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== Putting the ex-gay and ex-ex-gay material into the appropriate sections. ==

There is a long list of ex-ex-gay people in this article, but a short list of ex-gay people. Most of the ex-gay people are on the ] page. To be balanced, shouldn't there just be a short summary of ex-ex-gay people on this page and put the longer, more detailed list on the ] page, as is done for ex-gay? I also noticed that the section on scandals in ex-gay camps is duplicated both on this page and on the ex-gay page. Could there be a summary here and leave the main section on the ex-gay page? ] (]) 22:14, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
:I am reiterating this request. ] (]) 08:01, 20 May 2008 (UTC)
::Be ]. ] (]) 15:40, 22 June 2008 (UTC)

== Moved Germany section from article ==

Moved from article. It's unclear what this means and what the legal effect of this is, and an English-language source should be provided if possible. I googled this but didn't find much.
<blockquote>
In ] all parties of the german ] are against Conversion therapy. The german executive wrote, that Conversion therapy is dangerous and that homosexuality is no reason for conversion therapy. ]/] against conversion therapies]
</blockquote>
] (]) 14:50, 23 March 2008 (UTC)

I included a paragraph in this article about the study that was conducted in the US and the results that found that reorientation therapy does make a change in the majority of patients. ] (]) 00:38, 12 April 2008 (UTC)

== A client interested in conversion therapy has the right to seek it ==

The following was removed from the lead: "a client interested in conversion therapy has the right to seek it." Why? It follows what all major medical organizations have said:
*From the American Psychological Association: "Mental health professional organizations call on their members to respect a person’s (client’s) right to self-determination." The President clarified this in saying "The APA has no conflict with psychologists who help those distressed by unwanted homosexual attraction."
*From the American Counseling Association: "It is of primary importance to respect a client's autonomy to request a referral for a service not offered by a counselor."
*From the American Psychiatric Association: "Psychologists respect the dignity and worth of all people, and the rights of individuals to privacy, confidentiality, and self-determination."
*From the World Health Organization: "The gender identity or sexual preference (heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, or prepubertal) is not in doubt, but the individual wishes it were different because of associated psychological and behavioural disorders, and may seek treatment in order to change it."
I see no evidence anywhere where a client does not have the right to get conversion therapy. I know from personal experience that you can legally get it from licensed psychologists with full approval of the APA. All they have ever done is officially express concern. The way it is currently written is misleading and either needs to be fixed or removed from Good Article Status. ] (]) 17:55, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
:None of the sources you mention refer to a "right to seek" conversion therapy -- you're making an interpretative leap. It is true that conversion therapy is legal and that the American Psychological Association does not say that conversion therapy is ''per se'' unethical (in contrast, the American Psychiatric Association "recommends that ethical practitioners refrain from attempts to change individuals' sexual orientation"). The article can and should say as much. ] (]) 21:20, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
::The WHO source does. "the individual ... may seek treatment in order to change it." As for the other sources, how do you think would be non-POV way to put it? All of these quotes are from documents that are specifically addressing conversion therapy and are related to them. Psychologists are called upon to respect a client's right to self-determine their goals to change their sexual orientation within therapy? It is of primary importance to respect a client's autonomy to request a referral for a service not offered by a counselor such as conversion therapy? You also removed the direct quote "Mental health professional organizations call on their members to respect a person’s (client’s) right to self-determination." saying it was taken out of context. How was that taken out of context? Could we just have that sentence? ] (]) 21:36, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
:::First, I'll respond specifically to each of the sources you cited:
::::(1) The ACA language is taken out of context: the ACA goes on to say that "To refer a client to someone who engages in conversion therapy communicates to the client that his/her same-sex attractions and behaviors are disordered and, therefore, need to be changed. This contradicts the dictates of the 2005 ACA Code of Ethics" and that "Considering all the above deliberation, the ACA Ethics Committee strongly suggests that ethical professional counselors do not refer clients to someone who engages in conversion therapy or, if they do so, to proceed cautiously only when they are certain that the referral counselor fully informs clients of the unproven nature of the treatment and the potential risks and takes steps to minimize harm to clients..."
:::::"if they do so" implies that they can. They go on to say "The responsibility of counseling professionals at this juncture is to help clients make the most appropriate choices for themselves without the counselor imposing her/his values. To do so respects a client's request and leaves open the possibility that the client can return to the professional counselor if the conversion therapy is ineffective and harms the client." and further "if clients still decide that they wish to seek conversion therapy as a form of treatment, counselors should also help clients understand what types of information they should seek from any practitioner who does engage in conversion therapy. The Committee members agree that counselors who offer conversion therapy are providing "treatment that has no empirical or scientific foundation." I'm not saying they don't advise against it. I am saying they allow counselors to practice it and they respect the client's right to seek conversion therapy, and after all the other conditions they have outlined, it is that right to seek it that "is of primary importance." ] (]) 23:55, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
::::(2) The American Psychiatric Association specifically "recommends that ethical practitioners refrain from attempts to change individuals' sexual orientation."
:::::Recommendation to refrain does not nullify "rights of individuals to privacy, confidentiality, and self-determination." You cut off the addition "keeping in mind the medical dictum to First, do no harm." Going against a patient's autonomy is harmful. ] (]) 23:55, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
::::(3) The WHO language is, as we and other have discussed before on this talk page, exceptionally confusingly written. It is not clear whether "may" is ''prescriptive'' of what the person's options should be, or ''descriptive'' of what the condition itself is.
:::::I didn't agree with you then and I don't agree with you now. India seems to have the same interpretation as I do. Since there is disagreement, their statement can't be so readily applied, but at the same time, it can't be so readily ignored. ] (]) 23:55, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
::::(4) The American Psychological Association's language is quoting a general ethical maxim without specifically elaborating on its application in this context (perhaps because there isn't a consensus amongst the drafters as to how it applies in this context). Your interpretation is plausible, but so is the interpretation that the guideline here functions to prohibit therapists from advocating conversion therapy to clients who do not want it.
:::::It is not some general ethical maxim. It is in the section "What about therapy intended to change sexual orientation from gay to straight?" They are specifically talking about conversion therapy. You suggested that it was a prohibition "from advocating conversion therapy to clients who do not want it." It is both. Not only one side gets the right to self-determination. If I want it, I can get it. If I don't, you can't force me to. That is respecting a client's autonomy. It does not just work one way. The statement "The APA has no conflict with psychologists who help those distressed by unwanted homosexual attraction" clearly applies to conversion therapy and a client's right to seek it. ] (]) 23:55, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
:::Stepping back, it's very difficult to craft a short (i.e., lead-appropriate) summary of the nuances of the ethical guidelines related to conversion therapy. I think that the following language would do it: "The ethics guidelines of major U.S. mental health organizations vary from cautionary statements about the safety, effectiveness, and dangers of prejudice associated with conversion therapy that do not state that such therapy is ''per se'' unethical (American Psychological Association) to recommending that ethical practitioners refrain from using conversion therapy (American Psychiatric Association) or referring patients to others who do (American Counseling Association)." ] (]) 22:34, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
::::But that would over-emphasize one aspect of it and completely ignore all of the above statements. They allow it. Every single one of them do, and each of them emphasize the right of the client to his or her own self-determination. The current explanation is biased, and seem relentlessly intent on maintaining that bias. It doesn't have to be my wording, but it should not be a selective collection of negative statements about conversion therapy. That is POV.] (]) 23:55, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
:::::I'd be happy with the following summary in the lead: "The ethics guidelines of major U.S. mental health organizations vary from cautionary statements about the safety, effectiveness, and dangers of prejudice associated with conversion therapy (American Psychological Association) to recommending that ethical practitioners refrain from using conversion therapy (American Psychiatric Association) or referring patients to others who do (American Counseling Association). The organizations do, however, respect the client's right to self-determination." I think that respects the nuances of the positions, draws attention to the tension between them and the right to self-determination ("however"), and avoids giving an unsourced interpretation of what "respecting the client's right to self-determination" means in this context. ] (]) 01:24, 27 March 2008 (UTC)
::::::I'm alright with that for the lead. ] (]) 01:50, 27 March 2008 (UTC)

== Medication Studies? ==

It's unfortunate that this has had a religious focus that makes some people upset. As someone not on the "religious right" I'm concerned with people's mental health. I don't think it's prejudicial to observe that when you can't stand to be in your body, there's something wrong. I'm interested in knowing any valid, honest information on any studies in the area of medication or non-religious psychotherapy for the psychological discomfort described in transgender disorder cases.Anybody got any data, minus political posturing? ] (]) 14:09, 31 March 2008 (UTC)

Well, it sounds like you are attempting to refer to]. I've never heard of someone using conversion therapy to cure them. Read through that page and see if that answers your questions.] (]) 13:17, 6 April 2008 (UTC)

== Camille Paglia ==

The article currently reads, 'Support for conversion therapy has even been found among gay activists. Camille Paglia, a lesbian activist, wrote in her book Tramps and Vamps, "Is the gay identity so fragile that it cannot bear the thought that some people may not wish to be gay? Sexuality is highly fluid and reversals are theoretically possible."'

This gives a somewhat misleading idea of Paglia's views. She was criticising the extreme reaction of some gay people to some people's decision to try to change, not necessarily advocating conversion therapy. The reference to Paglia connects to an article on NARTH's website, which includes some quotes from ''Vamps and Tramps'', notably not including this, on page 78: 'The injustice and impracticality are in trying to "convert" totally from homosexuality to heterosexuality, an opposition I think false.' The description of Paglia as an 'activist' is also rather off. Actually she is a literary scholar. ] (]) 23:10, 26 April 2008 (UTC)
:Good point. I have removed reference to her advocating conversion therapy and her being a gay activist. ] (]) 23:00, 29 April 2008 (UTC)
::The current version is an improvement, however, it could perhaps be modified further. It still seems a little odd to say that Paglia does not oppose 'conversion therapy' when she wrote that attempting to 'convert' is unjust and impractical. More detail could help to clarify things. ] (]) 23:22, 29 April 2008 (UTC)
:::She said the injustice and impracticality are in trying to convert ''totally from homosexuality to heterosexuality''. Most modern supporters of conversion therapy agree with that. She is in favor of freedom of choice, a notable distinction from some of the more vocal gay activists. ] (]) 17:24, 30 April 2008 (UTC)

== Conversion therapy is not a pseudoscience ==
If conversion therapy were a pseudoscience, then the APA wouldn't allow physicians to practice it under their licenses, have presentations at their conferences on it, and publish guidelines on how to do it. The official statement by the APA includes the quote: "APA encourages and supports research in the NIMH and the academic research community to further determine "reparative" therapy's risks versus its benefits." The APA wouldn't support research into pseudo science. The only evidence of it being a pseudoscience is a paper written back in the 1990's by gay psychologist Dr. Haldeman, who has since written a paper supporting the right of a client to seek it professionally. Yes, they discourage it, warn of potential harms including a harmful environment and have found several faults in the premises surrounding reparative therapy, but that doesn't mean it is a pseudoscience. You need to find an official source saying mainstream organizations consider it a pseudoscience or remove it from the pseudoscience category. ] (]) 20:33, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:APA and ACA do not condone this practice. It is a Pseudoscience, as defined . Furthermore, it is clarified to be so in this article, in several sections, including "Mainstream medical view in the U.S." ] <sup> ]</sup> 22:43, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::Misplaced Pages is not a reliable source. There is extensive debate and the APA does condone it, even publishing guidelines as defined . (Notice how I am using an outside source?) ] (]) 23:19, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:::That reads as a clear stance against conversion therapy. ] <sup> ]</sup> 23:23, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::::It's entitled "Appropriate Therapeutic Responses to Sexual Orientation". They are guidelines on how to do appropriately. I didn't say they were in favor of conversion therapy, but they do provide information on how to do it appropriately. ] (]) 23:33, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:As far as I know, none of the major mental health organizations have called conversion therapy, ''as it is practiced by certain people today'', "pseudoscience". However, the history of conversion therapy goes back over a hundred years, and many of the methods that have been used (see ] and with the subsequent historical sections) throughout most of the history of conversion therapy are uncontroversially "pseudoscience." This suggests that the category is appropriate. ] (]) 19:59, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
:::Nothing is uncontroversially pseudo-science, because this term has no clear definition. It probably should not be used at all. ] (]) 22:40, 28 May 2008 (UTC)
::I think what is practiced today is more important than the pseudoscience of yesteryear. That certainly isn't pseudoscience, because it is practiced by people with licenses. ] (]) 07:54, 20 May 2008 (UTC)
:::If a therapist uses concepts from ] or ] in her/her therapeutic model, does the APA automatically revoke the therapist's license? If not, does this mean that the APA endorses astrology and the I Ching as rigorous science?
:::I think not; the APA would be quick to point out that astrology and I Ching are psudosciences with little or no empirical basis.
:::By the same token, the mere fact that the APA does not swoop in and automatically revoke the licenses of therapists embracing conversion therapy does not mean that it is therefore regarded as valid science, or that the entire model is not motivated, at its root, by a singular aversion to the very existence of mentally healthy gay and lesbian people.] (]) 02:55, 28 May 2008 (UTC)
::::Please provide some evidence that the comparison of conversion therapy's concepts to those of astrology is correct. There's no point in making the comparison if you cannot back it up. ] (]) 22:54, 28 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::This is a refutation to the argument that "since the APA does not always revoke licenses of therapists practicing conversion therapy, conversion therapy is therefore not a pseudoscience." ] perceived it as a positive argument that conversion therapy is a pseudoscience like astrology. This is a ].
:::::The evidence I need to support the refutation is the existence of one or more therapists who use pseudoscience in their practices, yet who don't have their licenses automatically revoked by the APA.
:::::If the existence of Dr. Jeanette's license is proof enough for you that astrology is not pseudoscience, then you may argue out of conviction that the existence of a reparative therapist's license proves that reparative therapy is, likewise, not pseudoscience.
:::::This falsifies the argument that reparative therapy is not pseudoscience ''simply because'' such therapists are allowed to practice.] (]) 05:52, 30 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::There is no good argument that conversion therapy is a pseudo-science, and nor, I think, is there a good argument that 'pseudo-science' has any clear or useful meaning. ] (]) 01:43, 31 May 2008 (UTC)
(Outdent) No one has presented any reliable sources showing that there's a consensus that conversion therapy as practiced by certain people today is pseudoscientific -- debates about licensing, etc., seem inapt -- the standard is ]. However, there ''are'' reliable sources stating that conversion therapy, as practiced throughout most of its history, is pseudoscientific. That seems sufficient to put this article in the pseudoscience category for navigational purposes. (Joshua's response to this argument above doesn't really have much meat to it.) ] (]) 20:38, 30 May 2008 (UTC)
:This isn't a good argument. If conversion therapy per se isn't a pseudo-science, then it does not belong in the pseudo-science category. Nor is it true that there is good evidence that conversion therapy as practiced in the past was pseudo-scientific either. It may not have been good science, it may even have been very poor science, but it wasn't necessarily 'pseudo-science', unless you're going to use that term for what happens whenever a scienist opens his or her mouth and gets it wrong. ] (]) 01:43, 31 May 2008 (UTC)
:I'll fess up that my whole discussion above does not satisfy ] and might even be "original research" if not downright argumentativeness. Still, I think it's now clear that ] argument above that "If conversion therapy were a pseudoscience, then the APA wouldn't allow physicians to practice it under their licenses ..." is invalid, on the grounds that one cannot disprove the proposition that any particular practice is pseudoscience simply by pointing out that some licensed therapists are allowed to practice it. ] (]) 06:28, 31 May 2008 (UTC)
::There are numerous reasons why it would be wrong to label conversion therapy a 'pseudo-science.' 'Pseudo-science' is often used to mean something that claims to be science but is not. Therapies are activities or practices, which may be based on scientific theories of some sort but are not themselves claimed to be 'science.' Since therapy itself is not claimed to be a science, the label pseudo-science cannot apply. It would be like calling baseball a pseudo-science. ] (]) 08:04, 31 May 2008 (UTC)
:::If that is the case, then any valid arguments which may support the thesis that conversion therapy is not pseudoscience should be listed. The fact that some therapists are sometimes allowed by the APA to practice conversion therapy is not one of those valid arguments. Therapy may be an art, but psychology is a science, and homosexuality is not considered an illness in the psychological community. ] (]) 06:49, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
(unidented)There are a lot of points to respond to. Let's see if I can get them all:
#] argues "that conversion therapy, as practiced throughout most of its history, is pseudoscientific." In high school, my chemistry teacher said that 90% of what he was teaching us was going to be disproved in our life times. Does that make chemistry pseudoscientific? Until 1992, any form of homosexuality was considered a mental illness by the World Health Organization. Is it any surprise that theories presented by conversion therapist followed modern, mainstream thinking and indicated that same sex attractions stemmed from a mental illness? Hind-sight is 20-20. Science changes. Let's get over the past. Conversion therapy as practiced 20 years ago, relied on the mainstream thinking of 20 years ago. That is hardly pseudo-scientific.
#The way I am interpreting ]'s argument, (s)he thinks conversion therapy as practiced today should be considered a pseudo science because homosexuality is not an illness. There are two problems with this argument. (1) Just because someone wants to diminish homosexual attractions doesn't mean they think it is an illness. Many modern approaches, such as ] focus on aligning sexual behaviors with internal values. That has nothing to do with thinking it is an illness. (2) (S)he said "homosexuality is not considered an illness in the psychological community." We aren't talking about ] homosexuality, but ]. That is indeed considered a mental illness according to the ], not that I necessarily believe that. Even the DSM has a diagnosis for persistent and marked distress about one’s sexual orientation.
#Both have argued that my argument that because licensed psychologists practice it doesn't mean it isn't pseudoscientific. That may be true, but I still think it is a good indicator.
#No one has addressed my argument that why would the APA hold a conference and allow ] to be presented at it if it were based on sound psychology?
#What reliable sources have been presented that indicate it is pseudoscientific? ] (]) 08:46, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
::I think either Joshuajohanson or I may have conflated two arguments. I have not stated a position on whether or not conversion therapy is a pseudoscience. I have only made the argument that the very existence of reparative therapists does not logically disprove the pseudoscientific status of reparative therapy, which refutation I believe Joshuajohanson was trying to make when he started this talk-page section.
::Some people certainly do hold the opinion that reparative therapy offers more lasting benefit to clients who are ego-dystonic than affirmative therapy would. We must accept the fact that some people believe this. In view of the fact that the article is about reparative therapy, and not about the status of gays and lesbians in the world, it seems suitable (and encyclopedic) to reference any experts who people in this field may consider notable, as long as those references are up-to-date, and where equally suitable refutations are also referenced. However, it would be ] to give the pro-reparative argument equal weight--and, indeed, the article does not. ] (]) 10:37, 5 June 2008 (UTC)

