Lagayscienza wrote: ↑April 21st, 2024, 11:45 am
I have read US studies that come to the opposite conclusion - that gender affirming care reduces suicide rates in those with GD. For example, a study by Travis Campbell, Samuel Mann, Duc Hien Nguyen and Yana van der Meulen Rodgers, in
AEA Papers and Proceedings, VOL. 113, MAY 2023 (pp. 551-55) found that supportive family environments and hormone replacement therapy that affirms a transgender child’s gender identity decrease their risk of suicide or running away from home, whereas unsupportive family environments and conversion therapy that denies their gender identity increase these risks. Other studies I have read come to the similar conclusions.
Reading about that study you refer to is interesting although it's not quite looking at the same thing. For one thing, I'm not sure what is meant by "conversion therapy" but that seems like a bit of a false dichotomy. It is not a binary choice between
gender affirming care and
conversion therapy. To repeat what I have said before: I'm not advocating any kind of "conversion therapy".
But what I like about the study
I referred to is that they controlled for specialist-level psychiatric treatment, they found no difference in rates of suicide. In other words, high rates of suicide correlated with mental health problems generally (which is what you might expect) and not having gender dysphoria. As far as I can tell, they didn't control for this in the above study
you referred to.
Another study ("Suicidality in clinic-referred transgender adolescents" on pubmed) also came to a similar conclusion, that when you control for mental health problems (such as depression) the differences in the suicide rates between trans-identifying and other children is much closer.
The numbers of young people identifying as trans has skyrocketed in recent years. Some people believe this is due to the widespread use of social media and "social contagion". Others will say that they have always been there, they have just only recently felt safe enough to "come out of the closet". But if the latter theory were true we would expect to have seen an epidemic of suicides among gender-distressed teenagers before “gender affirming” drugs and surgeries first became available in recent years. Yet no evidence of such an epidemic exists. Indeed, rates of suicidal behaviour among youth have increased since 2011.
What we are seeing is an unprecedented mental health crisis among young people (particular among young girls) suffering from things like anxiety, depression, eating disorders, ADHD, autism, and history of sexual trauma. It seems likely that teenagers with suicidal tendencies are gravitating toward a trans identity. We need to find ways of distinguishing between them as it's not in anyone's best interest to be put on the wrong medical pathway.
I have found no evidence that "parents are often brow beaten into complying with the social and medical transitioning of their child".
It is not hard to find many instances of people claiming that the denial of access to gender affirming care is leading to suicides, a "genocide of trans people".
On the contrary, there is evidence of certain religious and conservative groups trying to shut down gender affirming care at children's hospitals so that it is not available to young GD people and their parents. This is shameful.
I agree that this is going too far - an over-reaction that is taking things too far the other way. That seems to be an American thing though, fortunately here in the UK we seem to be taking a more measured approach.