
Pock, pock, pock. That’s the sound of champagne bottles being opened throughout the West by people who care about children’s mental and physical health. They are celebrating the 338-page final report and recommendations to England’s National Health Service (NHS) by pediatrician Dr. Hilary Cass and her team, the product of a four-year investigation into the efficacy of social and medical transitioning of children diagnosed with gender dysphoria in England’s gender identity clinics and services.
Accompanied by thorough reviews of the scientific evidence to support its recommendations, the Cass Review delivers what gender-extremism critics hoped for: the conclusion that gender-affirmative medical practice is built on “remarkably weak evidence.”
