MPs decide not to give puberty busting drugs
MPs decide not to give puberty busting drugs
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silverfoxcc

Original Poster:

8,221 posts

171 months

Yesterday (22:14)
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This one passed me by,so cannot comment on whether good or bad.

Anyone got a resume on it?

motco

17,488 posts

272 months

Yesterday (22:19)
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I should bloody well think so! It's appalling!

Ridgemont

9,241 posts

157 months

Yesterday (22:24)
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Wut?

No they didn’t.

It was given the go ahead. Absolutely shocking.

https://www.spiked-online.com/2026/06/24/the-nhs-p...

Ridgemont

9,241 posts

157 months

Yesterday (22:26)
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The short form is that the NHS is going to experiment on 200 kids.

BrettMRC

5,773 posts

186 months

Yesterday (22:48)
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Nice healthy debate already, supported by unbiased sources.

Ridgemont

9,241 posts

157 months

Yesterday (23:18)
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BrettMRC said:
Nice healthy debate already, supported by unbiased sources.
They are running a trial (as opposed to the scandal at Tavistock).
Which will determine whether applying puberty blocking drugs is medically sound.
By applying said drugs to 200 children.

I couldn’t give a fig for your ‘unbiased’ ‘healthy’ stance.


oddman

4,028 posts

278 months

Ridgemont said:
The short form is that the NHS is going to experiment on 200 kids.
When it's finding out about something you approve of (eg. cancer, Alzheimers), it's research; when it's something you don't, it's an experiment

The scandal with the Tavi is the treatment was being given before the scientific basis for the condition and its treatment was established.

BrettMRC

5,773 posts

186 months

Gender dysphoria is a real condition, and whilst I agree there has been a disproportionate amount of social media influence and public attention surrounding it over the last few years, there are real people for whom it is genuine and causes significant distress.

If medical treatment is going to have any benefit for those patients, it will necessarily involve adolescents, which means this research can't simply be done in adults. That obviously requires sensitivity, appropriate safeguards and robust ethical oversight.

The criticism after Tavistock wasn't that researchers knew puberty blockers didn't work. It was that they were being used despite there not being robust evidence either way. If that's the problem, then surely the solution is to collect better evidence under proper clinical trial conditions rather than continue relying on opinion.

Every treatment we now regard as standard started life in a clinical trial. Nobody likes the uncertainty involved, but that's precisely why trials exist—to determine whether a treatment is beneficial, harmful, or makes no difference.

If the trial ultimately shows puberty blockers don't improve outcomes, then that's valuable knowledge and they should be abandoned. If it shows a clear benefit for carefully selected patients, that's equally important. Either way, we'll have better evidence than we do today.

Supporting a clinical trial isn't the same as supporting widespread use. In fact, it's almost the opposite. It's saying, "Let's stop arguing from ideology and find out what the evidence actually shows."

Jasandjules

72,236 posts

255 months

So, kids can't smoke (it's too dangerous), kids can't drink booze (it's too dangerous), kids can't look at Facebook (it's too dangerous) BUT they can do this?!?!?!


CMTMB

1,439 posts

21 months

BrettMRC said:
If medical treatment is going to have any benefit for those patients, it will necessarily involve adolescents, which means this research can't simply be done in adults. That obviously requires sensitivity, appropriate safeguards and robust ethical oversight.
This sounds like the sort of vague, wishy washy ste a politician would say.

I agree that Gender dysphoria is real and should be taken seriously, but it's a mental health condition and should be treated as such.

Earthdweller

18,847 posts

152 months

I'm sorry but no 11 year old is mentally aware and capable enough of making irreversible life changing decisions


S600BSB

7,808 posts

132 months

BrettMRC said:
Gender dysphoria is a real condition, and whilst I agree there has been a disproportionate amount of social media influence and public attention surrounding it over the last few years, there are real people for whom it is genuine and causes significant distress.

If medical treatment is going to have any benefit for those patients, it will necessarily involve adolescents, which means this research can't simply be done in adults. That obviously requires sensitivity, appropriate safeguards and robust ethical oversight.

The criticism after Tavistock wasn't that researchers knew puberty blockers didn't work. It was that they were being used despite there not being robust evidence either way. If that's the problem, then surely the solution is to collect better evidence under proper clinical trial conditions rather than continue relying on opinion.

Every treatment we now regard as standard started life in a clinical trial. Nobody likes the uncertainty involved, but that's precisely why trials exist to determine whether a treatment is beneficial, harmful, or makes no difference.

If the trial ultimately shows puberty blockers don't improve outcomes, then that's valuable knowledge and they should be abandoned. If it shows a clear benefit for carefully selected patients, that's equally important. Either way, we'll have better evidence than we do today.

Supporting a clinical trial isn't the same as supporting widespread use. In fact, it's almost the opposite. It's saying, "Let's stop arguing from ideology and find out what the evidence actually shows."
Quite right - good post.

8.4L 154

5,726 posts

279 months

CMTMB said:
BrettMRC said:
If medical treatment is going to have any benefit for those patients, it will necessarily involve adolescents, which means this research can't simply be done in adults. That obviously requires sensitivity, appropriate safeguards and robust ethical oversight.
This sounds like the sort of vague, wishy washy ste a politician would say.

I agree that Gender dysphoria is real and should be taken seriously, but it's a mental health condition and should be treated as such.
So treatment via conversion therapy then?

chrispmartha

22,701 posts

155 months

Earthdweller said:
I'm sorry but no 11 year old is mentally aware and capable enough of making irreversible life changing decisions
I'm not arguing for and against the trial here but that's a simplification of the eligibility process.

Do you seriously think any 11 year old can just sign up for this and be accepted?

CMTMB

1,439 posts

21 months

8.4L 154 said:
CMTMB said:
BrettMRC said:
If medical treatment is going to have any benefit for those patients, it will necessarily involve adolescents, which means this research can't simply be done in adults. That obviously requires sensitivity, appropriate safeguards and robust ethical oversight.
This sounds like the sort of vague, wishy washy ste a politician would say.

I agree that Gender dysphoria is real and should be taken seriously, but it's a mental health condition and should be treated as such.
So treatment via conversion therapy then?
Why would you assume that?



JagLover

46,493 posts

261 months

8.4L 154 said:
So treatment via conversion therapy then?
The extension of the term "conversion therapy" to describe the counselling of troubled teens is highly misleading. In adolescents the majority reporting gender dysmorphia do not have this five years later. In the case of teenaged girls 70% no longer report this after five years according to one study.

They need counselling and support not life altering surgery and chemical intervention.