Author Topic: Opposite End ? hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)  (Read 144 times)

Offline Gyno64

  • Posting Member
  • *
  • Posts: 36
Not sure who this may apply to? Or even if this is a subject correlated to this forum? But found this very interesting article. 
Found it very interesting to say the least. I can see this going in either direction?

 Hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) by age 7, and referred for autism screening by age 17.

Cole began identifying as a boy during adolescence and sought physical changes to match.
Doctors readily consented to medical intervention. They prescribed puberty blockers and testosterone at age 13. At 15, surgeons performed a double mastectomy.

But doctors didn’t address her neurological issues first. The same gender specialist who referred her for breast surgery later referred her for autism screening. Cole has described herself as being on the autism spectrum, but said she was never formally diagnosed.
Cole is now a leading campaigner against interventions to transition children with gender dysphoria.
She said many of those she knew personally when she was involved in the transgender community, as well as many of the detransitioners she knows, “are either somewhere on the autism spectrum, or they have been diagnosed with similar conditions, like ADHD.”
 
Her observations are increasingly supported by research. For at least a decade, studies have reported links among transgender identity, autism, and other neurological conditions. These connections have recently gained greater public attention.
Growing evidence of an autism–transgender link is already prompting some nations to recommend neurological screening before intervention. In America, the treatment model remains unchanged, and the predominant “affirmation” model makes the link difficult to investigate.
Autism and Gender Dysphoria

A report published this month by the British think tank Centre for Social Justice showed that autism and ADHD were “overrepresented,” or disproportionately high, among youth with gender dysphoria.
The report, citing data from the UK’s National Health Service, showed 32.4 percent of gender dysphoria referrals had an autism diagnosis, and 11.7 percent had an ADHD diagnosis.

Those numbers were 16 times higher than the national population averages for autism, and more than twice as high for ADHD. The population-wide averages for autism and ADHD in the United Kingdom are estimated at 2 percent and 5 percent, respectively. A pair of studies conducted in 2016 and 2019 indicate that autistic children are between four and seven times more likely to experience gender dysphoria or gender variance, he said. A 2019 study was conducted by researchers at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, and a 2016 study was conducted at New York University.
Nicolosi said there are several reasons for the connection, including “rigid thinking.”

For example, if a boy with autism lacks stereotypical male interests, he may doubt he is a boy and assume he must be a girl. Reading social cues is often hard for those with autism, so they may perceive same-sex peers as getting along better than they do.
“This heightens their sense of alienation from their peers,” Nicolosi said.

Cole recalled having difficulty coping with her body beginning to mature around the fourth grade, younger than most of her peers.
“The older I got, the less I associated with femininity, and I didn’t really feel like I fit in—especially with my female peers—but with my peers in general,” she said.

“It’s a common sentiment amongst people who have either ADHD or autism.”
Erin Friday, who gained national attention for successfully steering her ADHD daughter away from identifying as a transgender male, said she knows many detransitioners who are on the autism spectrum. A detransitioner is someone who had previously taken steps to transition to the opposite gender.
But most of the medical community doesn’t recognize transgender identity as a maladaptive coping mechanism, she told The Epoch Times.
They view autism and transgender identity as complementary and natural, instead of looking at causality, she said.
“This is the intersection of autism and transgenderism, like peas and carrots, it goes together,” Friday said. “They’re not even looking at ... what is the causality?”
She observed that some hospitals offering pediatric transgender care have integrated autism and gender dysphoria services.
“It’s a feeder,” she said. “So it gives an endless stream of patients.”

 
In the UK, a seminal report released last year on how the country has handled treatment of children with gender dysphoria suggested screening children for neurodevelopmental conditions, including autism and mental health issues.
That review, led by pediatrician Dr. Hilary Cass, sparked a wave of reforms, and the UK’s National Health Service all but halted the prescription of puberty blockers because there was a lack of evidence that the treatment was beneficial.
The Cass report found that young people distressed about their gender often have complex problems contributing to that distress, including mental illness, neurodiverse traits, and a variety of social problems.

 
Sweden and Finland recommend that neurodevelopmental conditions such as Autism and ADHD be addressed as part of the evaluation process for the treatment of pediatric gender dysphoria.

In the United States, however, psychological organizations prioritize “gender-affirming care” without recommending neurological screening.
Instead, most follow the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) Standards of Care, which call for individualized, age-appropriate care to “improve health and wellbeing” of youth who identify as transgender.

The organization says assisting gender dysphoric patients “may include gynecologic and urologic care, reproductive health, voice and communication therapy, mental health services (e.g., counseling, psychotherapy), and/or hormonal or surgical treatments, among others.”
WPATH does not believe an autism diagnosis should prevent “gender-affirming care.”

“There is no evidence to suggest a benefit of withholding [gender affirming medical and surgical treatments] from [transgender] people who have gender incongruence simply on the basis that they have a mental health or neurodevelopmental condition,” according to WPATH.
Likewise, a 2023 commentary appearing in the journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics said that autistic youth deserve “gender-affirming care, and an [autism spectrum] diagnosis should not prevent youth and families from providing informed consent to gender-affirming care.”
The Autistic Self-Advocacy Network said in its June newsletter that the government shouldn’t interfere with an autistic person’s decision to transition.

