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Hannah barnes time to think
Hannah barnes time to think







hannah barnes time to think

This urgent, scrupulous and dramatic book explains how, in the words of some former staff, GIDS has been the site of a serious medical scandal, in which ideological concerns took priority over clinical practice. Was there enough clinical evidence to justify such profound medical interventions in the lives of young people who had so much else to contend with? Why had the patients changed so dramatically? Were all these distressed young people best served by taking puberty blockers and then cross-sex hormones, which cause irreversible changes to the body? While some young people appeared to thrive after taking the blocker, many seemed to become worse. The profile of the patients changed too: from largely pre-pubescent boys to mostly adolescent girls, who were often contending with other difficulties. In the same period, the number of young people seeking GIDS's help exploded, increasing twenty-five-fold. But in the last decade GIDS has referred more than a thousand children, some as young as nine years old, for medication to block their puberty. The Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS), based at the Tavistock and Portman Trust in North London, was set up initially to provide - for the most part - talking therapies to young people who were questioning their gender identity. Time to Think goes behind the headlines to reveal the truth about the NHS's flagship gender service for children. 'This is what journalism is for' - Observer









Hannah barnes time to think