How gender dysphoria rates among children have DOUBLED since 2017

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The number of children with gender dysphoria has exploded in recent years, giving rise to the use of powerful puberty-blocking drugs.

About 300,000 children aged between 13 and 17 (1.4 per cent) in the US identify as transgender, according to most recent estimates from 2020.

That is double the number estimated to have the condition in 2017 in a previous report by the same researchers, though they used different estimates.

Children aged 13 to 17 are over four times more likely to identify as transgender (1.4 per cent) than adults over 65 (0.3 per cent).

Some say the rise is born out of increased awareness of gender dysphoria — that is, emotional distress due to a disconnect between gender identity and biological sex — and a rise in acceptance in society.

However, many believe that the impressionable minds of children are easily swayed by ‘trends’ and ‘phases’ among peers and that children are not ready to make irreversible decisions about their gender.

While no official, national estimates exist, many more children receiving gender-affirming care at an increasingly younger age. Treatment often involves powerful and life-altering drugs that block puberty and the release of key developmental hormones. 

So far, four states — Alabama, Arkansas, Texas, and Arizona — have brought in bans to restrict access to gender-affirming care including hormonal treatment and surgery. Oklahoma signaled its intent to follow suit Tuesday after threatening to cut a hospital’s funding if it prescribes puberty blockers or hormone therapy.

How gender dysphoria rates among children have DOUBLED since 2017

There are estimated to be 300,000 trans Americans aged 13 to 17, a number that has risen several fold in the last two decades.

Shown above are the states with a ban on puberty blockers (red), a partial ban (dark orange), a suspended ban due to legal proceedings (orange) and a ban on surgery only (yellow).

Shown above are the states with a ban on puberty blockers (red), a partial ban (dark orange), a suspended ban due to legal proceedings (orange) and a ban on surgery only (yellow). 

Puberty blockers today are sold as a ‘pause button’ on puberty, offering a child the breathing space to reach a considered decision over whether to proceed with cross-sex hormones and sex-change surgery to achieve full transition.

They work by halting the production of sex hormones like testosterone and estrogen, effectively ‘blocking’ the physical changes that would occur during puberty — such as a deeper voice in a man.

They are approved for pre-pubescent teens and can be given to children as young as eight or nine years old. They were initially approved to slow down puberty in children where it was happening too fast.

Now Oklahoma ‘bans’ puberty blockers for trans children

Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt has signed a bill that effectively bans gender- reassignment drugs from being prescribed to minors at the state’s main children’s hospital.

The Republican is withholding Covid relief funds from Oklahoma Children’s Hospital at OU Health until it stops providing puberty blockers and hormone therapy to under-18s.

The state allocated $108 million to the University of Oklahoma-linked health system as part of the federal American Rescue Plan Act passed in 2021 to help struggling businesses and hospitals.

Gov. Stitt said Tuesday: ‘By signing this bill today we are taking the first step to protect children from permanent gender transition surgeries and therapies.

‘It is wildly inappropriate for taxpayer dollars to be used for condoning, promoting, or performing these types of controversial procedures on healthy children.’

Oklahoma Children’s Hospital currently offers life-altering drugs to teenagers under 18 with parental approval. It is thought that around 100 minors are currently receiving treatment.

Stitt also called for the Republican-controlled state Legislature to ban some of those gender-affirming treatments statewide when it returns in February.

He said in a statement that he wanted a prohibition on ‘all irreversible gender transition surgeries and hormone therapies’ on minors.

Patients receive the medication as an injection, given every one, three or six months. They can also be administered via an implant which lasts for about a year. 

Hormone therapy is where either testosterone or estrogen is given to a patient to trigger secondary sex characteristics to make the body better match a patient’s gender.

Like puberty blockers, it can also be given as an injection. Patients may also be offered the treatment as a pill, or as a cream that can be rubbed onto the skin.

Gender-affirming surgeries available to older adolescents and adults are non-reversible, and can include top surgery to create male or female chests, bottom surgery on genitals, and even facial feminization surgeries.

In February, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott directed state agencies to begin investigating parents who allow their children to receive gender-affirming care, classifying that as a form of child abuse.

Abbott wrote a letter to the state’s Department of Family and Protective Services in which he said that state law imposes reporting requirements “upon all licensed professionals who have direct contact with children who may be subject to such abuse.”

Doctors, nurses, and teachers could be subject to criminal penalties if they fail to report on such incidents.

A bill in Missouri would attempt classify gender-affirming care as child abuse, not dissimilar to the order recently issued in Texas. 

The Williams Institute found this year that its estimate of the number of youth who identify as transgender has doubled from its previous estimate in 2017.

Children age 13 to 17 make up around 18 per cent of the transgender population in the US, meaning nearly one in five people who identify as transgender fall into that age group.

Since 2005, the number of youth referred to gender clinics has increased as much as tenfold in the US, said a review in the British Psych Bulletin this year.

A study from Yale University examined the use of puberty blockers implants in people going through precocious or early puberty, when puberty begins before age eight in girls and age nine in boys.

It found that in 2016, blockers were used in 512 cases for early puberty at an average of 8.9 years old.

In trans adolescents, they were only used in 62 cases at an average of 14 years old.

The researchers said this suggests that the age-based argument that trans adolescents are too young to access puberty blockers does not appear to apply to those experiencing puberty early.

The same study found that between 2004 and 2016, the annual number of puberty-blocking implants given out to transgender patients increased from 0 to 63.

The average age of the recipient was 14 years old.

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