Health

Campaigners demand 'cowboy clinics' doling out powerful puberty blockers to trans children are banned in wake of bombshell report that ruled gender care is built on 'shaky foundations'


Private clinics treating transgender children must be banned after they were strongly criticised in a landmark medical review, campaigners have warned.

Ministers have pledged to ‘look carefully’ at a ban on private clinics after an independent report by expert paediatrician Dr Hilary Cass expressed concern over their behaviour.

Dr Cass’s review found GPs were ‘pressurised to prescribe hormones’ by patients who had seen a private clinician.

The report, which ran to nearly 400 pages, issued a stern warning over ‘the use of unregulated medications and of providers that are not regulated within the UK’.

And Dr Cass said GPs should resist attempts by private providers to prescribe puberty blockers or hormones, ‘particularly if that private provider is acting outside NHS guidance’.

Dr Hilary Cass's review found GPs were 'pressurised to prescribe hormones' by patients who had seen a private clinician. Pictured, Dr Cass speaking about the publication of the Independent Review of Gender Identity Services for Children and Young People, April 9

Dr Hilary Cass’s review found GPs were ‘pressurised to prescribe hormones’ by patients who had seen a private clinician. Pictured, Dr Cass speaking about the publication of the Independent Review of Gender Identity Services for Children and Young People, April 9

Dr Cass's comments have been seen as a warning shot to GenderGP, a private clinic which operates in the UK, but is based in Singapore. Run by Dr Helen Webberley (pictured), the clinic has taken a defiant stance against NHS guidance and only days ago issued a statement denouncing the NHS's ban on puberty blockers

Dr Cass’s comments have been seen as a warning shot to GenderGP, a private clinic which operates in the UK, but is based in Singapore. Run by Dr Helen Webberley (pictured), the clinic has taken a defiant stance against NHS guidance and only days ago issued a statement denouncing the NHS’s ban on puberty blockers

Puberty blockers, known medically as gonadotrophin-releasing hormone analogues, stop the physical changes of puberty in teens questioning their gender. Pictured one example of these drugs, called Triptorelina

Puberty blockers, known medically as gonadotrophin-releasing hormone analogues, stop the physical changes of puberty in teens questioning their gender. Pictured one example of these drugs, called Triptorelina

There was no good evidence to support the use of puberty blockers, with gender medicine ‘built on shaky foundations’, the review said.

Home Office minister Laura Farris said the Government was ‘looking carefully’ at the Cass review when asked whether it would legislate to ban people accessing prescriptions to gender-blocking drugs from private clinics and online.

She told Times Radio: ‘We are absolutely clear that there should not be obtaining of any drugs that haven’t been prescribed and she’s given very strong conclusions on puberty blockers.

‘So we will be looking carefully at what she said and acting accordingly.’

Campaigners said the ‘cowboy clinics’ must be closed and called on the Government to legislate against them.

Fiona McAnena, director of campaigns at charity Sex Matters, said: ‘It’s scandalous that rogue private “gender” clinics in the UK and abroad are still free to supply British children with off-label puberty blockers. 

‘Worried parents have been misled by false claims about child suicide, so they think they have no choice but to allow their children to use these powerful drugs, for which there’s zero evidence of benefit.

‘Dr Hilary Cass has done everything she can to close this dangerous loophole, including by warning GPs not to get involved in shared care with private providers. 

‘She also reminded pharmacists of their responsibility for the safety of patients and that they could be criminally liable if they fall short of professional standards.

‘Dr Cass has done her best, but shutting down cowboy clinics is beyond the scope of her review. 

‘Ministers must now act urgently, and prevent overseas and private clinics from prescribing these dangerous drugs to gender-distressed children.’

Dr Cass’s comments have been seen as a warning shot to GenderGP, a private clinic which operates in the UK, but is based in Singapore.

Run by Dr Helen Webberley, the clinic has taken a defiant stance against NHS guidance and only days ago issued a statement denouncing the NHS’s ban on puberty blockers.

A statement issued by GenderGP earlier this week read: ‘The decision by NHS England to ban puberty blockers for trans adolescents is empirically unjustified, ethically unacceptable, and is based on assumptions that are inaccurate and unsupported.

‘The systematic reviews by NICE which informed NHS England’s decision not only fail to acknowledge several relevant studies, but also use an inappropriate evaluative framework that unduly minimises several important sources of evidence.’