=="Gay and lesbian" vs. "homosexual"==
I reverted a series of major changes by ]&nbsp;(]&nbsp;'''·''' ]), who purged the article of "gay" and "lesbian" and replaced with "homosexual" and who has made accusations of NPOVness about at least one other editor objecting to the change. "Homosexual" is becoming recognized as a derogatory term among gays and lesbians. From : "Offensive Terminology to Avoid: Please use "lesbian" or "gay man" to describe people attracted to members of the same sex." Skoojal claimed that reverting away from "homosexual" was just "political correctness", but this is incorrect. Per ]:
<blockquote></p>Terminology must be neutral. Derogatory terms are not to be tolerated in a category name under any circumstances, and should be added to the list of speedy deletion criteria. Note that neutral terminology is not necessarily the most common term — '''a term that the person or their cultural group does not accept for themselves is not neutral even if it remains the most widely used term among outsiders.'''</p></blockquote>
It is therefore clear that WP guidelines indicate that the most appropriate terms to use are "gay" and "lesbian." ] (]) 23:28, 12 May 2008 (UTC)
:The term 'homosexual' is not derogatory, whatever some gays and lesbians may think (other gays, including me, don't have a problem with it). 'Homosexual' is a neutral and accurate term for people attracted to the same sex, just as heterosexual is a neutral and accurate term for people attracted to the opposite sex (and I note that eaolson isn't objecting to 'heterosexual' or complaining that it is somehow derogatory, which logically it should be if 'homosexual' is bad). There is no reason why this article has to use what one particular homosexual organization considers appropriate language: GLAAD does not speak for the homosexual 'cultural group' as a whole. ] (]) 23:35, 12 May 2008 (UTC)
::Should I assume that because no one has responded to my comments above there is no further disagreement and that I should go ahead and edit the article again? Really, I think that if someone is going to call the word 'homosexual' derogatory they should try harder than eaolson has. ] (]) 22:52, 13 May 2008 (UTC)
*First, I disagree with your statement that if "homosexual" is offensive then "heterosexual" must therefore also be derogatory. If political groups start using "heterosexual" to make straight people sound clinically disordered, then I might agree. If you can show me a major straight-rights advocacy group asking that the term not be used, I'll have no objection to "heterosexual" being changed to "straight." In fact, I don't really have any objection anyway. Descriptive adjectives for the majority group are very rarely derogatory, mainly because they are in the majority, the "normal" group.
:The question isn't whether the word is inaccurate. Words have connotations and we should be sensitive to them, just how "Eskimo" isn't used on Misplaced Pages, regardless of its accuracy. You won't find many people objecting to "Caucasian" but I'd be very careful using the clinical term "Negroid" if I were you.
:Simply put, "homosexual" isn't generally how the gay and lesbian community describes itself. As examples:
:# GLADD. Self-evident from the fact they request the media not use the term. (see above)
:# : Describes itself as the "award-winning '''LGBT''' news site."
:# : "...the largest civil rights organization working to achieve equality for '''gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender''' Americans..."
:# : lists among its goals, "Lift the ban preventing '''gays, lesbians and bisexuals''' from serving openly and honestly in the military."
:# : "a precedent-setting television destination dedicated to serving the country's '''gay and lesbian''' audience."
:# : the new '''lesbian & gay''' network from MTV Networks
:Those are just examples I pulled entirely at random from all the major gay and lesbian media and web presences I could quickly think of. I didn't cherry-pick; I couldn't actually find a ''single'' use of the word "homosexual."
:Your claim that "GLAAD does not speak for the homosexual 'cultural group' as a whole" is an impossible to meet standard, as there can never be a group that speaks for the whole of any cultural group whether it centers on race, religion, or sexual orientation. And it's not just one group. As far as I can tell, it's basically every media presence, with the exception of some obviously conservatives ones like WorldNetDaily that can't even use the term "gay" without putting it in scare quotes. From our very own article ]:
:<blockquote>Same-sex oriented people seldom apply these terms to themselves, and public officials and agencies often avoid them... The Guardian Style Guide, Newswatch Diversity Style Guide, The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, and the Committee on Lesbian and Gay Concern of the American Psychological Association's Avoiding Heterosexual Bias in Language agree that "gay" is the preferred term... People with a same-gender sexual orientation generally prefer the terms gay, lesbian and bisexual.</blockquote>
:I stand by my claim that "gay" and "lesbian" should be the preferred terms. ] (]) 23:47, 13 May 2008 (UTC)
:::Some factual knowledge about the history of the word 'homosexual' may be helpful here. There's a good article about this by Jim Burroway over at the Box Turtle Bulletin website http://www.boxturtlebulletin.com/page/2. It describes how the word 'homosexual' was coined by Karl-Maria Kertbeny, an early supporter of what is now often called gay rights, as a neutral term to describe people sexually attracted to their own sex.
:::The term 'homosexual' is standardly used in scholarly and academic discussion of people who are attracted to the same sex, which it certainly would not be if it were derogatory. It is used this way by both supporters and opponents of the gay movement. The fact that some gay groups think that the word 'homosexual' is derogatory does not make this true. They may happen not to like the word 'homosexual', or even be uncomfortable with it, but that's an entirely different matter. ] (]) 00:14, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
This remains an issue wherein the terminology on articles should only be changed through ]. It appears that current consensus on wikipedia is not in favor of replacing "gay" and "lesbian" with "homosexual." Consider building consensus prior to making such changes on articles. ] <sup> ]</sup> 01:25, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
:::'There has to be a consensus' is an argument one can always resort to if one has nothing better. The majority opinion may prefer 'gay' and 'lesbian', but these terms are not neutral, and the very fact that many homosexuals insist on them shows as much. ] (]) 04:05, 14 May 2008 (UTC)

::* Yes, and in the early days of the gay rights movement the term "homophile" was used. We don't use it anymore. The word "fairy" was used in a non-insulting way in the 1920s. We don't use that one anymore, either. I'm not saying "homosexual" was inappropriate for the 19th century. I'm not saying it's inaccurate, I'm just saying it's not the preferred usage. Terms change. The very ''reason'' "homosexual" is not preferred is that it is unnecessarily clinical. Go take a look at or . One thing you'll ''never'' find there is the word "gay" used, it's always "homosexual" this and "homosexual" that. That's not a coincidence. That's a very intentional use of a clinical word to imply some sort of disorder.
::Again, the WP guideline is to refer to a group as how they generally refer to ''themselves'', not how outsiders refer to them. Furthermore, I think this is analagous to the British/American spelling edit wars that go on. WP guidelines are to leave those as they were initially without a significant reason to change them from one to the other. Maybe you can suggest why it's necessary to change all uses of "gay" to "homosexual" in this article? ] (]) 01:26, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
::* In response to the interesting boxturtlebulletin article, let me submit this link from , a fairly prominent gay blogger:
::<blockquote><p>As a gay guy, the use of the word homosexual is downright messed up. The word homosexual is now often considered derogatory by gays, partly because the word is used incessantly by the religious right for the express purpose of denigrating gays (the word can sound dirty and clinical). </p></blockquote> ] (]) 01:30, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
::Your use of the word 'we' suggests that all homosexuals agree that the word 'homosexual' should not be used. This is not true. Remember that I'm a homosexual and I don't agree with you. The fact that most homosexuals do not prefer the word 'homosexual' does not make it either derogatory or insulting and is not a valid reason for not using it. The fact that the words 'homosexual' and 'heterosexual' are clinical is what makes them appropriate to an article about a scientific subject. Insisting on politically correct rather than scientifically correct language is a violation of neutral point of view.

::Incidentally, you aren't describing accurately the changes I made - I did not remove all uses of the word gay from the article. Not only did I not remove it from direct quotes, which unquestionably would have been wrong, I also did not remove several other instances of the word (in one case, I removed it, but on further reflection decided that I shouldn't have done that and put it back in again). I accept that it may be appropriate within certain contexts, eg to describe gay affirmative therapy. It just shouldn't be used in general. ] (]) 04:19, 14 May 2008 (UTC)

::Another point. There is a substantial group of homosexuals who generally don't want to be called 'gay.' These are homosexuals who regard homosexuality as wrong and want to change their orientation. Why should their feelings and sensitivities count for less than those of homosexuals who are happy being homosexual? Using the word 'gay' rather than 'homosexual' is a way of siding with homosexuals who are happy being homosexual against those who are not. Must it be pointed out that a neutral article shouldn't do this?] (]) 04:34, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
:::It appears that the group of people who are homosexual but prefer the label "gay" currently outnumber those who are homosexual and prefer that label. ] <sup> ]</sup> 04:44, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
::::This may be true, but how is it relevant? That's not a convincing response to my point above, which I consider a strong argument for limiting the use of the term 'gay.' ] (]) 04:49, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::Ultimately you will need to work to build consensus. I don't think this argumentative approach is likely to do that. Your perception of your argument being strong does not necessarily change any minds. ] <sup> ]</sup> 04:52, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::Argument about article content is what talk pages are for. Can I ask why my arguments haven't changed your mind? ] (]) 04:56, 14 May 2008 (UTC)

==Misrepresentation of the use of the term reparative therapy==
I think this article fails to point out the fact that most therapists actually practicing conversion therapy prefer the term reparative therapy. The article currently states "The label conversion is often preferred over reparative, as the latter suggests that same-sex desire is something which can or should be repaired." This is certainly true for opponents of conversion therapy. However, advocates of conversion therapy tend to use the term reparative therapy, which the article does not currently state. If you actuatly go to the NARTH website you will see that their literature tends to use this term.] (]) 02:56, 15 May 2008 (UTC)
:Please see my post below - 'The first sentence of this article' - on why this is a mistake. Reparative therapy is only one kind of conversion therapy. The misrepresentation (it is you who is engaging in it) is using these terms as synonyms.] (]) 22:42, 16 May 2008 (UTC)

==Sexual activity versus Sex==

This article frequently uses the expression 'sexual activity' where plain old fashioned 'sex' would be better. I propose to replace 'sexual activity' with 'sex', which means the same thing and has eleven fewer letters. If there are no objections within the next two days, I will assume that no one disagrees or can suggest a reason why I shouldn't do this, and will go ahead. ] (]) 08:53, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
:Actually I only see it used three times, and each circumstance would be clumsy otherwise. If the first instance, ''"avoiding same-sex sexual activity"'' was changed to "avoiding same-sex sex", it would sound silly. --] (]) 13:22, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
:::I agree that the expression 'same-sex sex' would be silly. The words 'same-sex' do not need to be used at all, however. In this context, they mean exactly the same thing as 'homosexual' and that's the word that should be there. I accept that for the time being I've lost the struggle over changing 'gay' and 'lesbian' to 'homosexual', but I submit that there is no reason why 'same-sex' has to be used in cases where 'homosexual' has the same connotation. ] (]) 21:01, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
::::I will make this change in the near future if there are no further objections. ] (]) 22:45, 17 May 2008 (UTC)
::There is a whole lot more involved in sexual activity than sexual intercourse. Passionate kissing and petting are considered sexual activities.] (]) 17:38, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
:::'Sex' and 'sexual intercourse' do not mean the same thing. 'Sex' is a very broad term that can include a wide range of things, including passionate kissing, and so forth. That's why it's not different in any meaningful way from 'sexual activity.' ] (]) 20:55, 16 May 2008 (UTC)
::::I disagree with the idea that passionate kissing is a form of sex, or at least the connotations are very different. If I heard someone had sex with someone else, I would assume they did more than just kiss. ] (]) 16:15, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::If I heard that someone had sex with someone else, I wouldn't necessarily assume anything. Seriously speaking, if a behavior like anilingus (often called 'rimming') that does not even involve the genitals counts as sex, then passionate kissing counts as sex too. And just as a matter of logic, 'sex' and 'sexual behavior' mean the same thing. 'Sex' is a behavior, therefore 'sexual behavior.' 'Sexual behavior' likewise means sex. ] (]) 03:41, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::Yeah, I think "sexual activity" or "sexual behavior" is more appropriate here in general. ] (]) 17:53, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::Well I don't think that. I have given reasons for my position; you have given none for yours. Please note that I will make this change in the near future if no one offers good grounds against it. ] (]) 02:03, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::Joshua has given a good example as to why ''sexual activity'' or ''sexual behavior'' is broader than ''sex'' and is more accurate in this context. ] (]) 03:18, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::::Joshua has offered his opinion. His assertion of this opinion, and your agreement with it, does not end the issue. Disputes can't be solved by just asserting that someone is wrong - where are your arguments, your sources? ] (]) 03:43, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::''Sexual behavior'' and ''sexual activity'' are widely used terms in the professional literature (see and ). ] (]) 03:51, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::::::So is sex. The first hit on the first of those links is Alfred Kinsey's classic book on Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. It uses the term ''sexual behavior'' in the title, yes, but the book itself also contains a lot of uses of the word ''sex''.] (]) 03:52, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::::Since there was no response to my post above, I assume that there is no more disagreement. I will make this change soon. There is currently no consistent terminology - the article sometimes refers to 'sexual activity' and sometimes 'sex', with no apparent rationale. I will be changing 'sexual activity' to 'sex' whereever this makes sense. ] (]) 08:31, 21 May 2008 (UTC)

==The first sentence of this article==

The first sentence of this article begins, 'Conversion therapy, sometimes called sexual reorientation therapy or reparative therapy...' This is not actually wrong - conversion therapy is sometimes called reparative therapy, just as it is called a lot of other things, but it is misleading, as has been pointed out numerous times. Elsewhere, the article says, 'Sometimes reparative therapy is misleadingly used synonymously with conversion therapy, though in fact it is only one type of conversion therapy.' This is true, and that's why the article should not begin the way it does. I have taken the liberty of changing the article without waiting for a discussion because it really was just wrong the way it was. ] (]) 22:16, 16 May 2008 (UTC)

