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Healthcare Professionals’ Conflicts When Treating Transgender Youth: Is It Necessary to Prioritize Protection Over Respect?

Maximiliane Hädicke, Manuel Föcker, Georg Romer, Claudia Wiesemann

2022Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Increasingly, transgender minors are seeking medical care such as puberty-suppressing or gender-affirming hormone therapies. Yet, whether these interventions should be performed at all is highly controversial. Some healthcare practitioners oppose irreversible interventions, considering it their duty to protect children from harm. Others view minors, like adults, as transgender individuals who must be protected from discrimination. The underlying ethical question is presented as a problem of priority. Is it primarily relevant that minors are involved? Or should decision makers focus on the fact that they treat transgender individuals ? The paper explores the relevance for medical practice. We provide results of an interview study with German healthcare professionals. We discuss the general question whether prioritization among different group memberships of the same person is ethically defensible. We conclude that priority conflicts between group memberships of the same person can be deceptive and should be addressed by an intersectional approach. Eventually, we discuss practical implications.

Topics & Concepts

TransgenderPsychological interventionHarmHealth careRelevance (law)DutyPsychologyDuty to protectHealth professionalsMedicineNursingSocial psychologyPolitical scienceLawPsychoanalysisEthics and Legal Issues in Pediatric HealthcareEthics in medical practiceMedical and Health Sciences Research
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