Last month NHS England announced it was banning the routine prescription of puberty blockers to children, following the recommendations made in Cass’s interim review.

Keira Bell (pictured) took Tavistock and Portman NHS foundation trust to the High Court, claiming she had not been challenged enough, before being prescribed puberty blockers at just 16 called it 'a step in the right direction'

Keira Bell (pictured) took Tavistock and Portman NHS foundation trust to the High Court, claiming she had not been challenged enough, before being prescribed puberty blockers at just 16 called it ‘a step in the right direction’

in a sign of changes being underway, the NHS's old Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS) at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust shut its doors two weeks ago

in a sign of changes being underway, the NHS’s old Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS) at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust shut its doors two weeks ago

In the days following the annoncement Dr Webberley said her clinic ‘GenderGP will not be following the NHS guidance, it will be following International Guidelines and best practice’.

She cited WPATH international guidelines, which were discredited in Dr Cass’s review having created ‘an apparent consensus on key areas of practice despite the evidence being poor’.

The Mail has attempted to contact Dr Webberley for comment since the publication of the Cass review.

Dr Cass said in her review: ‘GPs have expressed concern about being pressurised to prescribe hormones after these have been initiated by private providers and that there is a lack of clarity around their responsibilities in relation to monitoring.

‘The Review understands and shares the concerns about the use of unregulated medications and of providers that are not regulated within the UK.

‘Any clinician who ascertains that a young person is being given drugs from an unregulated source should make the young person and their family aware of the risks of such treatment.

‘Specifically, no clinician should prescribe outside their competence, nor should GPs be expected to enter into a shared care arrangement with a private provider, particularly if that private provider is acting outside NHS guidance.

‘The Review has been told that a number of young people have sought private provision whilst on the waiting list for GIDS, and about families trying to balance the risks of obtaining unregulated and potentially dangerous hormone supplies over the internet with the ongoing trauma of prolonged waits for assessment.

‘Feedback from the lived experience focus groups presents this as ‘a forced choice rather than a preference’.’

Dr Cass was appointed to lead a review into NHS England’s gender identity development services in 2020, after a sharp rise in the number of patients questioning their gender.

Whistleblowers had raised concerns about the standards of care offered by the service — known as Gids and based at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust.

The claims ultimately saw the Tavistock clinic closed and two replacement regional hubs in London and Liverpool opened this month (APR).

Dr Cass’s review made 32 recommendations in her final report.

Revealed: Timeline of what has happened since the Cass report was commissioned nearly four years ago

Here is a timeline of events since it the Cass report was launched almost four years ago.

2020

September: The Independent Review of Gender Identity Services for Children and Young People is commissioned by NHS England and NHS Improvement to make recommendations about NHS services for gender-questioning children and young people.

Led by Dr Hilary Cass, former president of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, it is known as the Cass Review.

NHS England says it has been established ‘in response to a complex and diverse range of issues’ including the significant rise in referrals to the Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS) at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust from just under 250 in 2011/12 to more than 5,000 in 2021/22.

October and November: The Care Quality Commission (CQC) inspects GIDS, which is the only service available in England for children and young people with gender dysphoria, also treating children and young people from Wales.

2021

January: The CQC publishes its inspection report which rates the service inadequate overall.

The watchdog says the service is difficult to access, with young people waiting more than two years for their first appointment, and that staff do not develop holistic care plans for patients, with ‘significant variations in the clinical approach of professionals’ and no clarity in records on why decisions had been made.

2022

March: Dr Cass publishes her interim report, saying a ‘fundamentally different service model is needed which is more in line with other paediatric provision’, and concluding that a sole provider of such services is ‘not a safe or viable long-term option”.

July: The NHS announces GIDS will close and be replaced with a regional network, aimed to be up and running by spring 2023.

2023

The deadline for the regional clinics to be operating is pushed back amid what NHS England describes as the ‘complex’ set-up of the ‘completely new service’. The new aim is spring 2024.

2024

March: NHS England confirms children will no longer be prescribed puberty blockers at gender identity clinics, saying there is not enough evidence to support their ‘safety or clinical effectiveness” and that they would only be available to children as part of clinical research trials.

April: New regional hubs open as the GIDS at Tavistock officially closes.

Led by London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital and Alder Hey Children’s Hospital in Liverpool, NHS England hopes they will be the first of up to eight specialist centres as part of the north and south hubs over the next two years.

The Cass Review’s final report is published.



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