“They think autistic people cannot really know if we are transgender. They say we are being tricked or we are confused. They think we should not be allowed to get gender-affirming care,” the newsletter stated.
Republican lawmakers in many states have enacted bans against gender-related medical treatments on minors, with corresponding federal actions to restrict funding for such practices.
Shortly after taking office earlier this year, President Donald Trump signed an executive order stating that the federal government will not fund or promote transition-related care for children who identify as a different gender.
This spring, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released a 409-page review of medical procedures used for gender dysphoric children. The report advocates for psychotherapy as a “noninvasive alternative to endocrine and surgical interventions,” since the benefits of hormones or surgery have not been established.

“Many of these children and adolescents have co-occurring psychiatric or neurodevelopmental conditions, rendering them especially vulnerable,” the executive summary for the report states.
Addressing Underlying Issues
 
C. Alan Hopewell served in the U.S. Army as a neuropsychologist. Courtesy of C. Alan Hopewell
C. Alan Hopewell, a longtime neuropsychologist in Fort Worth, Texas, who saw gender-confused patients as far back as the 1970s, said ties between autism and gender dysphoria are difficult to investigate in the United States.
Hopewell said medically transitioning people has become a lucrative cottage industry in the medical field and most U.S. professional organizations support the affirmation model.
Researchers and professors conducting transgender studies have attracted grants “worth millions of dollars,” often leading to professional recognition, promotions, and tenure, he told The Epoch Times.
Autistic children are known to have sensory issues that affect sexual function, identity, self-concept confusion, and may cause impairment in social functioning, he said.

When neurological problems are present, the brain may have greater difficulty processing information, so people may become more easily confused when exposed to ideologies, he said.
Patients suffering from mental illness, such as borderline personality disorder, schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder, are also at risk of developing sexual confusion, he added.

In a previous interview with The Epoch Times, Cole explained that she expected to feel better as her body became more masculine. However, she did not, and she ultimately regretted her double mastectomy and began detransitioning.
Gender confusion “is always linked to some sort of difficulty or some struggle in the lives of these children,” she said.
“Their gender, their sex, their body is never the issue. It’s psychiatric; it’s emotional, and that is what needs to be focused on.”
 
 
“Individuals with autism spectrum disorder are far more likely to identify as transgender,” Joseph Nicolosi Jr., a licensed clinical psychologist and researcher in California, told The Epoch Times via email.
 
 
 

 


 
Her observations are increasingly supported by research. For at least a decade, studies have reported links among transgender identity, autism, and other neurological conditions. These connections have recently gained greater public attention.
Growing evidence of an autism–transgender link is already prompting some nations to recommend neurological screening before intervention. In America, the treatment model remains unchanged, and the predominant “affirmation” model makes the link difficult to investigate.






Offline Traveler

  • Gold Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 456
Don’t know about the validity of this report, especially since the epoch times is involved. Regret from those that surgically transitioned is extremely low, like in the 1% range according to all other studies.
Tired of being uncomfortable so other people are comfortable.

Offline gotgyne

  • Senior Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 828
Quote:

"In a previous interview with The Epoch Times, Cole explained that she expected to feel better as her body became more masculine. However, she did not, and she ultimately regretted her double mastectomy and began detransitioning.
Gender confusion “is always linked to some sort of difficulty or some struggle in the lives of these children,” she said.
“Their gender, their sex, their body is never the issue. It’s psychiatric; it’s emotional, and that is what needs to be focused on.”
 
“Individuals with autism spectrum disorder are far more likely to identify as transgender,” Joseph Nicolosi Jr., a licensed clinical psychologist and researcher in California, told The Epoch Times via email."


For this reason it is very important not to give puberty blockers and not to start any transition process before the age of 18 years. A lot of people who are not transgendered regret it bitterly later. And not to forget in MtF cases: If the male genitals can't develop properly because of puberty blockers how can a physician create a vagina? There is just not enough tissue, that the only way is a sigmoid vaginoplasty from the gut. Have you watched videos from these patients? Such a vagina stinks! It's a fact.
A bra is just an article of clothing for people with breasts.

Offline Gyno64

  • Posting Member
  • *
  • Posts: 36
No I have never watched any videos of patients under going that type of surgery. And I'm pretty sure I wouldn't care to.

I'm ADHD. Grew up with it.  I was even a Ritalin child growing up. Still have it to a fair degree. I was not in the autism end of the spectrum.
But I definitely embraced my given birth gender. Male.

I just found it interesting that in this article there is a claim to the connection between having both ADHD and Autism having and effect on a child and maybe causing gender confusion. And I feel the same as gotgyne had said. It's a very bad idea to perform a sex change on an adolescent while they are still developing physically and mentally. And Most Especially if there is some health or mental issues involved. 

Offline Traveler

  • Gold Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 456
Again, your opinion. Again, Epoch Times. Again, less than 1% percent regret surgery. Guys, when an article says “
“many” and not actual numbers it is immediately suspect. I’d suggest going to actual medical sites on transgender information and not relying on a site that has a religious bias.

Online 50/50

  • Posting Member
  • *
  • Posts: 6
We went to a comedy show a few years ago and one of the comics was 74 year old man. Best one there that night. He said the average life expectancy for men is 76 and for women 81. So he was going to transition to a woman and get a extra 5 years of life…🤣🤣

Offline bobb

  • Posting Member
  • *
  • Posts: 34
looks like someone here has all the facts and and everything else is just opinion.

Offline Gyno64

  • Posting Member
  • *
  • Posts: 36
Traveler

I think you are too abscessed with your dislike for Epoch Times to be totally fair about the content of said article. Please reread it with a more open mind. I feel your missing some of the content of the whole point of the combined ADHD and autism.   


 

SMFPacks CMS 1.0.3 © 2025