: Fine by me but in that case I think the sentence "The label conversion is often preferred over reparative, as the latter suggests that same-sex desire is something which can or should be "repaired" should be removed from the lead.] (]) 22:05, 17 May 2008 (UTC)
:: I agree that the sentence is misleading and should be removed - I will do it, if no one has done that already. ] (]) 22:18, 17 May 2008 (UTC)


== Gender Exploratory Therapy - Cass Review ==
==Terminology==


The ] has the following to say about exploratory therapy:
As a result of a recent edit war between myself and several other people, this article now uses an inconsistent mixture of terms to describe people attracted to the same sex. Sometimes 'homosexual' is used, and sometimes 'gay' or 'lesbian', with no apparent logic to the choices. Presumably this happened because those who were undoing my edits did it so quickly that they may not have realized exactly what they were doing - several cases of my changing 'gay' to 'homosexual' seem to have escaped notice. The article ought to use consistent terminology (I would prefer it if 'homosexual' was used throughout the article except in direct quotes, but I realize that I'm not going to get my way on this). My only request to whoever edits the article to resolve this situation is to at least not use the silly acronyms - GLBT, LGBT, GLB or whatever - where it can be avoided. They're a mutilation of the English language. ] (]) 02:19, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
:I'm going through and restoring the original language (using gay, not homosexual). I appreciate that terms like ] (or LGB, when trans people are excluded) take some getting used to, but they are part of the mainstream public discourse today -- presumably because using the full "lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender" is a mouthful and makes a text more difficult to read. ] (]) 16:05, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
::Terms like 'LGBT' are the language of an elite of activists who do not represent ordinary gay men and lesbians (or for that matter bisexuals and transsexuals). They are ugly and silly terms that can be objected to on numerous grounds. For example, the article now reads: 'The 1969 riots at the Stonewall Inn began a movement of LGBT visibility and policy reform.' The term 'LGBT' ''wasn't even used'' in 1969 so this is a misrepresentation of history. I will change this (probably to 'gay') if no one gives a good reason why I shouldn't. ] (]) 02:37, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
:::I'm fine with replacing that instance of ''LGBT'' with ''gay and lesbian''. Regarding the use of the term more generally, I think you'll find it's made its way into the mainstream (see, e.g., ). ] (]) 03:14, 19 May 2008 (UTC)


{{quote frame| Exploratory Approaches - Therapeutic approaches that acknowledge the young person’s subjective gender experience, whilst also engaging in an open, curious, non-directive exploration of the meaning of a range of experiences that may connect to gender and broader self-identity (Bonfatto & Crasnow, 2018; Churcher Clarke & Spiliadis, 2019; Di Ceglie, 2009; Spiliadis, 2019).}}
==Wording of the introduction==


Spiliadis 2019 is the original "Gender Exploratory Therapy" paper.
The introduction contains a sentence that reads, 'Today's conversion therapists characterize the movement as offering the possibility of a choice to gay men and lesbian women who are unhappy with their sexuality.' I've already tried to point out what is wrong with this. Conversion therapists typically do not like or use terms like 'gay men', so this sentence effectively represents them as saying something that they do not say. The 'gay men' and 'lesbian women' who are not satisfied with their sexuality also generally do not use these terms or want them applied to themselves, so that's deeply unfair to them. This part of the article could be made fair without using the word 'homosexuals' by changing it to, 'Today's conversion therapists characterize the movement as offering the possibility of a choice to people who are unhappy with their attraction to the same sex.' I can't see why anyone should object to this. ] (]) 02:32, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
:Since no one objected I made the change. It's clearer and more precise this way (since it is specifically their same sex attractions that the people in question are dissatisfied with, rather than their 'sexuality' in general - a much broader concept). ] (]) 01:38, 19 May 2008 (UTC)


It also says:
==Something else that should be changed==


{{quote frame | Terms such as ‘affirmative’ and ‘exploratory’ approaches have been weaponised to the extent that it is difficult to find any neutral terminology. }}
Part of the article reads, 'The label reparative originates from 1983 when research psychologist Elizabeth Moberly coined the term reparative drive to refer to male homosexuality itself, interpreting male–male desires...' This is expressed very badly. The term 'male-male' does not make sense in English. I am going to change this to something that actually makes sense - male homosexual desire, maybe; I'm open to other suggestions - in the near future in the absence of objections. ] (]) 03:50, 19 May 2008 (UTC)


And:
:: Male-male makes sense to me and a gives plenty of results showing that its usage is widespread. It is a useful and common shorthand. Anyone else have an opinion?] (]) <small>—Preceding ] was added at 23:53, 20 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!--Template:Undated--> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:::'Male-male' is an expression that does not make sense in English. No one with a sense of logic or style would use it. That it may be in widespread use does not contradict this. ] (]) 04:59, 21 May 2008 (UTC)
::::To whom does it not make sense? It makes sense to everyone who uses it and therefore it makes sense in English. No one person is the arbiter of the English language, its usage is dependent on the users.] (]) <small>—Preceding ] was added at 22:05, 21 May 2008 (UTC)</small><!--Template:Undated--> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
::::: I think it does make sense as the language communicates what is intended. However, it is not the best use of the English language and more professional word choices are available. This is an encyclopedia and we should strive for excellence.] (]) 22:13, 21 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::Hi there. I completely understand where you are coming from on this and in a way I agree. I just think that terms like male-male are widely used in the context of the subject and it is therefore appropriate to use them in the article. It is very common to hear of terms like male-male in the literature (I can find examples if you like) and so I thought that it made sense to use the term here. It has been changed anyway and it is not something extremely close to my heart. I just wanted to explain my rationale behind my belief that it is appropriate for the article. :) ] (]) 18:18, 22 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::That expression may be widely used, but this does not mean either that it is elegant or that there is any reason why it must be used in this article. ] (]) 09:09, 24 May 2008 (UTC)


{{quote frame | The intent of psychological intervention is not to change the person’s perception of who they are but to work with them to explore their concerns and experiences and help alleviate their distress, regardless of whether they pursue a medical pathway or not. It is harmful to equate this approach to conversion therapy as it may prevent young people from getting the emotional support they deserve.}}
== APA affirms principles with regard to treatments to alter sexual orientation: ==


Cass also :
In 1997, the APA sent out a resolution that included these words:


{{quote frame | She noted that some medics were afraid of being accused of conducting “conversion therapy if, again, they take a cautious or exploratory approach”}}
"Therefore be it resolved that APA affirms the following principles with regard to treatments to alter sexual orientation:"


Given the weight of this source, how do we square this with the coverage in this section? That is, this whole section does exactly what Cass warns agains, ie conflating conversion therapy with exploratory therapy. The Cass Review has been directly accused of espousing conversion therapy on this basis, by WPATH. The final Review's opinions on this are due here. ] (]) 20:38, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
I summarized it by saying by saying they "affirmed the principles with regard to treatments to alter sexual orientation." I really tried to keep the same wording, but it was removed with the paraphrase "this phrasing misleadingly makes it sound as though the APA has established principals within which it approves of conversion therapy -- that is not what the source says." Am I missing something? I am trying to keep the same wording as the document. Are you seeing something I'm not? ] (]) 07:03, 19 May 2008 (UTC)
:Yes, the use of the word 'but' in your proposed language (''No mainstream medical organization endorses conversion therapy but they have affirmed the principles with regard to treatments to alter sexual orientation'') misleadingly suggests that the principles are somehow opposed to or qualify the lack of endorsement. ] (]) 01:25, 20 May 2008 (UTC)


