English health system says enough to puberty blockers

Finally an action aimed at safeguarding children after a series of hyper-progressive choices good only to satisfy the LGBT religion. The satisfaction with the announcement of theNHSthe English National Health Service, which in the centers …

English health system says enough to puberty blockers

Finally an action aimed at safeguarding children after a series of hyper-progressive choices good only to satisfy the LGBT religion. The satisfaction with the announcement of theNHSthe English National Health Service, which in the centers that deal with gender dysphoria it will no longer be possible to prescribe puberty blocking drugs after the health alarms reported by experts. The body has banned the supply of the drugs to young people under 18 and they will remain available only for experimental clinical research.

The NHS decision on puberty blockers came after it commissioned the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) to review revision on gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRHa) analogues. “We concluded that there is insufficient evidence to support the safety or clinical efficacy” of the drugs to “make the treatment routinely available at this time,” the experts judged.

The search was carried out given the massive increase of the number of children referred to the Gender Identity Development Service: from 250 children in 2012 to over 5 thousand in 2022. An impressive trend, but the shocking numbers concern those who are already taking puberty blockers: more than 100 children in the United Kingdom alone. They, monitored by endocrinologists at Leeds Hospital and University College London, will be able to continue to have access to drugs through the NHS.

Spotlights on significant correlation between gender dysphoria and other developmental problems. “A significant percentage of children and youth who are concerned or distressed by gender issues experience co-existing mental health, neurodevelopmental, and/or personal, family, or social complexities in their lives,” the Washington Examiner reported.

The government welcomed the NHS decision: “We welcome this historic decision by the NHS to end the routine prescribing of puberty blockers and this guidance which recognizes that treatment must be evidence-based, ‘clinical opinion of experts and in the best interests of the child”, the words of the Minister of Health, Maria Caulfield. A correct decision, which reminds us once again of the priority of the National Health Services: to protect, support and act in the best interests of children, not to satisfy the demands of this or that community.

The instrumental protests of the rainbow galaxy have obviously not ceased. The Stonewall organization denounced that “all trans youth deserve access to timely, high-quality healthcare.” A delusion, fundamentalism in its pure state. Not anything new, considering the subjects, but it matters little: today, in the era of Taliban fury, we can celebrate a victory of common sense.

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