In a 2015 survey of more than 27,000 trans adults, nearly 1 in 7 said that a professional, such as a therapist, doctor, or religious adviser, had tried to make them not transgender; about half of respondents said they were minors at the time. By applying this rate to population estimates, the Williams Institute at UCLA projects that more than 135,000 trans adults nationwide have experienced some form of conversion therapy.
Despite the data, lawmakers frequently donât believe that conversion therapy is still happening in their community, says Casey Pick, director of law and policy at the Trevor Project, the LGBTQ suicide prevention group. âWeâre constantly running up against this misconception that this is an artifact of the past,â she says. So, five years ago, the Trevor Project began scouring psychologistsâ websites and books, records of public testimony, and known conversion therapy referral services, looking for counselors who said they could alter someoneâs gender identity or sexual orientation.
As the research stretched on, Pick noticed webpages being revised to reflect changing times. âWe saw many folks who seemed to leave the industry entirely,â she says. âBut others changed their website, changed their keywords, [from] talking about creating ex-gays to talking about ex-trans.â
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And in Las Vegas, Cretella drew a direct connection between the old work of the Alliance and the new work of gender-exploratory therapists. âIt truly is very similar to how the Alliance has always approached unwanted SSA [same-sex attraction],â she told the assembled therapists. âYou approach it as âchange therapyââor, even less triggering, âexploratory therapy.ââ
Conversion therapy
TL;DR: QueerAF has confirmed that leaked guidance seen by the Good Law Project is in use by NHS England. It reveals the 6000+ children currently on the waiting list for the new Children And Young Peopleâs Gender Service are being invited to have their mental health assessed. At these assessments children and their families will be advised to stop gender-affirming treatments, and that if they continue without âappropriate careâ they could face safeguarding referrals. It could result in young people being forced to medically detransition.
The projectâs star success story was a young man named Kirk Andrew Murphy, who had been caught by his father posing in the kitchen in a long T-shirt saying, âIsnât my dress pretty?â In a 1974 paper research assistant George Rekers and Lovaas described Kirk at age five as ââswishingâ around the home and clinic, fully dressed as a woman with a long dress, wig, nail polish, high screechy voice, [and] slovenly seductive eyes.â At home, Kirkâs father exchanged his sonâs red tokens for beatings with a belt, with Rekersâs approval. Eventually, Kirkâs brother Mark started hiding the red tokens to save Kirk from the abuse.
After 60 sessions in the lab, Kirk was declared cured of sissy-boy syndrome. The psychologists noted that after the treatment, the little boy was no longer upset when his hair was mussed and was eager to go on camping trips with his father. Rekers eventually published nearly 20 papers on his clientâs alleged metamorphosis, becoming one of the worldâs leading proponents of conversion therapy in the process.
Then in 2003, at age 38, after a series of unsuccessful relationships with women, Kirk died by suicide. His sister Maris told Anderson Cooper on CNN that his treatment at U.C.L.A. âleft Kirk just totally stricken with the belief that he was broken, that he was different from everybody else.â