:The treatment of the Cass Review in the recent addition after I made this comment takes none of this into account, instead adding this and a whole chunk right next to it about NARTH.
== Debate within Professional Literature ==
:{{tq|The same month, the UK Council for Psychotherapy announced it was fine for counsellors to practice GET and in April 2024 it was endorsed by the Cass Review.}}
:The source doesn't even support this sentence. I'm adding an NPOV tag to this section. ] (]) 21:57, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
::{{tq|The source doesn't even support this sentence}} - what?
::From the source: {{tq|In November 2023, the UK Council for Psychotherapy—the nation’s top professional association—declared that it was fine for counselors to take GETA’s “exploratory” approach to gender. This April, a of gender-related care for youth in England’s National Health Service endorsed exploratory therapy, according to Alex Keuroghlian, an associate psychiatry professor at Harvard Medical School}}
::Care to explain the NPOV tag? This section's been extensively discussed on the talk page and got consensus. You've been arguing for months that the UKCP and Cass Review endorsing GET should be mentioned, but now it's been mentioned you have an issue? Make it make sense. ] (]) 22:08, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
::Pinging others who've discussed this section: @], @], @], @], @], @], @], @], @]. ] (]) 22:15, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
:::My intuition here is actually pretty similar to Void's below, for once. Namely that "gender exploratory therapy" is both a euphemism used by conversion therapists to cover up what they're doing, and a literal self description used by actual credible gender therapists.
:::What we do about this, I'm not sure. Especially since I would be truly amazed if we could actually source this split. But it does seem to be what's happening with Cass's quote. I really don't think she means to endorse conversion therapy. ] (]) 22:27, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
::::Can you provide sources to substantiate the idea that there are two different interpretations of "gender exploratory therapy", that refer to two significantly different practices? I've read some ideas about "intuitions", and some ideas that are clearly ] on the matter. But I'm not sure if it makes sense to create some new interpretation of "gender exploratory therapy" if there are not significant independent reliable sources actually saying that there are two major interpretations. ] (]) 22:50, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::Yes - the Cass Review says it is not, with a definition quoted above that is not about "change", and the recently added Mother Jones article quotes a conversion therapist saying it is.
:::::{{tq|
:::::“It truly is very similar to how the Alliance has always approached unwanted SSA ,” she told the assembled therapists. “You approach it as ‘change therapy’—or, even less triggering, ‘exploratory therapy.}}’” ] (]) 22:57, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::That's not what I asked. I asked if there are reliable sources substantiating the idea that there are two major and differing interpretations of gender exploratory therapy. Saying that the Cass Review says that gender exploratory therapy is not conversion therapy, is not an answer to the question. ] (]) 23:53, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::Like I said, {{tq|I would be truly amazed if we could actually source this split}}. No I can't, and I would be very surprised if anyone could. ] (]) 03:06, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::{{tq | The source doesn't even support this sentence - what?}}
:::Ah my bad, I couldn't see the Cass Review mentioned.
:::{{tq | now it's been mentioned you have an issue? }}
:::The Cass Review is a high quality source you've been falsely dismissing as FRINGE for months, and it says that conflating exploratory therapy with conversion therapy is harmful. You've made no effort to render this POV, and instead have slapped the cass review "endorsing GET" right after a section with NARTH chuckling about how it really is code for conversion therapy. No effort has been made at all to show that there is a legitimate medical dispute over trans youth healthcare here, and that when some people say "exploratory therapy" they mean ethical psychotherapy, while others do not. ] (]) 22:28, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
::::The Cass Review is indeed a high quality source, but it's only a single high quality source, and it contradicts many other high quality sources on this point.
::::What we do when sources contradict each other like this is not always clear, but certainly it's not to just go with the one new source over the five we currently have for {{tq|Gender exploratory therapy (GET) is a form of conversion therapy}}. ] (]) 03:16, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::Mother Jones is not a reliable source about the Cass Review. YFNS posted something before sourced to them that was so fully of shit I despaired. Henry Carnell is a young journalist, with training in "communication", according to their linked-in, currently looking for work. Psychological therapies, their description and comparisons, are ] material and thus fall under ]. While the ethics of "conversion therapy" fall outside MEDRS, a claim that a particular therapy has conversion as a goal falls into MEDRS. Carnell is simply not qualified to assess the Cass review and comments by other activists and put two and two together for us here as the added sentence says. I'm struggling also to find where in the Mother Jones piece it says "the UK Council for Psychotherapy announced it was fine for counsellors to practice GET". makes clear they do not regard any and all kind of "exploratory" therapy to be "conversion therapy" ("To conflate exploratory psychotherapy and conversion therapy is potentially dangerous and harmful to the public." and "Conversion therapy as described in the statement is harmful and must not be practised").
:::It is disappointing that this article is indeed falling into the trap recognised by Cass and exploited by activists who want to over simplify a range of approaches into one bucket term they can attack. Cass makes it clear that a trans life is not worse than a cis life. But Cass also does not accept every single child coming to a gender clinic ''is trans'' or has a fixed ''trans identity'' or that that trans identity must be lived in a body that has been medicalised (can't find the word) to be one of only two genders. I think some of the commentary about therapy is taking the view that any child who goes to a gender clinic and leaves without a prescription for hormones has been converted. Clearly there are a range of opinions among experts and a range of points of view. There are reliable sources saying this matter is in dispute and the everyday word "exploratory" has been weaponised into a bad faith assumption it is always a euphemism for conversion therapy. We have experts who disagree on this and can cite better sources than some rag written by a "communications" graduate. -- ]°] 07:54, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
::IMO, we have sources who say that exploratory therapy is a standard psychotherapeutic approach intended to determine if there are underlying causes of gender distress, with no set endpoint in mind, and not conversion therapy, eg.
::* https://www.researchgate.net/publication/334559847_Towards_a_Gender_Exploratory_Model_slowing_things_down_opening_things_up_and_exploring_identity_development
::* The ]
::Then we have sources who say that the conflation of standard exploratory psychotherapy is conversion therapy is dangerous and harmful, especially in the context of proposed bans on conversion therapy, where practitioners fear being accused of conversion therapy for pursuing standard psychotherapeutic exploration, eg.
::* https://jme.bmj.com/content/early/2023/11/21/jme-2023-109282
::* https://www.psychotherapy.org.uk/news/ukcp-guidance-regarding-gender-critical-views/
::* Cass and the ] itself, again.
::Then we have saying that "gender exploratory therapy" (as described in that first link by Spiliadis) has similarities to "conversion".
::And then we have a variety of sources of various levels of quality explicitly calling anything short of the affirmative model conversion therapy, and those who advocate it - including the Cass Review - conversion therapists peddling ] ]:
::* https://www.wpath.org/media/cms/Documents/Public%20Policies/2022/25.11.22%20AUSPATH%20Statement%20reworked%20for%20WPATH%20Final%20ASIAPATH.EPATH.PATHA.USPATH.pdf?_t=1669428978
::* https://osf.io/preprints/psyarxiv/gz5mk
::* https://explore.bps.org.uk/content/bpscpf/1/369/91
::* https://www.digest.ugent.be/article/id/85309/
::* https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-law-medicine-and-ethics/article/antitransgender-medical-expert-industry/25EFFECB8F71CA9A37F9F089E13BC41E
::* https://www-tandfonline-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1080/26895269.2024.2328249
::* https://www.splcenter.org/captain
::Virtually all these sources make this claim based on that Florence Ashley paper.
::And finally we have actual conversion therapists gleefully saying that "exploratory" or "change" therapy is conveniently a less triggering name for processes like trying to get rid of "unwanted" same-sex attraction:
::* https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2024/05/conversion-therapy-lgbtq-anti-trans-gay-gender-affirming-care/
::And this source also conflates this directed, unethical approach with the undirected, ethical positions taken by the Cass Review and UKCP.
::Meanwhile we have the Cass Review explicitly saying the terms have been weaponised to the extent that neutral terminology is hard to find, and we have NHS England, Finland and Sweden moving away from the affirmative model and toward exploratory psychotherapeutic intervention as a first line treatment.
::I think we can give a good faith rendition of this disagreement and ongoing controversy over contested terms, but it cannot start from the point of view that the Cass Review and UKCP are espousing ] ] as was failed to be demonstrated six months ago, and it should not be stating in wikivoice that the kind of therapy being adopted by national health services is conversion therapy, because this is an ] claim. ] (]) 09:27, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::{{tq|And this source also conflates this directed, unethical approach with the undirected, ethical positions taken by the Cass Review and UKCP.}} You are again presuming there are two major and differing practices for GET. Whether Cass believes that GET is ethical and effective, is a different matter. The major name associated with GET is the Gender Exploratory Therapy Association (GETA), which is promoted by ], with materials produced by ]. Both Genspect and SEGM are gender-critical advocacy groups, deeply entrenched in advocating against trans rights, and are both considered anti-LGBTQ+ hate groups by the Southern Poverty Law Center. ] (]) 12:29, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
::::{{tq | You are again presuming there are two major and differing practices for GET}}
::::No, I'm saying the sourcing for the opening line of this section includes a WPATH statement specifically in response to the Cass interim review and NHS service specification calling the "exploratory therapy" described there (not GET or any other moniker) "tantamount to conversion". ] (]) 13:13, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::Now the line is between gender "exploratory therapy", and "gender exploratory therapy"? What's next, a new distinction between "affirming care" and "affirmative care"? Is it really appropriate for Misplaced Pages editors to reify a passing remark about gender exploratory therapy into an entirely new interpretation of what that term might mean, when there are numerous sources here that have already provided discourse on what gender exploratory therapy is? As far as I can tell, the assertion that Cass is referring to anything other than conventional gender exploratory therapy, seems to be ]. ] (]) 22:46, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:Nub of the issue:
:{{tq | In November 2023, Michelle Cretella, a board member of the pro conversion therapy group Alliance for Therapeutic Choice and Scientific Integrity (ATCSI, formerly NARTH), gave a speech at an ATCSI conference which endorsed GET and arguing it "truly is very similar to how the Alliance has always approached unwanted same-sex attraction". }}
:See, here's the problem - you have an actual conversion therapist calling actual conversion therapy "gender exploratory therapy" to hide the fact that it is conversion therapy. And then you have the Cass Review saying that exploratory approaches are not conversion therapy, because actual, ethical, exploratory psychotherapy is not conversion.
:This section needs to make this distinction, rather than saying these two are the same thing.
:So this should not be said like this in wikivoice:
:{{tq| Gender exploratory therapy (GET) is a form of conversion therapy }}
:Saying this in wikivoice when we have a MEDRS that says, specifically, that making this comparison is '''harmful''' is a huge concern. We have to distinguish between what the cass review means when it says "exploratory approaches" and what Cretella means when she is talking about "exploratory therapy" as a euphemism for conversion therapy. ] (]) 22:19, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
::{{tq|Gender exploratory therapy (GET) is a form of conversion therapy}} That's been there for months and you adding a NPOV tag after extensively discussing this and consensus disagreeing with you is ].
::{{tq|'''See, here's the problem - you have an actual conversion therapist calling actual conversion therapy "gender exploratory therapy" to hide the fact that it is conversion therapy.'''}}... Yeah...
::{{tq|because actual, ethical, exploratory psychotherapy is not conversion.}} - you do realize this is literally NARTH's whole thing, right? They opposed "gay affirmative" therapy, arguing that it was necessary that a psychiatrist "ethically explore the roots of a persons same sex attraction", but that it wasn't "conversion" because there was "no preset goal in mind". Literally, same exact argument.
::
::And it would be a lot easier to take the Cass Review seriously if SEGM and Genspect weren't involved at almost every step of the process. ] (]) 22:31, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
::Just to note, Cretella is also executive director for ACPeds, so there's direct overlap between the leadership for ATCSI-formerly-NARTH and ACPeds. ] (]) 19:12, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
* hmm, funny one. First, I think we're agreed on the first sentence void quoted, that looks like an endorsement of exploratory therapy to me, even if they're being quite cagey about it, the sources quoted make it abundantly clear what they're referring to.
:{{tq|Terms such as ‘affirmative’ and ‘exploratory’ approaches have been weaponised to the extent that it is difficult to find any neutral terminology.}} I don't care about neutral terminology, I care what the cass report is saying about it, so this is a distraction to me.
:{{tq|The intent of psychological intervention is not to change the person’s perception of who they are but to work with them to explore their concerns and experiences and help alleviate their distress, regardless of whether they pursue a medical pathway or not. It is harmful to equate this approach to conversion therapy as it may prevent young people from getting the emotional support they deserve.}}
:Another endorsement of exploratory therapy, again, cagey language, which, judging by the 10+ sources we have already quoted for that section, seems to slightly mis-define it. But we are already aware of what exploratory therapy is from a multitude of other MEDRS, so the misdefinition doesn't really matter, we've established from the first sentence that we're still talking about the same thing.
:This just leaves the question of how we should treat the cass revieuw here. I would call it a primary source (thus needing attribution) that is, indeed, due for a mention. Which leaves me at the result that the contested insertion was probably reasonable. I don't care about the NARTH bit, if you want that moved elsewhere in the section so it doesn't seem like they're of equal quality, do whatever. Having said all that, Isn't an NPOV tag on the entire section a bit much for two sentences? --] (]) 23:49, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
:I think you’re missing the key underlying point.
:Cass is saying that therapy to merely explore the psychological environment present is not conversion therapy, and what is being described there is a firmly different procedure from what is being described in the article subsection.
:Conversely, it deliberately refuses to at any point tie what it’s describing to the words “gender exploratory therapy”.
:So the most basic interpretation of the text here, is that the report is not describing gender exploratory therapy at all, itms describing a therapy that it does not assign a name, as says it wishes the word “exploratory” was used in a more well defined way. It’s simply making some broadstrokes musings on the current professional environment. I feel that making that connection on our own would become SYNTH or OR. ] (]) 05:19, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
::To simplify my words, there’s nothing in the review but our own preconceptions to suggest it’s talking about GET at all. And thus, we can’t really add anything here except perhaps a line on Cass lamenting a lack of solid definition of “exploratory” maybe but even that’s fairly tangential ] (]) 05:22, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::I think this is a fair point, and I considered including a similar analysis in my own comment, but at the time I wrote my comment above, both other participants seemed to agree that the cass revieuw ''was'' endorsing, so I decided not to rock the boat. For what it's worth, I think the point hinges a little bet on how explicit we need them to be. If you read the text on a very surface level, your interpretation is or seems correct. As I pointed out above, they're being cagey and stopping just short of naming the practice they're referring to, but looking a little deeper, the sentence about exploratory approaches cites material about exploratory therapy, making it clear that this is at least included in their definition of "exploratory approaches". I obviously can't speak on authorial intent, but the end result behaves as a dog-whistle: strongly different implications depending on who is reading it and how. --] (]) 10:05, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::The problem with this is that the very first citation for this section is WPATH attacking the Cass Review for recommending it and the NHS Service Specification for going along with it.
:::{{quote frame | At several points in the document, there is an emphasis on “careful exploration” of a child or young person’s co-existing mental health, neuro-developmental and/or family or social complexities. There is also a suggestion that a “care plan should be tailored to the specific needs of the individual following careful therapeutic exploration…” WPATH, ASIAPATH, EPATH, PATHA, and USPATH are concerned that this appears to imply that young people who have coexisting autism, other developmental differences, or mental health problems may be disqualified, or have unnecessary delay, in their access to genderaffirming treatment. This would be inequitable, discriminatory, and misguided (Coleman et al., 2022). WPATH, ASIAPATH, EPATH, PATHA, and USPATH recommend that puberty suppression, where urgently indicated, can be commenced promptly, and proceed alongside and at the same time as any necessary diagnostic clarification of other conditions, or treatment of other conditions. Whilst careful assessment is imperative, undue delay inherent within a model of care is not a neutral option and may cause significant harm to those accessing services (Coleman et al., 2022). '''There is an alarming statement in the summary that “the primary intervention for children and young people… is psychosocial (including psychoeducation) and psychological support and intervention.” '''In another section, the document goes on to state that one outcome from the screening process would be “discharge with psychoeducation…” Disturbingly, this decision might be made without speaking directly with the young person or family. Taking No 8 and 9 together, this document seems to view gender incongruence largely as a mental health disorder or a state of confusion and withholds gender-affirming treatments on this basis. WPATH, ASIAPATH, EPATH, PATHA, and USPATH call attention to the fact that this “psychotherapeutic” approach, which was used for decades before being superseded by evidence-based gender-affirming care, has not been shown to be effective (AUSPATH, 2021; Coleman et al., 2022). Indeed, the denial of gender affirming treatment under the guise of''' “exploratory therapy” '''has caused enormous harm to the transgender and gender diverse community and is '''tantamount to “conversion” or “reparative” therapy under another name'''. '''This document reasserts the outdated “gatekeeping model”''' of access to gender affirming care.}}
:::The first citation I'm afraid widens the scope to exploratory approaches, first-line psychosocial interventions, and directly criticises the Cass Review on that basis.
:::This brings us to disagreement between MEDRS on a matter of the ethics of exploratory psychotherapeutic interventions - and Cass, as a high quality MEDRS, definitively supercedes many, if not all, of the other sources.
:::You cannot have your cake and eat it here. You cannot employ sources which attack first-line psychotherapeutic gatekeeping as tantamount to conversion, and then exclude MEDRS that say this is a harmful comparison to make.
:::And given all these sources it is clear this section should not be titled "gender exploratory therapy" but "exploratory therapy" since that is the only real unifying terminology. ] (]) 07:25, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
::::I think we should be careful about putting too much weight on one review here. I've said this before, but I don't believe the cass revieuw is the be-all end-all on this topic. also, it's not just WPATH, it is cosigned by four national organisations, and followed by four more sources. The Cass revieuw can supersede a lot, but we shouldn't tunnel-vision on it either. Especially not when it is being this cagey about a topic. --] (]) 10:25, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::Citation 2 () says, in a discussion about what constitutes conversion therapy:
:::{{quote frame | In fact, given the increased visibility of different sexual orientations and gender identities and expressions, efforts nowadays include clinicians gatekeeping life-saving hormonal interventions by encouraging clients to not commit to their transgender identity or initiate gender-affirming care until they are absolutely sure (sometimes euphemistically called “gender exploratory therapy”), or even ascribing transgender identity or asexuality to trauma (ashley, 2023). }}
:::So they are calling psychotherapeutic exploration that examines possible underlying causes of any kind "conversion therapy" and cite Florence Ashley as a basis.
:::This is not appropriate for a wikivoice claim that this is definitively true, when a MEDRS like the Cass Review says it is not. ] (]) 08:22, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
::::Just to be clear, that quote doesn't say 'examines possible underlying causes', it refers to {{tq|encouraging clients to not commit to their transgender identity or initiate gender-affirming care until they are absolutely sure}} as gender exploratory therapy. I think if somebody already has declared a gender identity, then it would be qualified as a conversion attempt under most of the definitions.
::::If we are talking about therapy for gender dypshoria, that might not qualify as conversion therapy. Many people with dysphoria do not identify with a gender identity that is discordant with their natal sex. But this is a grey area. ] (]) 09:22, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::I was referring there to {{tq|ascribing transgender identity or asexuality to trauma}}. This whole line conflates multiple things - but the cite to Ashley means this is referring specifically to the model described in Spiliadis 2019 which is explicitly an ''undirected'' model with no fixed outcome in mind.
:::::The Cass Review cautions about the diagnostic overshadowing that results from an uncurious affirmative approach. Some youth presenting with gender distress do have underlying causes that, ''when properly explored by the individual themselves'', resolves that distress, and sometimes this is trauma.
:::::So yes, directed therapy with an intention of '''changing''' is unethical. But undirected exploration of the reasons behind someone's desire to transition is not. Dismissing up-front that someone's gender identity is definitively the result of trauma is unethical. Uncovering that it actually is a response to trauma as part of standard exploratory psychotherapy is not.
:::::But, since that exploration can ultimately lead to desistance, it is being classed here as "conversion".
