The World Professional Association for Transgender Health said the refusal or withdrawal of HRT for trans patients raised âethical and clinicalâ concerns.
âHormones should not be stopped for political reasons or in the absence of a recognised medical issue,â a spokesperson told TBIJ. âIf GPs are withdrawing prescriptions despite recommendations, this could result in negative impacts on patients' mental and physical wellbeing.â
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The issue appears to reflect a wider rollback of access to gender-affirming healthcare in the wake of Aprilâs publication of the controversial Cass Review into health services for trans young people. This review claimed that the evidence base of using puberty blockers and gender-affirming hormones for young people was âweakâ. Some of the same medicines are used in adult care.
The review did not recommend a ban on puberty blockers but resulted in one for young people experiencing gender dysphoria (they are still permitted for children experiencing early puberty). The ban was extended by the new Labour government in August. Adult gender services are now also under review.
The World Professional Association for Transgender Health said the refusal or withdrawal of HRT for trans patients raised âethical and clinicalâ concerns.
âHormones should not be stopped for political reasons or in the absence of a recognised medical issue,â a spokesperson told TBIJ. âIf GPs are withdrawing prescriptions despite recommendations, this could result in negative impacts on patients' mental and physical wellbeing.â
In The Bureau of Investigative Journalism
The posts seen by TBIJ show Bayswater parents discussing how their treatment of their trans children has led to them being reported to social services.
One posted that a school counsellor made a referral because âmy [child] is fearful living in our home, we have refused to buy [them] certain (boys) clothes and we restrained [them]â. A subsequent post noted the child was ânot concerned that Mum and Dad have been referred to social servicesâ.
Members are aware that some of their behaviour is considered abuse. One user posted a link to an article about anti-LGBTQ+ domestic abuse, with the caption: âExamples include monitoring interaction with friends. Imagine it also includes refusal to affirm.â
Another parent sarcastically responded âYes, we are abusive!â, with the original commenter retorting: âOne day, they may thank us for that âabuseââ.
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Many Bayswater parents restrict their childrenâs internet access. âI knew the Internet was a major factor [in my childâs gender identity] so I (famously) drowned [their] iPhone in a jug of salty sugar water whilst [they were] in the shower one day,â posted one parent.
A suggested website blocklist on the forum includes LGBTQ+ charities like Mermaids and Stonewall, websites that sell binders, and even Childline, the NSPCCâs counselling service.
Heartbreaking and terrifying.
âAn amendment to the Schools Bill is being discussed in Parliament tomorrow,â read the post on an online forum run by the Bayswater Support Group, which describes itself as the UKâs only support organisation run by and for parents of trans children and young people.
âIf passed it will allow greater transparency about what is being taught in schools. We have been contacted for a short piece of evidence,â the mother said. âDoes anyone have the experience of their autistic child identifying as trans following learning about it at school? Ideally a situation where the school went onto transition the child.â
The following day, on 30 June 2022, during a parliamentary debate about relationships, sex and health education (RSHE), the Conservative MP Miriam Cates argued that learning about trans identities was damaging to children.
âOne parent of a 15-year-old with a diagnosis of Aspergerâs syndrome said she discovered that without her knowledge, her [childâs] school had started the process of socially transitioning her child, and has continued to do so despite the motherâs objections,â said Cates, who is standing again for her seat Penistone and Stockbridge, in South Yorkshire, in the upcoming election.
The story Cates told the House of Commons closely mirrored the request posted on Bayswaterâs private channel on Discord, an online message board. She even named the group during the debate, saying it had reported âa surgeâ of parents contacting Bayswater after their children learned about trans people at school.
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Bayswaterâs public concern about childrenâs safety strikes a marked contrast to posts on its Discord channel, where parents wrote of being reported to social services over ârestrainingâ their child and called a shelter for LGBTQ+ abuse survivors âa church for the gender faithfulâ. A post on the forum recommended blocking childrenâs access to the website for Childline, the NSPCCâs counselling service.