Science Children to no longer be prescribed puberty blockers, NHS England confirms

Children to no longer be prescribed puberty blockers, NHS England confirms​

The decision follows a review after a sharp rise in referrals were recorded at the Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS) run by the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, which is closing at the end of March.
Tuesday 12 March 2024 17:14, UK

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Children will no longer be prescribed puberty blockers at gender identity clinics, NHS England has confirmed.
Puberty blockers, which pause the physical changes of puberty such as breast development or facial hair, will now only be available to children as part of clinical research trials.

The government said it welcomed the "landmark decision", adding it would help ensure care is based on evidence and is in the "best interests of the child".
It follows a public consultation on the issue and an interim policy, and comes after NHS England commissioned an independent review of gender identity services for children under 18 in 2020.
The review followed a sharp rise in referrals to the Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS) - a specialised service for young people who experience difficulties in development of their gender identity - run by the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, which is closing at the end of March.
In 2021-22, there were over 5,000 referrals to GIDS, compared to just under 250 a decade earlier.
The clinic has faced repeated scrutiny.


Gender identity clinic to close
Dr Hilary Cass, who led the review, published an interim report in February 2022 saying there was a need to move away from one unit and recommended regional options be available to better support children.
She also said there was a lack of long-term evidence on what happens to young people prescribed blockers - adding that GIDS had not gathered routine and consistent data meaning it was "not possible to accurately track the outcomes and pathways that children and young people take through the service".

After Tavistock closes, two new NHS services will open in early April, situated in Great Ormond Street Hospital, London, and Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool.
The NHS said children attending these clinics will be supported by experts in neurodiversity, paediatrics and mental health, "resulting in a holistic approach to care".
Around 5,000 children and young people are currently on the waiting list for referral into the new clinics, as 250 patients are expected to be transferred to them when they are open.
Currently there are fewer than 100 children on puberty blockers, who will continue their treatment at Leeds and University College London Hospital.

Health Minister, Maria Caulfield, said: "We have always been clear that children's safety and wellbeing is paramount, so we welcome this landmark decision by the NHS.
"Ending the routine prescription of puberty blockers will help ensure that care is based on evidence, expert clinical opinion and is in the best interests of the child."
The consultation on the future of services received more than 4,000 responses, comprised of members of the public, 22% from patients, 21% from parents, 10% from trans adults and 5% from clinicians.
John Stewart, national director of specialised commissioning at NHS England, said the responses were "polarised" in line with the debate around puberty blockers.
Mr Stewart said: "Many people said the policy didn't go far enough in terms of still allowing potential access (to puberty blockers) through research, and others saying clearly they disagreed fundamentally and that these should be routinely available to everyone who believes they need it."
Former prime minister Liz Truss "welcomed" NHS England's decision ahead of her Health and Equality Acts (Amendment) Bill which is up for its second reading on Friday.
The bill includes a ban on the prescription of body-altering hormones to children questioning their sex, both privately and on the NHS.
The most commonly used puberty blockers suppress the production of hormones, including testosterone and oestrogen.
NHS England hopes to have a study into their use by December - with eligibility criteria yet to be decided.

Archive: https://archive.is/Gtamn
 
Hopefully kids with Precocious Puberty can still get them. No one should have to go through puberty before they're even old enough to start kindergarten.

Children will no longer be prescribed puberty blockers at gender identity clinics

First sentence homie. I can’t believe the UK beat the mutts to figuring out the obvious, where does that even put us?
 
Puberty blockers, which pause the physical changes of puberty such as breast development or facial hair, will now only be available to children as part of clinical research trials.
I predict a sudden massive increase in clinical trials. This is gonna turn out to be worthless isn't it?
 
I predict a sudden massive increase in clinical trials. This is gonna turn out to be worthless isn't it?
Could be, though Liz Truss is trying to push the "Health and Equality Acts (Amendment) Bill" (which is up for its second reading on Friday).

"The bill includes a ban on the prescription of body-altering hormones to children questioning their sex, both privately and on the NHS."
 
Hopefully kids with Precocious Puberty can still get them. No one should have to go through puberty before they're even old enough to start kindergarten.

These meds are loathed by many people who went on them for precocious puberty. Go check out the lupron victims hub. It destroys your bone density and lowers IQ for life, as well as many other side effects that do not stop even when you stop taking it. These drugs are cancer drugs that work great for prostate cancer in old men. They have no business around kids, even kids with endocrine issues.

The main issue with precocious puberty and the reason they gave these drugs is to keep the kids growing taller longer. A few extra inches of height is not worth permanent disability from osteoporosis and arthritis.
 
Does that mean they haven’t approved a study yet, or they’ll have the paper published by December?
I believe it means that by December NHS England will have a completed study that they can use to inform future decisions. I believe that the studies will have similar outcomes to the ones taken in Denmark, which highlighted many problems with previous studies into providing kids with puberty blockers, and caused Danish clinics to stop providing drugs in most cases.
 
These meds are loathed by many people who went on them for precocious puberty. Go check out the lupron victims hub. It destroys your bone density and lowers IQ for life, as well as many other side effects that do not stop even when you stop taking it. These drugs are cancer drugs that work great for prostate cancer in old men. They have no business around kids, even kids with endocrine issues.

The main issue with precocious puberty and the reason they gave these drugs is to keep the kids growing taller longer. A few extra inches of height is not worth permanent disability from osteoporosis and arthritis.
And going through puberty as a toddler can have some horrific consequences.

Sounds like we need to develop a newer generation of puberty blockers with fewer potential side effects, not force kids to go through puberty in preschool.
Puberty blockers cause a drop IQ. I want to say that's worse than early puberty but maybe you know something I don't.
I'll take an IQ drop over what happened to Lina Medina.

Even puberty on the earlier end of normal age increases the risk of everything from depression to substance abuse to CSA.
 
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