4.6 • 961 Ratings
🗓️ 8 February 2025
⏱️ 3 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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While healthcare is expected to be guided by evidence-based practice and individualized patient care, there seems to be a growing perception that some medical professionals may be more focused on advancing ideological influence rather than prioritizing individualized patient care.
The gender-affirming model of care functions as a streamlined path toward medical transition, often without sufficient psychological evaluation or exploration of alternatives. Many medical providers appear to follow a predetermined course rather than carefully assessing each patient’s unique circumstances. This raises serious ethical concerns about whether patients—particularly minors—are receiving the thorough, cautious care they deserve.
Additionally, the reluctance to critically discuss or debate aspects of gender medicine suggests that the field has become entangled with broader political movements. In some cases, dissenting voices, including those of detransitioners, have struggled to be heard, as their experiences challenge dominant narratives about gender-affirming care.
“It's sad that so many more parents I feel would speak out if it weren't so stigmatized to question anything related to child transition. And it makes me really sad because I know my parents have a lot they wish they could say and they just can't. And even if they did, they would be attacked and called liars, which is really sad to me.”
In this bonus episode for premium subscribers, Clementine discusses the societal and medical influences that shaped her transition, expressing concern about the growing politicization of gender medicine. While she supports the right of adults to pursue body modifications, she argues that irreversible procedures affecting bodily function should be limited to those who are fully mature and capable of making such significant decisions. She describes how stopping testosterone significantly improved her mental health, suggesting a link between high testosterone levels and psychosis in women. And she reflects on the role her family and partner played in her detransition, highlighting the importance of having someone who saw her as a person beyond identity labels.
Watch our full length episode with Clementine Breen: https://www.widerlenspod.com/p/episode-204
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0:32.2 | Now I sort of like I don't have a lot of strong like convictions of like I know what's right or what's wrong. I don't know as much as doctors obviously, but I definitely think there |
0:36.3 | are a lot of doctors who are |
0:37.8 | way too focused on their own personal, political or narrative goals or things like that. |
0:45.8 | And I think that is not a good way to base decisions in a hospital or with doctors or even |
0:52.2 | legal decisions. I think they need to factor in |
0:55.4 | all the evidence and all the research. |
0:57.6 | And, you know, I don't, with adults, I think it's definitely like something that should be |
1:03.2 | explored more. |
1:04.0 | And I don't like that any question of transition is deemed as inherently bigoted. |
1:09.4 | But also, you know, people have the right to do body modifications |
1:13.6 | if they want. I can't control what adults do. But I think it's pretty fair to say cosmetic surgeries |
1:19.5 | that impact function should be reserved for adults. I think that's a very, very reasonable position. |
1:29.7 | Our producer asked this really great question. |
1:32.3 | You know, you talked in the full episode about how, or when you stop testosterone, |
1:37.3 | a lot of your mental health problems got way, way better. |
1:40.7 | And she asked, like, do you think that was like purely a biological thing, like from the testosterone? |
1:46.1 | Do you think it was also about kind of giving up this attempt to become something? |
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