:::::And that brings us back to the Cass Review, and clinicians being afraid to engage in exploratory psychotherapy that may result in desistance - even if it isn't intended or clinician-directed - for fear of accusations of "conversion therapy". ] (]) 09:57, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::You wrote: {{tq|Some youth presenting with gender distress do have underlying causes that, when properly explored by the individual themselves, resolves that distress, and sometimes this is trauma}} – I do not think Cass review states this as fact. This is speculation. Nor do they claim that dealing with trauma alleviates dysphoria. As far as I am aware, Littman and ROGD proponents argue that a subset of young natal female individuals are transitioning due cultural ideas about gender, and that they are misinterpreting their mental anguish as evidence of dysphoria. If 'trauma' were causing gender issues, we would expect to see quite a lot of gender dysphoria in war zones and the rest. Regardless, I'd advise against stating this kind of speculation as fact. Plenty of psychological theories claim that 'trauma' causes 'X thing I don't like', but in large well designed studies, there isn't strong evidence for causality. ] (]) 10:10, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::I think we should watch not to argue back and forth about our own ideas and opinions (e.g. "If 'trauma' were causing gender issues, we would expect to see quite a lot of gender dysphoria in war zones and the rest.") If that's an argument against X then cite a good source saying that about X. We'll just end up filling this page with editors arguing about what they meant by "trauma" in that particular case, and not focusing on the article topic. What's the essentials for this page? There are a spread of opinions about how to treat trans children. Loosely we might characterise this at one end is being credulous about whoever walks through the door being trans and also that being trans means hormones and surgery, and the other end is actively preventing trans identities which are viewed as either inferior or mentally unwell or an abomination in the eyes of god or whatever. And varied opinions about what portion of children walking through the door have a certain and fixed trans identity. And almost zero evidence on the portion identifying as non-binary. It isn't really up to us to work out where the truth lies, and be cautious about offering any side's view as "fact". Reality seems to lie between the extremes (nothing like 100% of children referred to gender clinics go onto hormones as children and I don't think any serious expert thinks that should be the case) Both extremes in this culture war are over careless to describe their opinions as fact and to assert things with little or no evidence. We also need to be aware that political battles in this area mean writers at both extremes are unwilling to give an inch or accept there is nuance. Better sources are required or else say less. Don't just run with whatever low-level rubbish turns up on a google search.
:::::::Why is the sentence "The same month... endorsed by Cass" still in this article. The source is not reliable nor does the source mention Cass nor does the UKCP endorse what is being called GET and nor does Cass endorse what is being called GET. Allowing activists to take control of plain English words like "exploratory" is exactly the sort of problem that must be making clinical psychologists despair. Misplaced Pages isn't a trans activist blog any more than it is a gender critical blog. Both such activists use techniques like this (conflating a whole bunch of things into one thing that can be labelled BAD) which wouldn't be acceptable in either proper grown up journalism or in a medical journal. -- ]°] 13:39, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::{{tq| I think we should watch not to argue back and forth about our own ideas and opinions}} – well you just wrote a giant paragraph of your own opinions. My comment was a brief "correlation is not causation" statement, clarifying that plenty of psychological ideas are "just so" stories that aren't supported by evidence of causality. Can we stick to ]. ] (]) 04:02, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::I was writing about "What's the essentials for this page" (as as far as trans conversion therapy is concerned). You were arguing on the internet with someone about whether trauma leads to gender distress. Not sure why you feel able to fling NOTFORUM at anyone. And we still have that "The same month..." sentence citing "Mother Jones" and putting internet gossip in wikivoice. -- ]°] 13:22, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::{{tq|I do not think Cass review states this as fact. }}
:::::::I think if there's one takeaway from the Cass Review it is "we don't know", and that applies to a whole swathe of issues. The Cass Review states very little as "fact" but expresses extreme caution about proceeding with medical pathways given the paucity of evidence. Trauma and its possible contribution are discussed as part of the review, happy to dig out the passages if you like, but a neat summary is the figure on page 57 of which highlights how unresolved sexual abuse/trauma can be one possible presentation that can possibly end up at "Gender dysphoria resolved without transition" as part of the explanation of how complex presentations may have multiple different pathways.
:::::::What the Cass Review says is that the evidence base is not strong enough to rule any of this out. What critics say is that ''even considering'' other underlying factors may actually be at root of gender distress is conversion therapy. :
:::::::{{quote frame | GET is just conversion therapy by another name Similarly, proponents of GET often point to issues such as unprocessed trauma, childhood abuse, internalized homophobia or misogyny, sexual fetishism, and autism as the “real” explanation behind one’s transgender identity, rather than accepting that a child who identifies as trans is sharing a real, deep, and even joyful truth about themselves.}}
:::::::{{tq | If 'trauma' were causing gender issues, we would expect to see quite a lot of gender dysphoria in war zones and the rest. }}
:::::::This is overly simplistic. We're talking about complex psychosocial factors, not just "trauma results in gender dysphoria". ] (]) 14:15, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::{{tq|one takeaway from the Cass Review it is "we don't know"}} – this is more moderate. I agree. The Cass review is mostly focused on the effectiveness of puberty blockers, not the cause of dysphoria. It includes a brief overview on speculative causal pathways, but it excluded topic experts, hence it gets rather speculative. Regarding trauma: children with gender dysphoria are atypical in other ways, and we know that children who veer from behavioral norms are over other children. I.e. correlation is not causation.
::::::::{{tq|What critics say is that even considering other underlying factors may actually be at root of gender distress is conversion therapy}} – well, the Slate source is not labelling all therapy for gender dysphoric youth as 'conversion therapy'. It's referring to a very specific subset of therapists who are demanding clients find an external ''cause'' (how the heck do they ''prove'' this?) and who are opposed to transition in nearly all cases. Mainstream psychology remains open minded to potential causes of dysphoria... it's the groups cited in that piece who are claiming ''they know'' (and it must be something bad!) and that they hold the solution.
::::::::The APA cites six studies and reviews, which have found that 'gender identity change efforts' (in this case, psychotherapy) are ineffective in treating dysphoria. Whether or not this will apply to a different cohort of transitioners (i.e. the more recent cohort of young natal females/AFAB) is an open question, and seems to be what the Cass review is concerned about. But for now, I think you'll simply have to wait until a clearer picture emerges.
::::::::] (]) 05:02, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::{{tq | The Cass review is mostly focused on the effectiveness of puberty blockers, not the cause of dysphoria. }}
:::::::::This is simply untrue, the Cass Review looked at the entire epidemioloigcal, diagnostic and care pathway, and went far beyond just "blockers".
:::::::::{{tq | it excluded topic experts}}
:::::::::No it did not.
:::::::::{{tq | The APA statement cites six studies and reviews}}
:::::::::And doesn't say the word "exploratory" once, so I don't know why you mention it here. There's no debate that coercive attempts to "change gender identity" are unethical and don't work, that's not the problem.
:::::::::This is all a total derailing of the point of this section.
:::::::::The very first citation for the section on "gender exploratory therapy" establishing, in wikivoice, that it '''is conversion therapy''', is one calling the Interim Cass Review and NHS service specifications tantamount to conversion therapy. This is a source editors have kept as a consensus for months. See further up this talk WRT WPATH's response to the interim Cass Review and NHS Service Spec:
:::::::::{{tq |WPATH considers GET to be conversion "conversion" or "reparative" therapy under another name. Per WP:MEDASSESS/WP:MEDORG, it is the most high-quality source we have discussed on GET, and settles the question of whether it's conversion therapy or not. }}
:::::::::This source only says "exploratory therapy", and with specific reference to what is described by Cass.
:::::::::Your interpretation of other sources and what they may or may not be referring to isn't relevant. Current editorial consensus here, supported by ] is that what is described by WPATH as only "exploratory therapy" in the Cass Review and NHS Service Spec '''is''' "gender exploratory therapy", and also that this is '''the best quality source''' establishing it is "conversion therapy".
:::::::::But the final Cass Review is a high quality MEDRS explicitly saying it is not conversion therapy and that the weaponisation of these terms is scaring clinicians and is harmful to vulnerable youth in need of the best possible care.
:::::::::So - how to resolve this? None of this can be safely rendered in wikivoice the way it is at present, and the conflict and difference of opinion needs rendering, taking into account that there are no neutral terms and terminology is contested. ] (]) 09:06, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Unless you're sitting on some massive chapter that somehow hasn't come up yet (which, fair, it's a long read, I might've missed it), the cass revieuw doesn't actually say that much about gender exploratory therapy.
::::::::::As already established in your original comment, they don't actually talk about "gender exploratory therapy" at all! they talk about "exploratory approaches" which snokalok above already points out may or may not be the same thing, or a category including that thing. And the WPATH comment comes in the middle of a long series of related points establishing a pattern within multiple parts of the cass revieuw, striking me as more of a sidenote building up to a larger point (and indeed, the main point of that alinea is medical gatekeeping in general, not endorsement of gender exploratory therapy).
::::::::::I think the cass revieuw being a MEDRS doesn't actually end up factoring into it all that much. All six sources under discussion fit the MEDRS label and we always need to look beyond the cover to establish due weight. I think the weight of the cass revieuw just doesn't weigh all that heavy here, due to the lack of on-topic content. Granted, I think the same goes for the WPATH&co. statement, but again, that's why we don't '' just '' cite to them, as you seem to keep implying. --] (]) 11:23, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::Yeah, again, my intuition here is that Cass's comments aren't about the euphemism for conversion therapy, but about people who take the fact that it's a euphemism for conversion therapy to mean that anyone who does therapy about gender exploration is a conversion therapist. ] (]) 15:56, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::Genuine question, how is exploratory therapy supposed to work? You say {{tq|But undirected exploration of the reasons behind someone's desire to transition is . Dismissing up-front that someone's gender identity is definitively the result of trauma is unethical.}} A trans kid (let's say 16) comes into a clinic, knows they're trans, already socially transitioned, and is seeking medical transition. Just how much "exploration of the reasons behind someone's desire to transition" should be required before they can transition? Who gets to decide? When does the therapist say, "alright, we've explored everything, you're free to go"? What's stopping the therapist preventing their transition indefinitely?
::::::For the record, there is no evidence GET is effective or helpful. ] (]) 20:42, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
::::Void, your most recent includes sources which support my point. Cass review and are arguing therapy for ''gender dysphoria'' (rather than gender identity) cannot necessarily be taken as a form of conversion therapy. ] (]) 09:39, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::When a "gender questioning" child is referred, in Europe at least, to a clinical psychologist, what is it that various bodies think that person should do. It clearly isn't "That's nice. Here's a referral to endocrinology for hormones". Only a minority of referred children go down that path as children. So when do we reach "conversion therapy" vs what clinical psychologists actually do for a living. -- ]°] 10:02, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::{{tq|So when do we reach "conversion therapy" vs what clinical psychologists actually do for a living}}? When kids who are sure they're trans, have already socially transitioned, and wish to medically transition are made to go through an indefinite period of a therapist trying to make them explore "what made you trans? trauma? the internet? we have to look at everything before I say you're trans enough in my book to recieve medical care". The population is not, as you called them, "gender questioning" children being met with an immediate {{tq|Here's a referral to endocrinology for hormones"}}. As the infallible Cass Review said:
::::::* 12.18 {{Tq|Clinicians have said that most children have already socially transitioned before reaching the specialist gender service}}
::::::* 12.32 {{tq|Early research cited in Chapter 2 found low rates of persistence of childhood gender incongruence into adulthood, around 15% (for example, Zucker, 1985). Papers from this period were criticised because the children were not formally diagnosed using ICD or DSM. At that time, it was rare for children to have socially transitioned before being seen in clinic.}}
::::::* 12.33 {{tq|Later studies, which showed higher rates of persistence at 37% (for example Steensma et al., 2013) did use formal diagnostic criteria, but by that time a greater proportion of the referrals had socially transitioned prior to being seen.}}
::::::] (]) 20:24, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::I was hoping for a reply that addressed the question. And any answer suggesting research from 2013 has much to say about the cohort presenting to childhood gender clinics in 2024 is missing reality. If only we could, you know, write an article about a medical therapy and what is and is not acceptable professional practice without having to argue that perhaps some nonsense claims in Mother Jones are wrong. Letting any old fool on the internet write about serious medical stuff is how we got all that MMR autism nonsense. It is frustrating to see Void above have to point out very basic errors like claims Cass "excluded topic experts" which is the sort of misunderstanding that comes when one's feed of information is activist bloggers. -- ]°] 13:39, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::{{tq|I was hoping for a reply that addressed the question.}} Your question was based on a flawed premise, you said "gender questioning kids", while we are talking about "trans kids sure of their gender seeking medical transition".
::::::::{{tq|So when do we reach "conversion therapy" vs what clinical psychologists actually do for a living.}} - when you presume that being transgender and wanting to transition is (or, likely is) a mental disorder due to trauma, and argue that trans kids medical care should be indefinitely placed on hold (possibly forever) while you "explore" the reasons ''you'' think the kid isn't "really" trans. If a "gender questioning kid" comes in and says "I don't know if I'm trans, I might be, I want to explore that" - nobody is just giving them hormones ffs. Nobody is against them being free to explore and supported in that. The conflation of "kids questioning their gender" and "kids sure of their gender" is precisely the kind of imprecise nonsense we are supposed to avoid.
::::::::The TLDR: the line is when you make indefinite "exploration" a nebulously defined requirement for people sure they're trans instead of a choice for those who actually want to explore whether they are.
::::::::Here are 6 MEDORGS stating that Cass endorsed "exploratory therapy" which they consider a form of conversion therapy. There continues to be no evidence whatsoever that GET is beneficial or effective.
::::::::Arguments here that "yes, there is a kind of conversion therapy called GET, pushed by organizations X, Y, and Z, AND Cass was criticized by MEDORGS for endorsing it BUT Cass endorsed a ''different'' GET that just happens to cite the definitions provided by X, Y, and Z. are silly.
:::::::::* For the record, they are even ''sillier'' when you argue a MEDRS source is needed to say "members of X, Y, and Z were advisors to the review" even thought ] obviously applies: {{Tq|Conversely, the high-quality popular press can be a good source for social, biographical, current-affairs, financial, and historical information in a medical article.}}
::::::::] (]) 14:56, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::guys, is this relevant? --] (]) 15:15, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Perhaps? I'm trying to stick to sources say. Can we all agree on these basic facts?
:::::::::# The Cass review says GET shouldn't be conflated with conversion therapy because it's not directed. Cass based this definition of Spiliadis 2019, a SEGM member who coined the term GET.
:::::::::# There is no evidence GET is effective or necessary or studies of it in action.
:::::::::# Florence Ashley's piece directly notes it's comparison to "reparative therapy" and interrogates Spiliadis's definition: {{tq| The attempt to distance and distinguish gender-exploration therapy from conversion practices is also familiar. After California banned conversion practices, ] wrote an essay claiming that his reparative therapy did not directly aim at altering same-sex attraction but, rather, encouraged inquiry and exploration into its underlying cause. The positive-sounding language of inquiry and exploration sanitizes his approach despite him viewing “most same-sex attractions as reparations for childhood trauma”}}
:::::::::#:* VIR removed this and probably shouldn't have - the key point was the similarity of the "undirected exploration" narrative because that's exactly what NARTH peddled .
:::::::::# We have a bunch of reliable sources saying GET is conversion therapy pushed by SEGM/Genspect/GETA/NARTH, largely citing Ashley
:::::::::# We have sources saying exploration is already encouraged and allowed under the affirmation, just not mandatory sessions trying to find pathological roots for wanting to transition.
:::::::::# We have 6 medical organizations saying that Cass is endorsing GET, which is conversion therapy, also citing ashley.
:::::::::There seem to be 3 main ideas in the thread for how to handle this.
:::::::::# Some think the section should be rewritten on the grounds if Cass says GET isn't conversion therapy we can't say it is
:::::::::# Some think the section should note the Cass Review endorsed GET / said it shouldn't be called conversion therapy
:::::::::# Some think there is conversion therapy GET, and there is Cass Review GET, but agree there's no sources specifying they're different
:::::::::] (]) 16:23, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Well it at least seems that Cass is in agreement about how GET is defined, and agrees about its definition, as laid out by a member of ]. So it's an idea about GET that comes from a group that is deeply involved in anti-trans advocacy, and has been classified by the SPLC as an anti-LGBTQ+ hate group.
::::::::::Notably, SEGM seems to hold the view that the term "conversion therapy" is only applicable to sexual orientation, so by definition, they would reject the label of conversion therapy. This, of course, is not a mainstream view. ] (]) 21:33, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::So what we have is:
::::::::::* A four-year multidisciplinary review that came to conclusions which proponents of gender-affirming care don't like, favouring an exploratory approach and criticising the over-affirmative approach employed by GIDS, while also cautioning that equating exploratory therapy with conversion therapy is harmful to vulnerable youth and scaring ethical clinicians.
::::::::::* The opinions of Florence Ashley - a strong proponent of zero-gatekeeping - which were only ever an expression that there are "similarities" between exploration and conversion, based on the (deliberately) obfuscatory language used by "reparative" therapists, being cited repeatedly by other sources as concrete equivalence, and thus presented here in wikivoice as definitively true.
::::::::::* An independent statement from WPATH criticising Cass for endorsing gatekeeping and exploration.
::::::::::{{tq | VIR removed this and probably shouldn't have}}
::::::::::The removed part was a definitive, wikivoice statement that {{tq | A "psychotherapeutic” approach viewing ] as a mental health disorder or a state of confusion was used for decades, has not been shown to be effective, and was superseded by an evidence-based ] approach}} which is way, way overstating things, and the very conflict the Cass Review weighs in on, on the side of evidence and caution. This was making broad medical claims where the strongest MEDRS do not agree at all, and it was based on WPATH's response to Cass, exemplifying this dispute.
::::::::::Cass is interrogating the whole basis for offering medical treatments to young people, ie what condition is being treated, how is it diagnosed, on what basis and are these even the best treatments, what is the safest and most effective holistic pathway for this group of youth.
::::::::::But Florence Ashley argues that medical transition should be no more gatekept than contraception because '''there is no medical condition being treated'''.
::::::::::These are irreconcilable viewpoints, and those with Ashley's perspective will always view any gatekeeping of medical transition as an attempt at "conversion". It simply arises logically from this different perspective.
::::::::::I think we have a lot of reliable sources for stating the beliefs and strong opinions of people, but not reliable sources for factual, wikivoice statements that exploratory therapy '''is''' conversion therapy.
::::::::::The existence of the Cass Review, as a MEDRS, weighing in on this topic to the contrary, means we should not be taking one "side" of this as definitive as the section currently does. At best, there is a clear difference of medical opinion over how exploratory/affirmative approaches are framed, given that all parties seem to be talking about the exact same things. ] (]) 11:17, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::The Cass Review is out of step with existing medical sources, and it is referencing members of ], so we should be very careful there. Florence Ashley is a bioethicist who studies conversion therapy, and their research on the matter is important in the field, which is why other medical reliable sources may reference Ashley. Ultimately, Cass doesn't have a lot to contribute on this topic, as it just appears to parrot some views trying to say that GET is not conversion therapy, while using SEGM definitions of GET. The stance is the same as what SEGM also says. It just shows how closely Cass is aligned with the views of GET that come from SEGM / ] / GETA / Therapy First. ] (]) 12:57, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::{{tq | Florence Ashley is a bioethicist who studies conversion therapy}}
::::::::::::From the standpoint that , , and .
::::::::::::Ashley's opinion is diametrically opposed to a neutral assessment of the evidence.
::::::::::::{{tq | Cass is aligned with the views of GET that come from SEGM / Genspect / GETA / Therapy First.}}
::::::::::::So you now agree with my original point which is that the exploratory approach advocated by all those organisations are one and the same as what is put forward by the Cass Review, and which the Cass Review says is not conversion therapy.
::::::::::::So we have a MEDRS source saying it isn't conversion therapy and equating the two is harmful, a WPATH statement attacking that source saying it is "tantamount" to conversion, an opinionated essay saying it has "similarities", and a load of sources based off them.
::::::::::::Which means we should not be saying it definitively is conversion therapy, in wikivoice, but should make an effort to reflect what these different sources actually say. ] (]) 13:20, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::No, I see one source (Cass) that is closely aligned with fringe anti-LGBTQ+ groups on this issue, against the medical consensus. It says more about Cass than it does about other sources, not that Cass actually evaluated the effectiveness of GET, or bothered to do any actual analysis of it. ] (]) 19:32, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::{{tq|The removed part was}} not the thing I am talking about...
:::::::::::You changed {{Tq|Bioethicist ] found that GET had strong conceptual and narrative similarities with previous conversion practices such as "]" and "reintegrative" therapy, noting they portrayed themselves as exploring the underlying psychological causes of same-sex attraction rather than directly aiming at altering it.}} to {{tq|Commenting on gender exploratory therapy in 2022, bioethicist ] argued it had similarities to conversion therapy}}.
:::::::::::You took out 1) what ''specific'' historical form of conversion therapy she compared it to and 2) why. ] (]) 13:26, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::Ah I see, I misunderstood - I'll try and reword it. ] (]) 13:51, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::But we also have sources calling what the Cass Review is discussing conversion therapy, and criticising that fixating on a diagnosis of "gender dysphoria" is pathologising. These aren't different things. ] (]) 10:04, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
:Also: the section is in the wrong place, it should be under "techniques". I'll move it down unless anyone has a good reason not to. ] (]) 12:11, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
I agree with Void that Misplaced Pages cannot simply assume the idea that exploratory approaches are definitely conversion therapy is an undisputed truth. British doctors have come to a jarringly different conclusion to their American counterparts, as seen in the Cass Review and the statement from the UK Council for Psychotherapy last November. Two more sources defending an exploratory approach: and . Even Florence Ashley, who opposes this approach, acknowledges that exploratory therapy is being presented as having a different goal to conversion therapy. ] (]) 16:39, 20 June 2024 (UTC)


