Whyever should it be necessary to do extensive scientific research to demonstrate that you cannot turn boys into girls or girls into boys? Wishful thinking has its limits. Was it arrogance or stupidity or perversity that made serious medical organizations support and foster transgender transitions?
One reason is a
pseudoscientific report, produced by Dutch researchers, that purports to show
that transitioning improves mental health.
Now, thanks to the
Free Press, we read the results of a study performed by a Finnish adolescent
psychiatrist, a distinguished woman of science, by name of Dr. Riittakerttu Kaltiala.
In a long and
detailed article Dr. Kaltiala sheds some serious light on the controversy.
Hopefully, her work will tamp down on the madness, though one imagines that it
will require a blizzard of lawsuits to rescue the children who have been
mutilated and sacrificed to this pseudoscience.
Initially, the
population of the transgendered was comprised mostly of adult men who had been
treated with estrogen to allow them to live as women.
The science
shifted in 2011 when a Dutch research group published a paper touting the
virtue of treating children with puberty blockers and opposite sex hormones.
She explains:
It became known
as the “Dutch protocol.” The patient population the Dutch doctors described was
a small number of carefully selected young people—almost all male—who, from
their earliest years, insisted they were girls. These patients, apart from
their gender distress, were mentally healthy and high-functioning. The Dutch
clinicians reported that following early intervention, these young people
thrived as members of the opposite sex. The protocol was quickly adopted
internationally as the gold standard treatment in this new field of pediatric
gender medicine.
Not to be left
behind, the Finnish national health service adopted the practice. In time
Finnish clinics started seeing an increased demand for gender-affirming care.
And yet, the patient population was not what the Dutch protocol would have
projected:
But the ones
who came were nothing like what was described by the Dutch. We expected a small
number of boys who had persistently declared they were girls. Instead, 90
percent of our patients were girls, mainly 15 to 17 years old, and instead of
being high-functioning, the vast majority presented with severe psychiatric
conditions.
Some came from
families with multiple psychosocial problems. Most of them had challenging
early childhoods marked by developmental difficulties, such as extreme temper
tantrums and social isolation. Many had academic troubles. It was common for
them to have been bullied—but generally not regarding their gender
presentation. In adolescence they were lonely and withdrawn. Some were no
longer in school, instead spending all their time alone in their room. They had
depression and anxiety, some had eating disorders, many engaged in self-harm, a
few had experienced psychotic episodes. Many—many—were on the autism spectrum.
This confirms the research performed by Lisa Littman at Brown, to the effect that transgenderism became a social contagion. Moreover, it also affirms the views of Abigail Shrier, in her book Irreversible Damage.
These girls had not been dysphoric until their mothers told them that that was their problem and that transitioning could cure what ailed them:
Remarkably, few had expressed any gender dysphoria until their sudden announcement of it in adolescence. Now they were coming to us because their parents, usually just mothers, had been told by someone in an LGBT organization that gender identity was their child’s real problem, or the child had seen something online about the benefits of transition.
But the
foundation on which the Dutch protocol was based is crumbling.
Researchers have shown that their data had some serious
problems, and that in their follow-up, they failed to include many of the very
people who may have regretted transition or changed their minds. One of the
patients had died due to complications from genital transition surgery.
One does not want
to skip over the point too quickly, but apparently LGBT groups have been promoting
transgenderism.
When it came to reversing the transition, to detransitioning, the children who changed their minds after undergoing
biochemical and surgical mutilation, the Dutch report and its avatars was simply
false:
There is an
oft-repeated statistic in the world of pediatric gender medicine that only one
percent or less of young people who transition subsequently detransition. The
studies asserting this, too, rest on biased questions, inadequate samples, and
short timelines. I believe regret is far more widespread. For example,
one new study shows that nearly 30 percent of
patients in the sample ceased filling their hormone prescription within four
years.
Dr. Kaltiala
suggests that this was not the first time that medicalized groupthink produced
something like mass hysteria. It was also responsible for the recovered memory
craze:
Medicine,
unfortunately, is not immune to dangerous groupthink that results in patient
harm. What is happening to dysphoric children reminds me of the recovered memory craze of the 1980s and
’90s.
During that
period, many troubled women came to believe false memories, often suggested to
them by their therapists, of nonexistent sexual abuse by their fathers or other
family members. This abuse, the therapists said, explained everything that was
wrong with the lives of their patients. Families were torn apart, and some
people were prosecuted based on made-up assertions. It ended when therapists,
journalists, and lawyers investigated and exposed what was happening.
We need to
learn from such scandals. Because, like recovered memory, gender transition has
gotten out of hand. When medical professionals start saying they have one
answer that applies everywhere, or that they have a cure for all of life’s
pains, that should be a warning to us all that something has gone very
wrong.
Point well taken. Throw some serious doubt on snake oil salespeople, on pseudoscientists who pretend to have the solution to all of your problems. But, what about the political activists who have made this into their own private cause? Should we also start questioning their motives and their truth?
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1 comment:
Look up the Dutch statistics on assisted suicide and then tell me we should take seriously any idea from that country.
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