I have to admit that itās breaking my heart to watch a new generation of anxious parents think that they can address the struggles their kids are facing by eliminating technology from kidsā lives. Iāve been banging my head against this wall for almost 20 years, not because I love technology but because I care so deeply about vulnerable youth. And about their mental health. And boy oh boy do I loathe moral panics. I realize theyāre politically productive, but they cause so much harm and distraction.
I wish there was a panacea to the mental health epidemic we are seeing. I wish I could believe that eliminating tech would make everything hunky dory. (I wish I could believe many things that are empirically not true. Like that there is no climate crisis.) Sadly, I know that what young people are facing is ecological. As a researcher, I know that young peopleās relationship with tech is so much more complicated than pundits wish to suggest. I also know that the hardest part of being a parent is helping a child develop a range of social, emotional, and cognitive capacities so that they can be independent. And I know that excluding them from public life or telling them that they should be blocked from what adults values because their brains arenāt formed yet is a type of coddling that is outright destructive. And it backfires every time.
Iām also sick to my stomach listening to people talk about a āgender contagionā as if every aspect of how we present ourselves in this world isnāt socially constructed. (Never forget that pink was once the ultimate sign of masculinity.) Young people are trying to understand their place in this world. Of course theyāre exploring. And I want my children to live in a world where exploration is celebrated rather than admonished. The mental health toll of forcing everyone to assimilate to binaries is brutal. I paid that price; I donāt want my kids to as well.
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Please please please center young people rather than tech. They need our help. Technology mirrors and magnifies the good, bad, and ugly. Itās what makes the struggles young people are facing visible. But it is not the media effects causal force that people are pretending it is.
Social contagion
The American Psychological Association and 61 other health care providersā organizations signed a letter in 2021 denouncing the validity of rapid-onset gender dysphoria (ROGD) as a clinical diagnosis. And a steadily growing body of scientific evidence demonstrates that it does not reflect transgender adolescentsā experiences and that āsocial contagionā is not causing more young people to seek gender-affirming care. Still, the concept continues to be used to justify anti-trans legislation across the U.S.
āTo even say itās a hypothesis at this point, based on the paucity of research on this, I think is a real stretch,ā says Eli Coleman, former president of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health. Coleman helped create the organizationās most recent standards of care for trans people, which endorse and explain the evidence for forms of gender-affirming care.