Drzavna televizija liberalne svedske....
As more and more countries, including Britain, begin to debate the rights and wrongs of pumping such powerful drugs into young bodies, the spotlight has fallen on Leo, who lives in Sweden’s capital Stockholm.
A groundbreaking investigation by the state-run television channel has revealed he is one of 13 transgender children of the 440 treated by the country’s famous Karolinska University Hospital who are known to have suffered catastrophic injuries as a result.
Their ailments include liver damage, unexplained weight gains of up to two stone, mental health problems, and — in Leo’s case — skeletal damage and a failure to grow as tall as he should.
He has spinal fractures and a condition called osteopenia, which weakens the bones, making them more liable to break. It is a disease that you often see in people aged 60 or 70 and is almost impossible to reverse.
The Swedish TV revelations, which were not denied by doctors treating Leo, caused uproar.
After the film aired, the Karolinska reported itself to the national health authorities, and announced it had stopped prescribing puberty blockers to under-18s other than in a strictly-regulated research setting approved by ethics experts.
This led to the country’s national health board curtailing the administering of blockers to under-18s, with the admission that they carry risks that outweigh the benefits.
One of Sweden’s leading paediatricians, Ricard Nergardh, has said the drugs ‘chemically castrate’ children and can harm their mental wellbeing.
The television investigation claimed the hospital — which oversees the country’s identity development services for transgender children, and operates under the acronym KIDS — has rushed through treatments without examining the psychological issues of children who feel they were ‘born into the wrong body’.
It discovered that klix as young as 14 had received double mastectomies in their quest to live as boys.
Importantly, Sweden’s health chiefs say the high-profile British case of 24-year-old Keira Bell influenced their decision to halt the use of puberty blockers.
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But Leo’s tragedy is sounding an international alarm. The TV team that exposed his plight is certain that there are more victims than the 13 they found.
Finland has announced puberty blockers should not be the treatment of first resort for children who want to change gender. Instead, they should be offered psychotherapy.
In France, the National Academy of Medicine has told doctors that the high number of young transgender children is often fuelled by the influence of social media and advised that great caution should be exercised when treating them.
The academy stressed that hormone treatments carry health risks, have permanent effects, and that it is not possible to distinguish a genuine transgender desire in an adolescent from a ‘passing phase’ that occurs during the process of growing up.
It added that many children are being pushed on to the trans pathway too quickly and that, as young adults, they wish to turn the clock back and de-transition.
But of all the nations having a re-think, liberal Sweden is the most surprising. In the decade up to 2019, Sweden saw a 1,500 per cent rise in klix between 13 and 17 suffering from gender dysphoria and requesting hormone treatment to become boys.
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Puberty blockers today are sold as a ‘pause button’ on puberty, offering a child the breathing space to reach a considered decision over whether to proceed with cross-sex hormones and sex-change surgery to achieve full transition.
Their supporters say it is better to stop puberty altogether. If you never develop a beard, you never need painful electrolysis to remove it. If you never grow breasts, you will never face a double mastectomy. But puberty blockers are powerful drugs. And very little research anywhere in the world has been done on what impact they have on a young body.
When the Swedish TV researchers took Leo’s bone density tests and X-rays to the country’s leading child hormone specialist Ola Nilsson, he was shocked at what he saw.
‘It looks as if this patient has spinal fractures and that’s serious,’ the doctor said. ‘There is cause to be worried. If you are on puberty blockers for a long time, there is a risk of bone damage,’
According to the tests, Leo’s bones had become porous, two of his vertebrae had changed shape and he was suffering from osteopenia, a forerunner to osteoporosis in which the back can become permanently curved, there is height loss, and it is easy to break your limbs.
Crucially, according to the TV investigation, his medical team had never checked his bones, although he took puberty blockers from the age of 11 to 15, double the recommended time period of two years.
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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... ldren.html
Link za ovaj slucaj:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPNSWjjAzDk
I link za njihov "trans train", takodjer drzavna televizija svedske:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJGAoNbHYzk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=73-mLwWIgwU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3WqLT9NEnU
Transfobija u svedskoj?
In 1972, Sweden became the first country in the world to allow transgender people to legally change their sex, provided free hormone therapy, and an equal age of consent was set at 18.