:Robert D'Angelo is the president and a founding member of ] He argues in that piece that {{tq|Statements and bans on conversion therapy usually problematically merge gender identity with sexual orientation, which is misleading as these are very different constructs}} - a ] view as every medical org and human rights org agrees bans should cover both types of conversion therapy. He also says {{tq|A priori assumptions, either that trans identification is always a healthy development or that trans identification is always pathological, violate this foundational principle}} - but there is an overwhelming consensus that trans identities aren't pathological. He's a political activist who has never worked in trans healthcare and has done thinks like argue in court that a 16 year old should be denied gender affirming care.
In 1997, the APA stated:
:Anastassis Spiliadis is a member of the IATDD (a group founded by ], known for methodologically flawed research, to promote the ] hypothesis) alongside other founding members of SEGM/Genspect.
:D'Angelo and Spiliadis are ] activists linked to pro-GET lobbying groups. Those sources you linked are from years ago, and all the medical orgs and human rights orgs which have said "GET is conversion therapy" have done so based on the definitions put forth by them.
:{{tq|Even Florence Ashley, who opposes this approach, acknowledges that exploratory therapy is being ''<u>presented</u>'' as having a different goal to conversion therapy.}} - I agree this should be better included since we have the sources to note that GET's proponents argue that GET isn't conversion therapy since it's undirected. As Ashley notes though, that is exactly what NARTH said about reparative therapy based on the same reasons.
:* {{tq|Descriptions of reintegrative therapy by people who offer it are reminiscent of how gender-exploratory therapy is described by its proponents. Clinicians promoting gender-exploratory therapy have notably insisted that the approach is “not the same as ‘conversion,’ as the latter implies a therapist agenda and an aim for a fixed outcome” (D’Angelo et al., 2021, p. 10) and emphasized that they “do not aim to change someone’s gender or sexuality related feelings but rather engage in a dialogue exploring the meaning-making around identity development” (Spiliadis, n.d.)}}
:* {{tq|Proponents of gender-exploratory therapy acknowledge that some consider it a form of conversion practice, paradoxically resenting the suggestion while opposing bans on conversion practices on account that it would prohibit their approach. As for critiques of gender-exploratory therapy, they are presented as evidence of trans health care’s ideological capture. Yet a close comparison of gender-exploratory therapy and conversion practices reveals many conceptual and narrative similarities. How proponents talk about gender-exploratory therapy is nearly identical to how individuals offering conversion practices targeting sexual orientation frame their own work. }}
:] (]) 17:14, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
::I agree with YFNS. The president of an anti-trans lobbying group, and a member of a lobbying group founded by the author of the most infamously sloppy research in the topic area, are not reliable sources here. ] (]) 18:25, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
:::This is circular.
:::They are described as "anti-trans lobbying group" by people who describe what they espouse as "conversion therapy" - and what they espouse must be "conversion therapy" because they are an "anti-trans lobbying group".
:::They insist it is not, and ] agree. Calling Spiliadis ] when he is cited by Cass in the definition of what exploratory therapy is, is absurd.
:::There is a difference of perspective in MEDRS and absolutely none of the definitive claims should be in wiikivoice. ] (]) 08:31, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
::::I agree it is circular. Also, it is ], something that is all too common in debates on this fraught, polarised topic. If one must resort to ad hominem arguments, they at least ought to be factually correct. I pointed to two papers whose authors are not merely "activists"; they are both psychotherapists who have worked in gender medicine. Ironically, Spiliadis used to work at the ], a clinic that was accused of being ''too'' cavalier in using the affirmative approach. ] (]) 09:38, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
::::You cite Cass for Spiladis being a RS, while Cass cites Spiladis for their one-sentence comment on exploratory ''approaches'', which I remind you again doesn't even mention GET by name. In every discussion about this subject so far, I've never seen you deviate from your single-minded focus on what the Cass-report says. The Cass report is not god, and I would suggest you should take it deviating from every other RS as a sign that ''it'' might be wrong, instead of everything else. --] (]) 10:51, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::{{tq | You cite Cass for Spiladis being a RS}}
:::::No, I cite this to demonstrate it is clearly not FRINGE, and using FRINGE in this hyperbolic way to exclude entirely legitimate sources is inappropriate and question-begging.
:::::{{tq | single-minded focus on what the Cass-report says}}
:::::That is the subject of this current topic.
:::::{{tq | it might be wrong}}
:::::It is not for us to say which is wrong - it is for us to give a neutral rendition of what reliable sources say. ] (]) 11:10, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::If you think a scientific article or other high-quality source can't support a fringe perspective I have a couple asteroid craters in Spain to sell you. The subject under discussion is GET, about which the cass report only barely even says one sentence, which we seem to have concluded is due for inclusion here but is way too short to do anything else with, and that brings me to my final point here, which is that my problem with you ''isn't'' that you refuse to rebut the Cass report, the problem is that you consistently, throughout multiple discussions now, refuse to seriously consider any other source, regardless of relevance, quality (WPATH guidelines come to mind), or DUE-ness. In short, I don't think responding beyond this point is a productive use of my time. --] (]) 11:15, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::Ashley cites Spiliadis as a proponent of "gender exploratory therapy", whereas Cass cites him in defining "exploratory approaches", and Spiliadis proposes a "gender exploratory model" and several times in the paper uses the phrase "exploratory work". That's an example of how different exact wordings may be used for the same concept, though the use of "exploratory" is consistent. I don't think anyone disputes that "GET" and other phrases containing "exploratory" could be used as a cover for conversion therapy, but there's also clear evidence that it's being used for a concept of conducting a therapy with a different goal in mind. ] (]) 11:35, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
::::] argues that conversion therapy has never been practiced on trans people (a FRINGE statement), lobbies against bans on conversion therapy (more fringe advocacy), lobbies against public funding for transition ''for adults'' (so spare the "think of the children" shtick, that's pure bigotry), and works with the ].
::::Even if SEGM didn't advocate it's own new form of conversion therapy, it would be FRINGE, so no, it's not circular to point out they're ]. ] (]) 12:31, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
:There are two key NPOV problems here: 1) The wikivoice states that "Gender Exploratory Therapy (GET) is a form of conversion therapy". This is too strong a claim for the wikivoice given that other sources have, even when not using the exact same three words, have argued that "exploratory" approaches are distinct from conversion therapy (see UK Council of Psychotherapy in November 2023 and the Cass Review). As Cass notes, even proponents of the affirmation model argue that it can still include "exploring the meaning of that experience in a non-directive therapeutic relationship." 2) It barely says what proponents of exploratory therapy actually claim, even for the purposes of refuting them. ] (]) 20:09, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
::1) The UKCP withdrew from the memorandum of understanding on conversion therapy signed by every other professional body in the UK. Their views are an outlier even in the UK. A sentence in the Cass Review does not outweigh the many sources saying it's conversion therapy, especially when many are specifically calling out the review on that basis
::1.5) {{tq|As Cass notes, even proponents of the affirmation model argue that it can still include "exploring the meaning of that experience in a non-directive therapeutic relationship."}} - we already note that the affirmative model already encourages exploration without making it a prerequisite for care
::2) Yes we do. We note GET proponents claim it's not conversion therapy because it's an undirected exploration of why kids think they're trans. We note they believe that kids are identifying as trans due to trauma, autism, social contagion, and homophobia. We note who supports it. We note the proponents argue that bans on conversion therapy make it more difficult to practice GET. ] (]) 20:27, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
:::Therefore, it is incorrect to say that it is the unanimous, undisputed view of the medical community. ] (]) 10:25, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
::::We don't care about unanimity here, only consensus. A sufficiently strong consensus is equivalent to unanimity. ] (]) 15:07, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::Strongly condemning those who disagree is not the same as "strong consensus". It is pretty clear this is disputed, but sources which dispute it are continually (exhaustingly) accused of being ], which is circular. ] (]) 15:15, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::Sourcing from an author so closely associated with ] / ] would be inappropriate. These are classified as anti-LGBTQ+ hate groups by the SPLC, and they generally oppose trans rights, and trans healthcare, and also oppose conversion therapy bans. ] (]) 05:05, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::SPLCs designations have to be attributed, precisely because they are somewhat unreliable, hyperbolic and highly partisan. We don't have to afford this any weight when considering sources, especially when the claims are circular and non-independent like this, and wander into an area where MEDRS apples. ] (]) 07:39, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::The SPLC is very much green at ]. Attribution is for bias, not unreliability. ] (]) 12:07, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::And SPLC's biased opinion carries no weight when evaluating MEDRS. ] (]) 12:23, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Ok but we don't go to SEGM and genspect because they're fringe and promote bad science like rogd (there's no evidence for it). Them being a hate group clearly shows they're biased and as Misplaced Pages editors we should be careful with what they say, but from a Medrs pov, they just don't care about science and only use it as a tool ] (]) 12:25, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::Can you explain how citing Spiliadis (2019) is "going to SEGM and genspect"? ] (]) 17:22, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::I'd wager a guess and say it's because Spiliadis is an advisor of SEGM...
::::::::::::Also, wrt {{tq|And SPLC's biased opinion carries no weight when evaluating MEDRS.}}
::::::::::::* 1) MEDRS are pretty unequivocal that there is no evidence GET works or is necessary
::::::::::::* 2) MEDRS are overwhelmingly clear it's conversion therapy pretending not to be
::::::::::::* 3) We don't use the SPLCs designations in this article (though we should). We don't even use them to say GET is conversion therapy. We use them for relevant facts like the obviously anti-LGBT group the ] supports GET and cites SEGM to do so.
:::::::::::::* Friendly reminder that ACPeds directly recommends GET/GETA
::::::::::::* 4) ] says: {{tq|The prominence of fringe views needs to be put in perspective relative to the views of the entire encompassing field; limiting that relative perspective to a restricted subset of specialists or only among the proponents of that view is, necessarily, biased and unrepresentative.}}
::::::::::::SEGM, Genspect, GETA, and the ACPeds continue to be fringe anti-trans groups and the fact they're the biggest proponents of GET matters ] (]) 18:26, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::{{tq | I'd wager a guess and say it's because Spiliadis is an advisor of SEGM}}
:::::::::::::So Spiliadis' 2019 paper about the term he coined in 2017, written when he was a clinician at the Tavistock GIDS, is uncitable because Spiliadis went on to advise SEGM after it was founded in 2020. That's your answer? ] (]) 21:43, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::You asked {{tq|Can you explain how citing Spiliadis (2019) is "going to SEGM and genspect"?}} I answered. As RS have noted for years, SEGM is a small group of quacks who make ridiculous claims (which he has also made, ie that trans people don't experience conversion therapy) and lobby against trans rights - his position there does make him less reliable.
::::::::::::::More importantly: Spiliadis 2017 and 2019 are primary sources where he lays out a new approach: in 2019 he said {{tq|I attempted to move away from current theoretical polarities around psychosocial support for gender questioning young people and invite the reader to a different approach, the Gender Exploratory Model}}.
::::::::::::::His papers and model proposed therein have been extensively criticized by RS and medical orgs. Neither paper has any weight as neither are secondary or independent - GET is only notable because ''other'' sources discuss it. We weigh and discuss those, not the primary source. ] (]) 23:02, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::In fact ] Says spiliadalis developed GET and cites this paper so it would be the most primary source. ] (]) 23:16, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::As I noted at the start, Spiliadis 2019 is the originator of the term and the formalisation of the model.
::::::::::::::::That paper you cite is notable for its description:
::::::::::::::::{{quote frame | Responding to the increased visibility of detransition journeys, another model has emerged: the exploratory approach. Developed by Anastassis Spiliadis in England, this approach acknowledges the uncertainty inherent in trans journeys and underscores the clinician’s responsibility in facilitating exploration before undertaking a transition (Spiliadis, 2019). While recognizing the importance of contextual understanding and the dynamic nature of gender for appropriate support (Ashley, 2019; Coleman et al., 2022; Wren, 2019), some critique the exploratory approach’s suggestion that exploration should precede transition (Ashley, 2019).}}
::::::::::::::::All this says is it is a proposed model that has been critiqued. It doesn't say it is illegitimate or "conversion".
::::::::::::::::I also think that's a strange final citation. It is that was the first direct critique of exploratory therapy.
:::::::::::::::: however does contain lines such as:
::::::::::::::::{{quote frame | From the premise that facilitating exploration should be our starting point in caring for trans and gender creative youth, '''puberty blockers must be seen as the default position, to be readily prescribed''' since they leave the largest space for future identity development and negotiation.}}
::::::::::::::::Which is of course completely at odds with the eventual findings of the Cass Review, and why Ashley is so opposed.
::::::::::::::::We're simply talking about fundamentally different models of what "best practice" looks like, and those in favour of affirmative-medical-transition-on-demand consider any psychotherapeutic gatekeeping to be "conversion therapy", while those who view it as essential in determining who would benefit from medical interventions, do not. ] (]) 08:49, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::"and why Ashley is so opposed" prove it. --] (]) 10:50, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::Secondary/tertiary sources are things like systematic reviews, meta-analyses, textbooks and standards of care. A source that discusses something mentioned in another primary source doesn't make it a secondary source. Most of the sources here are either primary medical sources or popular press articles, which can be acceptable for a topic like this that probably hasn't been discussed directly in any secondary sources, but it is not true that we are excluding primary sources. ] (]) 23:18, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::And so I invite you to read once again my comment at the top of this section which states that the Cass Review notes this dispute, and warns against considering exploratory therapy to be conversion therapy.
:::::::::::::::Everyone has gone round the houses in this discussion and wound up right back at the start, which is to concede my original assertion which is that when all these sources are talking about exploratory therapy/exploratory psychotherapy/gender exploratory therapy/exploratory approaches they are '''all talking about the exact same thing'''.
:::::::::::::::Florence Ashley and WPATH have both likened this to conversion therapy (similarities/tantamount to), and other sources have subsequently cited them for these positions.
:::::::::::::::The Cass Review has said comparing it to conversion therapy is "harmful".
:::::::::::::::So this entire section should be rendered as a disagreement between MEDRS, with contested terminology.
:::::::::::::::What you keep trying to do is use ad hominem to exclude sources - directly or indirectly - and force one "side" of a real dispute between MEDRS into wikivoice. It is entirely inappropriate. ] (]) 08:33, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::Why not ] for a while. This thread is enormous now. ] (]) 08:47, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::This would not be a resolution. One possible way around is to replace the initial phrase by saying that "The denial of gender-affirming treatment under the guise of Gender Exploratory Therapy (GET)" is a form of conversion therapy. ] (]) 13:03, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::::Do we have RS that use the term GET and doesn't refer to it as conversion therapy. We certainly have RS that use Gender Exploratory model but that's not one to one the same (as WPATH SOC 8 says that's a term with many different meanings). If not we have to say that GET is conversion therapy (although I'd be happy to suggest that the part saying that GET is not gender exploration by itself should become more prominent in the section). ] (]) 13:44, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::::That's the heart of the issue, that intentional GI conversion therapy disguised as "exploration" should not be confused with the concept of gender exploration that (as Cass notes) even some proponents of the affirmative model consider an acceptable practice as part of a care pathway. ] (]) 15:18, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::::Your problem there is that you'd have to remove the citation to WPATH's criticism of the interim Cass Review, because that says "exploratory therapy" is tantamount to conversion therapy.
:::::::::::::::::::And this also means you're disagreeing with other editors (and the currently cited sources) that these are all the same thing.
:::::::::::::::::::You then have to reconcile that these sources all reference Spiladis 2019, but so does the Cass Review, in defining "exploratory approaches".
:::::::::::::::::::You then have to reconcile any source (like the Mother Jones article) which states Cass endorses "gender exploratory therapy".
:::::::::::::::::::And if you take out WPATH-attributed claims, none of this carries any MEDORG weight at all, making the highest MEDRS source on this subject the Cass Review.
:::::::::::::::::::The limitation you're trying to achieve won't work, and IMO the only feasible way through is to present this as the clear difference of opinion about ill-defined and contentious terms that it is, by stating what the Cass Review says about the use of these terms.
:::::::::::::::::::Because the heart of the dispute is that proponents of the affirmative model do not think that access to medical transition should be behind psychotherapeutic gatekeeping, and proponents of an ethical exploratory model think it should, and proponents of conversion therapy will call whatever barbarism they practice by whatever euphemism sounds palatable. ] (]) 08:18, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::::::The RS's say that GET is a term used by (seemingly almost exclusively) conversion therapists as a euphemism for denying any care indefinitely. Some go further and criticise individual documents (or people) for promoting this whilst not actually using the term GET (see WPATH on interim Cass). Cass (full) seems to be worried that people are thinking you can't have both a medical pathway and psychological interventions (as a side effect of this, affirmative Vs exploratory approach) but wants kids to have time to explore their gender and not feel 'pushed' down any pathway. WPATH SOC 8 says affirmative model and exploratory model are undefined terms. Is any of the above incorrect?
::::::::::::::::::::Based on this Misplaced Pages should say GET is a form of conversion therapy and is characterised by a denial of care. That gender exploration shouldn't be confused with GET. Then there's any details about organisations or documents Misplaced Pages should or shouldn't include.
::::::::::::::::::::Our current section does the above pretty well (I might argue the not confused with bit could be placed better, but it's alright) I fail to see where the npov problem with the entire section comes from. ] (]) 11:17, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::::::{{tq | Based on this Misplaced Pages should say GET is a form of conversion therapy and is characterised by a denial of care. }}
:::::::::::::::::::::But "gender exploratory therapy" as described by Spiliadis (2019) and reflected in Cass' citation of it and others as an "exploratory approach" is not that at all.
:::::::::::::::::::::{{quote frame | Therapeutic approaches that acknowledge the young person’s subjective gender experience, whilst also engaging in an open, curious, non-directive exploration. of the meaning of a range of experiences that may connect to gender and broader self-identity (Bonfatto &. Crasnow, 2018; Churcher Clarke & Spiliadis, 2019; Di Ceglie, 2009; Spiliadis, 2019).}}
:::::::::::::::::::::What you put forward is overly simplistic and if that were all there was to it, there wouldn't be this disparity between Cass and WPATH. You're trying to draw a distinction that does not exist and that the cited sources do not themselves draw.
:::::::::::::::::::::What Cass advocates is considered by WPATH tantamount to conversion therapy, which makes Cass' insistence that it is '''not''' a direct conflict between MEDRS, and one that absolutely should be reflected. And Cass' interpretation of Spiliadis (2019) carries more weight than Ashley (2022), which is foundational to this entire section.
:::::::::::::::::::::Nothing here should be in wikivoice, it has to be a difference of attributed opinion only. ] (]) 12:13, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::::::::Sorry Cass (full) doesn't mention Gender Exploratory therapy or Exploratory therapy anywhere so it's impossible to say that Cass supports that definition of GET. Cass uses Spiliadas once in a glossary for a definition they use (being generous and just searching the word exploratory) 4 times in the actual text. It seems like your and anywikiuser's arguments aren't convincing anyone. I'm going to drop the stick here and I'd recommend you do the same. ] (]) 13:19, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
::Adding which is an explicit response to Ashley (2022), which - again - rejects the idea that exploratory therapy is conversion therapy.
::{{quote frame | According to Ashley, conversion practices include not only direct attempts to change a person’s gender identity or gender expression, but any form of psychotherapy that examines possible causes of a person’s gender related distress or leads to any delay in medical transition}}
::To resolve the POV issues, I propose:
::* Open with a statement like {{tq|The role and nature of psychotherapeutic approaches to treating gender dysphoria is controversial}}.
::* Describe Spiliadis (2019) as proposing "gender exploratory therapy" as a name for undirected therapy for gender dysphoria with no fixed outcome in mind.
::* Describe Ashley (2022) as critiquing this as reminiscent of conversion or reparative therapy
::* Describe the evolving conflict between the affirmative/exploratory model as exemplified by the disagreement between WPATH and the Cass Review, with WPATH claiming Cass' endorsement of exploratory approaches are tantamount to conversion, and the Cass Review stating that comparing exploratory therapy to conversion is harmful.
::* Add attributed claims from eg. Caballero saying it is conversion therapy, and attributed claims from this new paper directly responding to Ashley saying it is not
::* Note eg. Mother Jones' reporting of usage of term "exploratory therapy" euphemistically by some gay conversion practitioners
::* Stop using the abbreviation "GET" as if it is a singular coherent defined practice that everyone agrees is the same, when various sources use gender exploratory therapy, exploratory therapy, exploratory approaches, exploratory psychotherapy, ethical exploratory approaches, and now (in this new paper) psychodynamic psychotherapy for gender dysphoria, and it is clear they are all discussing the same thing and responding to/accusing/criticising each other of various degrees of bias and misrepresentation
::* Retitle the section "Gender exploratory therapy controversy"
::] (]) 08:52, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
:::That's a perspective piece (opinion), so let's look at the credentials of the author:
:::*1) her total published contributions to transgender healthcare are 3 letters (including this one) to the editor citing SEGM/GENSPECT/GETA to argue that trans healthcare is bad and ] is real.
:::*2) She signed a letter by the ] (a culture war advocacy group) arguing the ] gender-affirming care textbook should be recalled because it's biased and activistic. <small>If you want to play the fun game of how many board members of ''indisputable'' conversion therapy advocacy orgs like ], ], and the ] signed it - I counted 4 at a glance (upwards of a dozen if you include SEGM/GENSPECT/GETA members known for publicly campaigning against gender-identity conversion therapy bans or arguing trans people have never experienced conversion therapy).</small>
:::*3) We do have an actually strong source, ''Decoding the Misinformation-Legislation Pipeline: an analysis of Florida Medicaid and the current state of transgender healthcare'', which states: {{tq| According to Florida Medicaid, Littman (2018) is one of multiple studies to introduce “additional subtypes of gender dysphoria” (in this case, ROGD) . It is not clear which studies outside of Littman’s 2018 article do propose additional subtypes, as--at this time--no such studies exist in the peer reviewed literature outside letters to the editor, specifically by Sinai et al (2022), Littman (2022), and Hutchinson et al (2020) . Rather, the only published original research that follows up on Littman’s 2018 study on ROGD “...did not find support within a clinical population for a new etiologic phenomenon of rapid onset gender dysphoria during adolescence” . In other words, the existence of ROGD is unsupported in current research.}}
:::* 4) , an org whose explicit goals banning transition for those under 25, banning public healthcare for trans healthcare, and making desistance ("no longer identifying as trans") the "stated goal of treatment" for young people believes that she's a reliable source and cites her in anti-trans legislation
:::*5) I've exhausted anything close to relevant expertise of hers
:::In short, this is an ''incredibly'' weak and biased source and doesn't justify any of the changes you present here.
:::P.S., as an aside, Cretella straight up uses "gender exploratory therapy", not the shortened version, and NARTH always practiced conversion therapy on trans people too. ] (]) 10:04, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
::::Generally in agreement. We should not bring ] views into the article and misrepresent them as viable and important mainstream views, or present the matter as "controversial" on that basis. Especially when those weak sources are known to be closely aligned with known anti-trans advocacy groups. Misplaced Pages should not lend prominence to fringe views and pseudoscience on the topic of conversion therapy. ] (]) 03:14, 29 June 2024 (UTC)


