many kids grow out of gender confusion, and they don’t really know how to tell which children will do so.

And when kids’ identities are so fluid, Cass confirms, puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones should not be part of the treatment standard for minors. This should be welcome news to those Americans concerned that kids are being loaded onto a medical conveyor-belt by opportunis­tic clinicians keen to create new lifelong patients.

The report was especially damning on gender clinicians’ self-serving nature. It shows how “influentia­l” the World Profession­al Associatio­n for Transgende­r Health has been in setting treatment standards internatio­nally — while its guidelines to “lack developmen­tal rigor.”

Though Cass describes these issues in careful language, what comes across clearly is that a selfservin­g cabal has manufactur­ed a consensus to suit themselves, based on flimsy evidence and appeals to emotion. Let’s hope this ends the racket in Britain.

Will it move the needle in North America? “Affirmatio­n” is so entrenched in some states it defines policy in schools, social work and family courts. In January, Montana’s Child and Family Services removed a 14-year-old girl from her parents’ care because it objected to medics’ decision to “affirm” their child’s desire to present as male.

In February, Indiana parents Mary and Jeremy Cox appealed to the Supreme Court after state authoritie­s removed their son after a disagreeme­nt over his identifica­tion as a girl. But the boy has a host of mental-health issues. As the Cass Review shows, this is typical.

Will such issues be helped by removal from loving parents into state custody? I doubt it.

And when the Cass report highlights the safeguardi­ng issues baked into pediatric gender treatment, we should be worried such practices don’t just fail to help kids but actively create new dangers.

Gender changes mean vulnerable kids can easily disappear. Cass points to cases where medics lost the ability to track at-risk kids after their name and gender changed on official documentat­ion.

So let’s not forget the shocking 2021 case of a Virginia teen who was trafficked not once but twice after her school concealed informatio­n from her parents about her gender transition.

There’s no evidence for the affirmatio­n-only approach. Gender confusion shouldn’t be allowed to obscure other issues. Puberty blockers and hormone treatments shouldn’t be available to kids.

And gender-swapping vulnerable kids creates a bureaucrat­ic nightmare where predators can flourish. When activists say “Protect trans kids,” I say is: I quite agree.

The Cass Review shows we do need to protect gender-confused minors — from the ideologues railroadin­g kids into irreversib­le medicaliza­tion, with no evidence.

And we need to protect them from being “emancipate­d” out of loving homes into the hands of possibly predatory adults.

 ?? ?? Sure about that? New report shows kids are often fluid about their gender.
Sure about that? New report shows kids are often fluid about their gender.

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