The Science

Gender‑affirming care is safe, effective, and grounded in decades of research. Studies across Europe and globally consistently show that transition improves health and wellbeing for trans and non‑binary people.

Many “gender‑affirming” treatments are routinely used by cis people (e.g., puberty blockers for early puberty; oestrogen/testosterone for menopause or hypogonadism; chest/breast or facial surgeries). Singling trans people out as “experimental” for the same treatments is not scientific.

Biodiversity and Variation

Biology rarely fits rigid binaries. Traits are distributed across ranges. Human sex and gender characteristics often form two overlapping clusters (typically associated with male and female ranges). This bimodal distribution explains why non‑binary identities and intersex variations fit normal human diversity.

Background on distributions: Probability distribution.

The Gender Spectrum (visual)

Two overlapping bell curves in trans flag colours illustrating trait variation with a shaded overlap labelled spectrum.
Two overlapping distributions illustrate natural variation across sex‑linked traits. The shaded region shows the overlap/spectrum. Real traits are multidimensional.

Biology and Intersex

Intersex people are born with variations in sex characteristics (chromosomes, hormones, anatomy) that do not fit typical definitions of male or female bodies. Depending on the clinical definition used, prevalence estimates range from ~0.05% to ~1.7% — that is roughly ~60,000 to ~1.1 million people in the UK.

  • Fausto‑Sterling A. (2000) Sexing the Body; Blackless M et al. (2000) Am J Hum Biol.

Gender identity is not a disorder

In 2019, the WHO’s ICD‑11 moved “gender incongruence” out of the mental disorders chapter to reduce stigma and reflect modern evidence.

Youth care is cautious and stepwise

Care typically starts with social transition and psychosocial support. Puberty blockers (GnRHa) may be offered after assessment; gender‑affirming hormones are considered later. Surgical interventions for minors are exceptionally rare in the UK.

Blockers & hormones: safety and monitoring

Blockers have decades of safe paediatric use; known risks (e.g., effects on bone accrual) are monitored and largely reversible. Supervised hormones improve quality of life and mental health.

  • Klink D et al. (2015) J Clin Endocrinol MetabEurope PMC
  • Chen D et al. (2020) NEJMEurope PMC

Mental health improves with affirmation

Transition and access to care are associated with reduced depression, anxiety, and suicidality; social affirmation is protective.

  • Wiepjes CM et al. (2018) Am J PsychiatryEurope PMC
  • White Hughto JM et al. (2015) Soc Sci MedEurope PMC

Regret is rare

Regret after transition is typically <1–3%, far lower than many elective surgeries. Satisfaction is high; when detransition happens, external pressures are common drivers.

  • Bustos VP et al. (2021) Plast Reconstr SurgEurope PMC
  • Wiepjes CM et al. (2018) Am J PsychiatryEurope PMC

Single‑sex spaces and safety

Empirical studies of nondiscrimination laws show no increase in assaults after inclusive policies; safeguarding applies to everyone.

  • Hasenbush A et al. (2019) Sex Res Soc PolicyEurope PMC
  • Roberts TA et al. (2020) Sports MedEurope PMC

On “autogynephilia”

The AGP hypothesis lacks robust empirical support and is not part of modern standards of care.

Prisons: numbers and context

Trans people are a tiny minority (~0.3%) of the prison population in England & Wales (≈295, 2024). Government does not publish a reliable breakdown of “trans sexual offenders”; public rhetoric often inflates numbers by including sex‑work‑related offences. Evidence indicates trans people in custody face elevated risks as victims.

  • HMPPS Offender Equalities Annual Reports (2023–24) — gov.uk; MoJ FOIs regarding data limitations.

Summary

Gender diversity is natural; gender‑affirming care is effective and safe when supervised; outcomes improve with access and support.