At last - we have one.
First up, I want to point out that the conversation started off with this comment: 'Gender reassignment surgery is very rarely if ever going to be appropriate
for little kids.' Post 38
And was discussing genital surgery: 'When you
chop off a boys penis, what else would you call it?' Post 62
Emphasised by: 'Change “cutting penis off” with “
being sexually active at 9” and see if that still works.' Post 92
And my comment: 'if someone did find an example and I thought that there were problems with it I'd say so. These things
must be considered on an individual basis.' Post 232
So this example is not talking about genital surgery for young children. The example was for a mastectomy on a girl who was 15 at the time. She had been discussing this with her parents, and obviously her doctor, for two years. And she was adamant that she wanted to transition. Parental consent was given and a medical decision made that it would be in her best interests.
From here:
Olson-Kennedy-2018.pdf
'Transmasculine youth, who are assigned female at birth but have a gender identity along the masculine spectrum,
often report considerable distress after breast development (chest dysphoria).
Chest dysphoria was high among presurgical transmasculine youth, and surgical intervention positively affected both minors and young adults. Given these findings, professional guidelines and clinical practice should consider patients for chest surgery based on individual need rather than chronologic age.
Self-reported regret was near 0.'
I am absolutely certain that genital surgery would not have been an option at that age and that the mastectomy that she had was done in her best interests.
From here:
High levels of satisfaction, and low levels of regret, after gender affirming mastectomy
'Gender-affirming mastectomies for transmasculine and nonbinary individuals can be life changing. Recent research from the University of Michigan finds that in addition to changing lives, most patients are highly satisfied with their decision to undergo surgery longterm.
The study
published in JAMA Surgery aimed to determine how patients who received a gender affirming mastectomy at a single major health system felt about their decision years afterward.
The research showed an overwhelmingly positive response –
the median satisfaction score was a 5 on a 5-point scale, the highest possible rating.
The median decision regret score was 0.0 on a 100-point scale where lower scores mean less regret.
In another indirect measure of satisfaction, none of the patients in the study pursued a reversal of their mastectomy.'
The obvious conclusion is that her operation was done with the best interests of the girl being considered. That she changed her mind later was an
extremely rare occurrence.