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Transgender kids get their own health-care guidelines

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imageNot all transgender people will seek health care, but the ones who do need to feel supported.from www.shutterstock.com

Today the first guidelines specific to the health-care needs of transgender and gender diverse children and adolescents have been released in the Medical Journal of Australia.

Gender identity is a person’s innermost sense of who they are – male, female, a blend of both or neither. Most children grow up thinking of themselves as a girl or a boy and don’t question their gender. But some children and teenagers identify as a gender that’s different to the sex they were assigned at birth. This is often referred to as being gender diverse, or transgender.

Being transgender or gender diverse is now largely viewed as part of the natural spectrum of human diversity. For some people, this is just part of who they are, and it’s not a cause of concern. Others experience gender dysphoria – the distress related to the mismatch between one’s sex and gender. It’s the reason many seek help from health-care professionals.


Read more: Explainer: what treatment do young children receive for gender dysphoria and is it irreversible?


Why the guidelines were needed

Our clinic is the largest paediatric gender service in Australia. In the last five years referrals to our service have increased tenfold. Rising referral rates have also been reported in many other countries across the Western world.

Although older international treatment guidelines exist, these are no longer fully reflective of current practices. They also focus on adults and not exclusively children and adolescents.

This is important because children and adolescents are continually developing in a social, emotional and physical sense. They also exist within the context of a family and school. So taking a developmental perspective is central to providing good care.

The new guidelines were developed in consultation with not only clinicians who work in the area of child and adolescent transgender health across Australia, but also members of the transgender community, their families, and relevant support organisations. And they draw on findings and recommendations from previous studies.


Read more: Should the family court have to approve hormone treatment for transgender teens?


What they outline

Although more research is needed, we know supportive, gender affirming care during childhood and adolescence contributes to improved mental health and well-being.

As gender diversity is an unfamiliar area for many people, the guidelines include a list of commonly used terms. Language is rapidly evolving and people may use words in different ways. An important part of providing affirming and respectful care is to understand and use inclusive language. For example, when we see young people, we often ask what name and pronouns they would like used to build rapport and affirm their gender identity.


Read more: More Australian trans stories on our TV screens, please


The guidelines also outline general principles for the care of transgender and gender diverse children and adolescents:

  • decisions about affirming a young person’s gender identity should be driven primarily by the child or adolescent, in conjunction with their family and health-care providers

  • every child or adolescent who presents with concerns about their gender identity is unique and has their own individual needs. So the options for intervention appropriate for one person might not be helpful for another

  • “conversion” or “reparative” therapies - which attempt to change someone’s gender identity to be more aligned with their sex assigned at birth - are strongly condemned.

The guidelines provide separate sections on providing care for children before and after puberty begins. This is important because the physical changes of puberty often trigger heightened distress, and support options differ.

The guidelines emphasise that providing gender-related health care to a young person requires many different approaches. This may include psychological support, social transition, voice and communication training, fertility counselling, hormonal intervention and surgery.

Many professionals may be involved, and the guidelines separately outline roles for mental health clinicians, paediatricians, endocrinologists, fertility specialists, nurses, speech therapists, GPs, bioethicists and lawyers.

But not all of these will be applicable to a given individual. It’s important to remember many transgender and gender diverse young people will choose not to access gender-related health care at all.

As a relatively new endeavour, gender-related health care for children and adolescents is surrounded by myths and misinformation. Accessing reliable, up-to-date information can be challenging for clinicians, patients and families.

We hope our guidelines ease this challenge and help young people access supportive, gender affirming care that helps them to lead happy and authentic lives.

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Carmen Pace is a member of the Australian and New Zealand Professional Association for Transgender Health. She receives funding from the Royal Children's Hospital Foundation to support research into transgender health.

Ken Pang is a member of both the Australian and New Zealand Professional Association for Transgender Health and the World Professional Association for Transgender Health, as well as a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians. He has also received funding from the Royal Children's Hospital Foundation to support research into transgender health.

Michelle Tollit has received funding from the Royal Children's Hospital Foundation to support research into transgender health.

Authors: Carmen Pace, Clinical Psychologist and Research Fellow, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute

Read more http://theconversation.com/transgender-kids-get-their-own-health-care-guidelines-98308

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