=== NPOV tag ===
:Whereas the ethics, efficacy, benefits, and potential for harm of therapies that seek to reduce or eliminate same-gender sexual orientation are under extensive debate in the professional literature and the popular media
Void if removed added a NPOV tag to the GET section a while ago and discussion here died down, do the other editors agree it's needed? There seems to be a clear consensus there is a form of conversion therapy labelled GET pushed by practioners of conversion therapy. RS are clear it exists, and specifically call out it relies on the ] trick of {{tq|it's not conversion therapy if it's ''undirected exploration'' of what ''trauma'' made this person <s>gay</s> trans.}} <small>And international medical consensus is that being transgender is not a mental health issue.</small> We really only have one source saying it's not, the ], and per the article the fact they endorse GET has been a subject of major criticism. There are very weak sources, commentaries and primary sources, from ] lobbying groups that argue GET isn't conversion therapy. GET is supported by many conversion therapy orgs like NARTH and the IFTCC. Some thought they are talking about different things both labelled GET, but per all the sources they are talking about the same GET.


@], @], @], @], @], @], @], @], @], @] - do you believe a NPOV tag is necessary? ] (]) 18:22, 23 July 2024 (UTC)
I have not seen any official statement refuting that. In 2004, the Counseling Psychologist published a paper saying "the topic of sexual-identity conflicts cannot be framed as it has been - that is, a war between opposing camps, with reparative therapists on one side and gay-affirmative therapists on the other. Ultimately, the client is the one who will be caught in the crossfire."


