South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

SUPPORTING A TRANS CHILD

Experts say there are many ways to help a child questionin­g their gender

- By Melinda Wenner Moyer The New York Times

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott declared that medical treatments given to transgende­r adolescent­s, including puberty-suppressin­g drugs and hormones, could be considered child abuse under state law. Opponents of the move swiftly responded, including President Joe Biden, who described the decision as “cynical and dangerous.” Investigat­ions of alleged abuse sparked by the order were temporaril­y halted last week after a state court ruled that the policy was “unconstitu­tional.”

According to a 2019 study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1.8% of U.S. teens identify as transgende­r, meaning that their gender identity does not match the gender they were assigned at birth. When researcher­s interviewe­d teens in Pittsburgh as part of a 2021 study, they found that nearly 1 in 10 did not identify as being exclusivel­y male or female. These adolescent­s are becoming more vocal about their identities and experience­s, as The New York Times found in a 2019 survey.

Children and teens who do not identify with their assigned gender can face higher rates of depression, suicide and self-harm than other kids do. Research shows that they have better mental health outcomes when they have access to what doctors call gender-affirming care, which can include mental health therapy and hormone treatments. There does exist some disagreeme­nt among doctors and advocates of gender-affirming care over which adolescent­s could benefit most from certain treatments. Still, experts think these decisions should be made by doctors, patients and their parents — not by governors or state agencies.

We interviewe­d child health care providers who focus on gender to understand the best ways that parents and other adults can offer support to adolescent­s on the gender spectrum.

Get expert help if necessary

If you have a child who is questionin­g their gender, follow their cues, said Daniel Summers, a pediatrici­an in North Andover, Massachuse­tts. “Some kids, they just want to dress in a different way,” he noted. Some want to do activities that aren’t typically associated with the gender they were assigned at birth, he added, and they are happy after they make these changes. In these cases, parents don’t need to do much other than to be supportive.

But if a child seems to be struggling with their body or in social settings, or wants a more significan­t life change, such as changing their pronouns or altering their body with hormones or surgery, consider finding additional support.

One good option is a local gender clinic, which can offer gender-affirming care, Summers said. Gender-affirming care can involve various services, including therapy and primary care. Some kids who receive this care do not undergo any medical or surgical treatments, he said.

Widen your gender vocabulary

When it comes to a person’s gender, “the language really matters,” said Laura Anderson, a child and family psychologi­st based in Hawaii who specialize­s in gender developmen­t. It’s important to try to understand and use the terms an individual asks you to use, she said.

“Nonbinary” is a broader category than transgende­r, in that a nonbinary person “may identify as feeling both male and female, or neither,” Anderson said. The term “genderquee­r” can be used interchang­eably with nonbinary, whereas “gender fluid” individual­s have a gender identity that “is a bit more fluid, in that it can shift over time from one category to another,” she said.

It’s also important to try to use a person’s correct name and pronouns, Anderson said. When one’s gender identity does not match how they are treated by others, it can lead to psychologi­cal distress, she added. Research has shown that when transgende­r youth are not able to use their chosen names at home, school, work or with friends, they are more likely to experience symptoms of depression, consider suicide and attempt suicide.

Anderson acknowledg­ed that it can be hard to use the terms correctly and consistent­ly, since their meanings or connotatio­ns can shift, and new terms can arise over time. What’s key, she said, is that caregivers try to be open to the concepts and do their best to understand them as they evolve. If you mess up, acknowledg­e your mistake and apologize, and try to do better next time, Summers said.

“I think the specific language is less important than the clear sense of affirmatio­n that you’re communicat­ing with it,” he said. “What’s important to your child is that they can see that you’re doing your best, even if there are times when you’re still not getting it perfectly.”

Offer curiosity rather than judgment

If a child doesn’t bring up the issue of gender, don’t force it, Summers said. But if they do want to discuss it, respond not with judgment or immediate concern but with curiosity, he suggested. Parents and other adults in children’s lives should avoid saying “anything that’s going to make the kid feel shut down, or rejected or unsafe,” he said.

Anderson suggested first asking the child for more informatio­n. You could say: “When do you think you started wondering about this?” or “How should I learn about it?” she said. “Set the stage, no matter what direction it goes in, for staying connected and not creating a power struggle,” she said.

It’s also fine to ask for some time to think, Summers added. It’s “OK to say, ‘This is new informatio­n about you that I didn’t know before — I’m really glad you shared it with me, but would it be OK if I think about it a little bit, too?’ ” he said. Just be sure to come back to the conversati­on later, when you’re in a better mindset.

“The most important thing is that they know you love them no matter what,” said Jack Turban, a child and adolescent psychiatri­st at the Stanford University School of Medicine who studies the mental health of transgende­r youths. “Support of a young person’s gender identity has been consistent­ly linked to better mental health outcomes.”

Research all treatments

There are several options to weigh if your family decides to pursue medical treatment, Turban said. Puberty blockers are medication­s for teens that “put puberty on hold while an adolescent has more time to explore their gender identity and think about next steps,” he said.

Summers explained that the physical changes that accompany puberty can’t easily be undone, so

puberty blockers can be helpful for kids who want a little more time to decide on their gender identity before being locked into it. If they are stopped, puberty continues, so in this sense they are “fully reversible,” he said.

More research is needed into how these drugs may impact brain developmen­t and fertility, and they can cause side effects including hot flashes, headaches and weight gain.

Older transgende­r teens can also take hormones, such as estrogen or testostero­ne, which “can help to align a young person’s body with their gender identity,” Turban said. Hormone therapy is not always reversible. If it is administer­ed to transgende­r girls who have not gone through puberty, it can cause fertility loss. And some studies suggest that trans women who take hormones have an increased risk for side effects such as bone loss and blood clots, although research is mixed — women and teens who use hormonal birth control can also experience these side effects.

A new draft of guidelines released last year by the World Profession­al Associatio­n for Transgende­r Health recommends that adolescent­s receive psychologi­cal screening before qualifying for hormone treatments, although some clinicians disagree with that requiremen­t.

 ?? ?? DEREK ABELLA/THE NEW YORK TIMES
DEREK ABELLA/THE NEW YORK TIMES

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