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Abstract
The number of people presenting at gender clinics is increasing worldwide. Many people
undergo a gender transition with subsequent improved psychological well-being (Paediatrics,
2014, 134, 696). However, some people choose to stop this journey, 'desisters', or
to reverse their transition, 'detransitioners'. It has been suggested that some professionals
and activists are reluctant to acknowledge the existence of desisters and detransitioners,
possibly fearing that they may delegitimize persisters' experiences (International
Journal of Transgenderism, 2018, 19, 231). Certainly, despite their presence in all
follow-up studies of young people who have experienced gender dysphoria (GD), little
thought has been given to how we might support this cohort. Levine (Archives of Sexual
Behaviour, 2017, 47, 1295) reports that the 8th edition of the WPATH Standards of
Care will include a section on detransitioning - confirming that this is an increasingly
witnessed phenomenon worldwide. It also highlights that compared to the extensive
protocols for working with children, adolescents and adults who wish to transition,
nothing exists for those working with desisters or detransitioners. With very little
research and no clear guidance on how to work with this population, and with numbers
of referrals to gender services increasing, this is a timely juncture to consider
factors that should be taken into account within clinical settings and areas for future
research.