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The 21st Century Salonnière's avatar

Anyone interested in this topic -- anyone who looks into the actual evidence and sees how quickly “affirmation” (and all that goes with it) replaced “watchful waiting” in absence of evidence -- replacing a psychology-based approach with a medical-based and extremely profit-generating approach -- can see this is a “medical reversal” waiting to happen.

What is a medical reversal?

It’s an unfortunately common occurrence where newly hypothesized but evidence-lacking treatments are implemented on many thousands of people, with many millions of dollars spent, and then “oops!” we realize that the treatment actually doesn’t help, doesn’t represent an improvement in the old way of doing things, and in fact sometimes causes more harm than good.

Some familiar examples include estrogen replacement for menopausal women, fen-phen, Vioxx, cholesterol-lowering drugs, flecainide for heart arrythmias, stents for people with stable coronary artery disease, low-fat diets, the usefulness (or not) of various vitamins, and the timing and usefulness of prostate cancer screening and mammography.

It’s very important to understand: These mistakes are not rare occurrences and they often result in serious harm or even death (fen-phen, flecainide, and stents).

It happens so often that we are right to be skeptical of new treatments of any kind.

But we are especially right to be skeptical of the new approaches to “gender.” These are permanent, irreversible medical interventions but we’re assured -- despite multiple other nations concluding the evidence is lacking -- that intensive and life-long medicalization is the best approach to a psychiatric diagnosis. (Just on the face of it, that makes no sense.) The more immediate, the sooner, the younger the patient, the better the results, we’re told.

Parents or other loved ones who express doubts are told (incorrectly, based on the available evidence) that their loved one will kill themselves. They are also told that they are bigoted, abusive, hateful, right-wing, and behind the times: the doctors know best.

So, medicalization for a psychiatric diagnosis, in absence of evidence, carried out on thousands of patients including children with many psychiatric comorbidities (sometimes after a single visit to the doctor) is supposedly the best approach.

And when anyone raises questions, they’re shut down with emotional blackmail -- your loved one will die without this care; you’re a bad, bigoted, unloving person if you’re not immediately in full agreement.

What could possibly go wrong? I think we’ve seen what can possibly go wrong.

If this were an “emotionally neutral” harmful treatment, like stents or fen-phen, it would already be discredited or abandoned.

But this ridiculous medical practice is tied up in our culture wars. It’s tied up in many people’s sense of whether they are good, loving, open-minded, supportive people.

They go along with it.

And it’s therefore incredibly dangerous.

I urge people to look carefully at the (lack of) evidence that led to gender affirmation and medicalization replacing watchful waiting. I urge you to look at it as neutrally as if you were evaluating any other drug or medical procedure. Please leave your feelings about whether others will think you’re a bigot at the door.

The stakes are too high to let our personal feelings about social ostracism get in the way: people are being harmed by these practices.

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Steve's avatar

What I've always found fascinating about some of this is many of the same people who advocate so strongly for children being able to make these kind of decisions on their own will loudly protest against children being charged as adults for crimes. The standard defense is their brains aren't fully developed yet. So their brains are developed enough to make potentially life-altering decisions about their physical health but not developed enough to understand that stabbing someone to death isn't ok? The same could said of other instances where the mitigating factor is always lack of mental maturity. But they're somehow mentally mature enough to make these decisions?

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