Appeal judges hear NHS trust’s challenge to landmark judgment on gender reassignment for under-16s

A landmark judgment that children under the age of 16 considering gender reassignment are unlikely to be mature enough to give informed consent to be prescribed puberty-blocking drugs undermined their entitlement to make decisions for themselves and was based on “partisan expert evidence”, the court of appeal has heard.

Tavistock and Portman NHS trust, which runs NHS England’s only gender identity development service for children, is challenging a high court ruling last year in a case brought against the service by Keira Bell, a 24-year-old woman who began taking puberty blockers when she was 16 before detransitioning. The other applicant was the unnamed mother of a teenage autistic girl on the waiting list for treatment.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Sad girl novels: the dubious branding of women’s emotive fiction

When women write complex characters, filled with desire, anger or self-destructive urges,…

Pension help for middle-class workers as Hunt ‘plans to raise cap in budget’

Chancellor reportedly planning to increase £40,000 annual limit and lifetime allowance Jeremy…

Regional museums break ranks with UK government on return of Benin bronzes

Aberdeen says it will repatriate a bust while Cambridge museum has ‘expectation’…