

When Ideology Corrupts Medicine—and How One Reporter Exposed It
22 snips Jul 12, 2023
Hannah Barnes, an award-winning investigations producer at the BBC's Newsnight, discusses the UK's groundbreaking decisions to ban puberty blockers for children and close the Tavistock Gender Clinic. She explores the long-term implications of these changes, the ethical dilemmas in pediatric gender care, and the influence of political divisions on healthcare practices in the U.S. Barnes emphasizes the importance of informed consent and the shift toward psychotherapy, urging a reevaluation of how gender dysphoria is treated in the medical landscape.
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Ellie's Experience
- In the early 90s, 11-year-old Ellie attended Tavistock and found it helpful.
- It was the first time someone understood her feelings about not fitting typical gender roles.
Puberty Blockers: Off-Label Use
- Puberty blockers, primarily licensed for prostate cancer, are used off-label for gender dysphoria.
- They suppress sex hormones, pausing puberty, but have unknown long-term effects on bones and brain development.
Blockers to Hormones
- Over 95% of teens on puberty blockers progress to cross-sex hormones.
- Tavistock claims good assessments, while clinicians cite potential identity lock-in from blockers.