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WHO Admits There Is No Scientific Evidence to Supporting 'Gender Affirming Care' On Children

The World Health Organization (WHO) admitted that there is no definite scientific evidence for recommending children to receive gender-affirming care. 

The WHO is acknowledging that its years-long push on children to undergo drastic gender-affirming care is not the best way to treat gender-confused minors. 

In fact, it is quite the opposite. Scientific findings on the long-term risk factors of child sex changes are “limited and variable.” 

The World Health Organization is currently in the process of advancing guidelines for the “health of trans and gender diverse people.” However, according to a Jan. 15 document released by the woke agency, it has declined to extend those guidelines to people under the age of 20.

“The scope [of the guidance] will cover adults only and not address the needs of children and adolescents because, on review, the evidence base for children and adolescents is limited and variable regarding the longer-term outcomes of gender-affirming care for children and adolescents. 

Democrat leaders have stressed that gender-affirming care is “medically necessary” and can be a life-saving treatment for minors who are suffering from gender dysphoria. States such as California and New York have made it a priority to identify as a “sanctuary state” and allow children to have access to puberty-blocking treatments and life-alternating surgeries. 

On the contrary, Republican-led states such as Florida, Texas, Arizona, Georgia, and Montana have all passed laws banning gender-affirming care for minors. 

Healthcare physicians in the United Kingdom, Sweden, Norway, Finland, and France have all expressed concern regarding child sex change procedures and medication. The WHO now joins this growing list. 

The WHO’s 21-member transgender Guideline Development Group only consists of eight doctors, while seven of them are transgender.