There is a debate in the field. Simple as that. ] (]) 07:08, 19 May 2008 (UTC) :I disagree that even the ] endorses GET, as opposed to therapy that encourages exploration of gender, no euphemisms. Which is to say, no I don't think the tag is appropriate. ] (]) 18:26, 23 July 2024 (UTC)
:I do not believe an NPOV tag is necessary ] (]) 18:26, 23 July 2024 (UTC)
:I don't disagree that there is debate in the professional literature and popular media. Regarding your revision and edit summary , two points: (1) First, procedurally, it's disingenuous to reprimand me by saying "Please trying talking about things for making major changes." The section has been specifically about the client self-determination issue for a very long time (close to a year), until you rewrote it without discussion . I was away at the time and so did not immediately revert and discuss. (2) Second, substantively, the original, stable version of that section was about a discrete topic that is fairly widely discussed in the literature. The presentation of that issue was well-written and cited a variety of articles to lay out a coherent dialectic. Your new version puts unrelated quotes next to each other and obscures the self-determination content. That's why I reverted it. ] (]) 01:22, 20 May 2008 (UTC)
:My earlier posts are still on this page. This is political game playing. Your comments about medical consensus is not representing how youth gender clinics actually work, in Europe at least. There is no medical consensus that 100% of youth referrals to gender clinics, which are all psychiatric clinics in Europe, must immediately write out a referral to endocrinology and surgery, and anything short of doing that is GET/conversion therapy. This is some new invented nonsense by activists who can't accept a middle ground as that is giving an inch to US politicians. Actual reality is complex and nuanced and this silly Mother Jones piece is just trash activist journalism. -- ]°] 20:32, 23 July 2024 (UTC)
::I apologize for the disingenuous reprimand. As you probably noticed, it is easy to get emotional about this topic. I actually do like discussing things with you because at least you are logical, even though we differ on opinion. To the point, I do not see how the new version puts unrelated quotes together. The main debate seems to be self-determination and possibility for change versus potential for harm, though neither side has been proven. I organized it with a summary, the official position promoting self-determination, arguments supporting self-determination, the official position warning potential for harm, and arguments against CT (which are quotes that I originally added, trying to be fair). I ended it with an observation about the debate and the harm it causes clients. I do not see how it is unrelated phrases stuck together. The original presented self-determination as if only conversion therapist were concerned about that. It also didn't cover other aspects of the debate such as evidence for success as well as the harm of the debate. We need a neutral section on the debate and I have been trying to get it in for a long time. We can have a self-determination section which is neutrally presented (the old "stable" one wasn't), but we definitely need a section on the debate as well. ] (]) 07:51, 20 May 2008 (UTC)
::That is a strawman, please stop accusing everyone who disagrees with you of playing politics.
:::I think of this as a stylistic issue rather than a pro/anti-conversion therapy issue. The content should be arranged topically -- we have sections on the harm and changeability issues, and had a section on the self-determination issue. That strikes me as a better organization than a generic "debate" heading. ] (]) 12:39, 24 May 2008 (UTC)
::{{tq|There is no medical consensus that 100% of youth referrals to gender clinics, which are all psychiatric clinics in Europe, must immediately write out a referral to endocrinology and surgery}} - nobody has said there is. WPATH doesn't even endorse this. This is a boogeyman.
::::I think we should have a debate section. I don't care if we have another self-determination section, but we need a debate section. I think Beckstead's quote which was removed on how the debate is damaging the clients is insightful and needs to remain in. I know of tons of people with same sex attraction who were too scared to see a psychologist because they were afraid s/he would tell them that they should just accept the fact that they were gay. Many of them had developed other problems from being so closeted and full of self hate. While the world goes on in political debate, real people are suffering, and no, not all of them would be happy with the gay lifestyle, as indicated by the research by Douglas Haldeman. And also, if we do have a self-determination section, it should not be presented as going contrary to modern psychology. Self determination is the mainstream view and those who oppose it are the fringe view. ] (]) 09:00, 1 June 2008 (UTC)
::GET - what we're taking about, is characterized by indefinite ''mandated'' "exploration" of "what trauma made you want to transition" while delaying all medical options. It is pushed by a few small conversion therapy groups. ] (]) 20:59, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
== Usage of the term "gay lifestyle" ==
:I don't think the NPOV tag is needed. We shouldn't allow tags to linger if there is no consensus that there is an issue that needs to be addressed. And we definitely should not allow tags to linger if the objections are based on fringe views and pseudoscience from anti-trans advocacy groups. ] (]) 23:10, 23 July 2024 (UTC)
Could you please define "gay lifestyle". I'm gay and I'd like to kow what my lifestyle is. --] (]) 18:43, 2 June 2008 (UTC)
::I think Void described the problem well elsewhere. That essentially you have one side who thinks every single child referred to a gender clinic is trans, and is trans in a way that requires cross-sex hormones and put on the waiting list for surgery when 18, and anyone who delays that should be in prison. And the other side who thinks no child is trans, that they are all deluded by the cult of gender ideology, and anyone forcing hormones and surgery on mentally ill children should be in prison. Neither side, it seems, think nonbinary people exist or forget they exist. Both side say "Don't listen to the other side, they are a fringe advocacy group, expounding a dangerous ideology". Meanwhile actual scientists and actual medical professionals are doing their job in a way that bears no resemblance to what either side claim is going on or should be going on. We have a problem that both sides are writing terrible terrible sources that are no better than rants in the Daily Mail for their level of fact checking and accuracy. How we got into a situation where some activist blogging in their bedroom is considered more reliable than systematic reviews in medical journals is deeply troubling to me from a MEDRS point of view.
P.S. Please define also "heterosexual lifestyle"; just to make things a bit clearer for the ignorant, like me. Thanks.
::I do not think for a moment Cass endorses conversion therapy. They have said so themselves and there's no indication they are a dishonest person or ignorant of what that means. They fully agree a trans life is not an inferior life or a second best choice, that hormones and surgery have a place. Wiser people than the Mother Jones authors, people who do actually know their stuff because its their job, are working out how best the psychiatrists should handle this group (and despite what YFNS keeps saying, it is psychiatrists) when they are referred gender questioning children. There will be a law banning trans conversion therapy in England and Wales, the Labour government committed to it in the King's speech the other day. Scotland has been consulting on the wording of such a law for they have their own legal system. Clearly this will also be compatible with the Cass recommendations, though there is anxiety that if badly worded it is so vague in scope no psychiatrist would want to work in that field. I have no doubt the concerns of both sides will be addressed in a way that makes both sides not entirely happy but could we leave the details and nuance of that all to professionals rather than trash magazine writers.
:Sorry. I did not mean to be offensive. By gay lifestyle I meant people who were either in sexual relationships with people of their own gender or pursuing said relationships. Just because your gay doesn't mean you have what is commonly termed in conservative circles as a gay lifestyle. People who have ceased pursuing homosexual relationships often refer to it as a lifestyle change. I shouldn't have used the term gay lifestyle, but I honestly forget it is offensive and it is sometimes easier than saying pursuing gay relationships. I will make more of an effort to avoid such a term in the future. Is there another term that is less offensive to refer to people who pursue sexual relationships with people of their gender? ] (]) 07:00, 3 June 2008 (UTC)
::What we currently have in the article is hyperbolic claims by one activist side. It doesn't need tagged. It needs removed. -- ]°] 07:45, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
::"lesbian", "gay", or "bisexual" ] 09:01, 3 June 2008 (UTC)
:::I would agree that some of the stuff Currently in the article is hyperbole. I heavily disagree that the entire section is activist hyperbole. There are groups of people out there performing conversion therapy under the name of GET (no evidence of recommending anyone go to endocrinology and their measure of success is people being happy with not transitioning), this phenomenon has a place in this article. I honestly think the only problem with the section is the statement "recommended by the Cass review". ] (]) 09:06, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
:::But how would that distinguish gays who pursue homosexual relationships from gays who do not? This was the context in which the offensive term "gay lifestyle" was used. ] (]) 17:37, 3 June 2008 (UTC)
::::Frankly I don't see how you can square yours and Loki's ''this has nothing to do with Cass'' perspective with YFNS comment at the top of this section which is adamant about the relevance. If you think that, you need to remove all the sources which direct their criticism at the Cass Review, which in particular means WPATH.
::::There is no such thing as a gay lifestyle because gay people do not behave in a single, uniform manner. Would an out, but celibate, priest be part of the lifestyle? It's a loadedterm used to dehumanize people. In fact, the WP ] article uses "homosexual lifestyle" as the example of a pejorative term. ] (]) 18:06, 3 June 2008 (UTC)
::::And you need to deal with the fact that Cass references Spiliadis, and so does Ashley - and virtually all the sources cite Ashley - so either they're talking about the same thing or they aren't.
:::::That is precisely the reason conservatives use the term. According to the usage in conservative circles, an out, but celibate, priest would most definitely not be part of the gay lifestyle. The whole purpose of the term is to distinguish those who choose to have gay sex and those who do not. This whole discussion is just simply for my benefit, since the term was used on the talk, not on the main page. I really do want to know what the correct term should be. I am more used to talking in conservative circles, but obviously some of the terminology doesn't translate very well. I do want to correct my speech to not be offensive. What is the correct term to distinguish a gay who is pursuing homosexual relationships from a gay (such as the celibate priest example) who is not? Conservatives use the term gay lifestyle. What do others use? ] (]) 18:47, 3 June 2008 (UTC)
::::And as for hyperbole you need to deal with the fact that the currently cited MEDRS are far more equivocal than currently implied by this section ("likened to", "tantamount to", "it seems doubtful" etc).
::::I see no substantive effort to deal with that so far or any of the issues I've raised, and conflicting opinions in this section already. ] (]) 09:26, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
:::::From memory Cass barely mentions GET by name. WPATH criticised interim Cass, Final Cass used Spiliadas as a reference for a glossary (for a term barely used in the full report). It seems likely that Cass may have taken this criticism on board for the final report. ] (]) 09:42, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
::::::{{tq | It seems likely that Cass may have taken this criticism on board for the final report.}}
::::::This is pure speculation when quite the opposite seems to be the case, since Cass specifically criticised the conflation of exploratory approaches with conversion, as WPATH did.
::::::And both the interim and final Cass cited Spilliadis in the same way.
::::::And note that current citations reference both Spilliadis and Ashley, and talk about a "gender exploratory model of care" and "exploratory model". None of this terminology is as neat or as definite or separable as editors would like it to be. ] (]) 10:22, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Cass is not a significant source for this page, as we've already seen. It contains no more than passing reference to this topic. People end up speculating about what it means by exploratory therapy, but it's not really relevant, because the review contains practically nothing about this topic. ] (]) 14:58, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
::::::::I repeat:
::::::::{{tq | I don't see how you can square yours and Loki's ''this has nothing to do with Cass'' perspective with YFNS comment at the top of this section which is adamant about the relevance. If you think that, you need to remove all the sources which direct their criticism at the Cass Review, which in particular means WPATH.}}
::::::::I don't see how sources explicitly criticising Cass are relevant, but Cass isn't. Please explain. ] (]) 15:23, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Cass has so little on this topic, and what it does have requires interpretation. If someone has sources that provide meaningful interpretation / analysis, then that source may be due. But using Cass directly require novel interpretation / analysis from editors, which should be avoided. ] (]) 19:22, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::For the record, here's
::::::::::* PATHA saying Cass endorsed GET, covered in RNZ and the Gay Times
::::::::::* WPATH/ASIAPATH/EPATH/USPATH/PATHA saying Cass endorsed GET
::::::::::* Here's a peer-reviewed paper on the Cass Review heavily criticizing its endorsement of GET
::::::::::* Here's a piece in the Guardian noting a Tavistock staff member said Cass's recommendations are pushing GET.
::::::::::] (]) 21:29, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::* PATHA says that {{tq|a number of people involved in the review ... have promoted non-affirming ‘gender exploratory therapy’}}, which is not saying that the review itself does.
:::::::::::* WPATH et al say that the interim report endorsed GET, which is not saying that the final report does.
:::::::::::* The Horton paper is concerned about the Cass Review's support for "non-affirmative" therapy in general, and does not at any point say it endorsed GET per se. In fact, it comes the closest to saying what I'm saying, in that it distinguishes between {{tq|gender exploration within an affirmative approach}} and {{tq|so-called “exploratory therapy” offered by non-affirmative practitioners who do not regard trans identities as valid}}
:::::::::::* The Guardian article is about the interim report, which is again not the final report.
:::::::::::] (]) 23:09, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
:How does everyone feel about just removing the fact the Cass Review supported it to remove the NPOV tag? I'll note that ] links here and one of it's heaviest criticisms has been it's endorsement of GET, but we can leave that for the Cass Review article. ] (]) 21:16, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
::Presenting sources in such a way as to leave out the relevant fact that they are directed at the Cass Review in order to avoid dealing with what the Cass Review says on this subject isn't NPOV. ] (]) 21:40, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
:::Believe me, I think the Cass Review should be mentioned here, but so far we have:
:::* a clear consensus there are conversion therapists practicing under the cover of GET and the section is due in the article
:::* no consensus that Cass/everybody else are talking about the same thing (though they are)
:::* absolutely no consensus to rewrite the section to say "sources disagree on if GET is conversion therapy" considering how many conversion therapists support it
:::If you want to propose a rewrite of the sentence mentioning Cass that leaves everyone happy, I'm all ears. ] (]) 22:03, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
::I'm fine with this. ] (]) 23:20, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
:::I would be fine with that as well. But if there are reliable sources saying that the Cass Review does support it, then those may be relevant. Depending on the sources, attribution may be appropriate. ] (]) 03:39, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
:I have collated 20 sources in a table ]
:These are sources either currently cited or that have been discussed on talk. I may have missed some, but it should be the major ones.
:It is useful to sort by date to see the evolution of this from Spiliadis' original case study, to Ashley's opinion on it, to increasing polarisation and hyperbolic/definitive claims in a variety of sources.
:I've tried to tag each source whether I think it is MEDORG, MEDRS, RSOPINION etc, I've probably got these wrong so input here is welcome.
:I have indicated whether a source is currently cited in this article, and also whether I believe the text of the source supports a wider interpretation of this section, either because it uses language other than strictly "gender exploratory therapy" (eg. exploratory approaches, exploratory psychotherapy) or because it directly references Cass or Spiliadis.
:By my count, of those 20, 14 support an interpretation that goes beyond simply "gender exploratory therapy" and encompasses other terms and the Cass Review, of which 6 are ''already cited'' on this article (ie, fully half the relevant citations).
:Notable excluded sources are The Cass Review, UKCP, Spiliadis, D'Angelo and Sinai. The rationale for their exclusion has varied from:
:* They are not relevant (which I dispute, by a reading of even just the currently cited sources)
:* They are ] (which I dispute, as the basis for that is a circular argument and largely relies on hyperbole from PARTISAN sources like SPLC).
:I also note that much of the language is opinion, and caveated ("critics consider", "tantamount to", "said", "my view" etc) and does not support the bold wikivoice claims being made.
:I think at this stage if you seriously want to argue this only and strictly about "gender exploratory therapy" and claim the Cass Review is not relevant, you need to remove the following citations:
:*
:*
:*
:*
:*
:*
:At which point you a) lose the strongest MEDORG source and b) call into question all the MEDRS that cite Ashley 2022.
:And in any case I don't think deliberately selecting sources in that way would result in NPOV. ] (]) 10:09, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
::1) most of what you labelled RSOPINION is just RS (the SPLC continues to be an RS and not a SPS)
::2) Spiliadis, D'Angelo and Sinai are indeed FRINGE, we've extensively discussed on this page how they're tied to FRINGE lobbying groups that would still be FRINGE if not mentioning GET.
::3) Rewriting this to say GET isn't conversion therapy is a non-starter, you've been crusading to change it for months and consensus disagrees with you.
::4) I just removed the pov tag per the consensus it's not needed, I also removed the sentence on the UKCP and Cass since it's obviously contentious. If you want the Cass review and UKCP to be included, please propose a version you'd be ok with. ] (]) 16:32, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
:::Thanks, this is an improvement. Generally in agreement about some of those sources being fringe, and we shouldn't waste time and space revisiting them. ] (]) 18:08, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
:::{{tq | SPLC continues to be an RS and not a SPS)}}
:::It is an SPS. They wrote it and published it themselves. That's the definition of an SPS. And given the note on ] your continued use of them as an authoritative source on subjects ''well'' out of their wheelhouse is inappropriate. The biased opinion of a highly partisan US-based lobbying group does not override MEDRS, least of all internationally.
:::To demonstrate the problems with this section and the continued refusal to cite Spiliadis, here's what Mackinnon et al says:
:::{{quote frame | The gender exploratory therapy model is characterized by required, in-depth talk therapy over an extended period of time in an attempt to foster an understanding of underlying factors that may be contributing to gender-related distress . Proponents argue that this approach is developmentally-informed while also enabling clinical discrimination between gender dysphoria and mental illness prior to facilitating medical/surgical interventions . Practitioners of gender exploratory therapy also often view medical transition as a last resort availed to patients only after judicious therapy and evaluation . To date, known practitioners of this model primarily work clinically with children and adolescents , however Spiliadis states that gender dysphoric children, adolescents, and adults alike could benefit from gender explorative therapy. To date, there are no known empirical studies that examine psychosocial or medical/surgical outcomes following the gender exploratory model of care and some authors have raised questions regarding its clinical practices. For instance, '''this model has been likened to gender identity conversion therapy''' given that some practitioners avoid using clients’ affirmed name and pronouns, while aiming to question trans identification in children and adolescents . '''However, Spiliadis’ differentiates the exploratory model from identity conversion therapy, stating that practitioners of the former are advised to acknowledge patients’ gender identities, and to collaborate with them without any active guidance toward a specific identity or outcome''' .}}
:::This citation presents all of the problems you, Loki, and Hist6900 refuse to grapple with, namely:
:::* It cites Spiliadis, whose terminology is "gender exploratory '''model'''", so we know that's what we're talking about (which therefore brings in Cass, which also cites Spiliadis and is talking about the exact same thing)
:::* It does not treat Spiliadis as FRINGE (and nor does Cass)
:::* It couches language in a far more balanced way ("has been likened to" is VERY different to "is", and Spiliadis' explanation of the distinction is included)
:::* It uses multiple overlapping terms, including "exploratory model", as juxtaposed with the "affirmative model" (which again brings in Cass, because this is not just about the specific phrase "gender exploratory therapy", but is ''exactly'' the exploratory/affirmation contrast Cass addressed)
:::MacKinnon et al is one of the stronger citations on the page, as it is an actual study and not just an opinionated essay published in a journal, and - IMO - this passage above gives a very clear indication of how we should be presenting this subject, and the language that should be used.
:::{{tq | Rewriting this to say GET isn't conversion therapy is a non-starter, you've been crusading to change it for months and consensus disagrees with you.}}
:::Please see upthread for what I've been reasonably proposing, which is balance and a description of the various perspectives, ie that some say it is and others say it depends what you mean but you shouldn't conflate ethical psychotherapy with conversion. All perspectives need to be fairly represented, ''as in MacKinnon et al'', which you cite, especially when different sources mean different things with overlapping terms.
:::Editors keep insisting that sources that aren't about "gender-exploratory therapy" aren't relevant, but of the sources on this page, only seven talk '''only''' about "gender-exploratory therapy", with the rest using broader terminology. McKinnon brings in multiple terms. Note that the direct quote from the actual conversion therapy advocate in the Mother Jones piece uses the terms "change therapy" and "exploratory therapy".
:::{{quote frame | “It truly is very similar to how the Alliance has always approached unwanted SSA ,” she told the assembled therapists. “You approach it as ‘change therapy’—or, even less triggering, ‘exploratory therapy.’”}}
:::The highest authority source in this section WPATH's direct response to the interim Cass Review, which also ''doesn't even say "gender exploratory therapy"''. How do you justify neither the Interim Cass Review nor the Cass Review being relevant given that citation? How do you justify selectively including some sources which use broader terminology, while excluding others as "not relevant" when they use the same terminology?
:::Snipping Mother Jones' reference to UKCP and the Cass Review is not a suitable solution to the clear POV issues. All the Mother Jones piece does is confirm what I have said for months, which is that the Cass Review '''is''' relevant. I know you accept it is relevant, you've said so. I agree. The solution is not ''to exclude the most relevant sources to preserve a particular POV'', but to neutrally render what RS say. The selective interpretation of sources that actually use multiple terms or snipping the parts of the Mother Jones article that bring in Cass is very clear ], which violates NPOV by {{tq |selectively presenting one point of view from available reliable sources that actually support two or more points of view that may conflict with each other}}. ] (]) 12:30, 27 July 2024 (UTC)
::::I support the statements made here - Cass, and the UKCP statement, seems very relevant. To remind ourselves on UKCP: after validating the exploratory approach they are very explicit:
::::* "exploratory therapy must not be conflated with conversion therapy which seeks to change or deny a person’s sexual orientation and/or gender identity. Conversion therapy as so defined is harmful and must not be practised".
::::] (]) 22:32, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
:::::Because it fails the ] - if something looks like conversion theory, sounds like conversion theory and smells like conversion theory, then it's probably conversion theory. A different name doesn't change that (which is why this discussion had ended several weeks ago with no consensus for inclusion). Many worldwide experts have called it what it is, as has been explained above in the thread. Repeating the same argument over and over is why we have ]. ] (]) 22:39, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
::::::It is not for you to apply the duck test yourself, it is for you to stick to what reliable sources say. And accusing an editor of IDHT for their first contribution on this talk is inappropriate. ] (]) 07:48, 20 August 2024 (UTC)
::::::I'll add that your comment is at odds with your argument here. If you think that simple mentions of "exploratory therapy" and comments from the Cass Review about conversion therapy are relevant to establish an in-quote link in an other article to this section on "gender exploratory therapy", then you should be consistent in arguing that relevance here, where the majority have argued against it, even removing material about Cass to that effect. I think that your argument that justifies a link to this section means the whole perspective that the Cass Review and sources about "exploratory therapy" are relevant. I don't think you can have it both ways. ] (]) 08:56, 27 August 2024 (UTC)


== Pending or proposed (yellow) category on the map ==
== The APA has no conflict with psychologists who help those distressed by unwanted homosexual attraction ==


It's obvious that yellow "pending or proposed" category on the map is pure ] and must be removed. ] (]) 18:41, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
What context do you think is necessary to put that quote in context. After he made the quote he reiterated some of the basic principles that have already been confirmed. Would this be enough context?
:The President of the ] has said: "The APA has no conflict with psychologists who help those distressed by unwanted homosexual attraction," provided they follow the several principles affirmed by the APA with regard to treatments to alter sexual orientation.
If not, what context do you want?] (]) 07:59, 20 May 2008 (UTC)
:This would strike me as NPOV:
<blockquote>"Gerald Koocher, while serving a one-year term as president of the American Psychological Association, said that "the APA has no conflict with psychologists who help those distressed by unwanted homosexual attraction." Advocates of conversion therapy called this statement "an amazing turnabout" and a positive development. But Koocher clarified his comments soon after, stating that "in a full multifaceted therapeutic relationship, the therapist has every duty to respond to patient choice and to help patients achieve their goals.... BUT... therapists must determine whether patients understand that their motives may arise purely from the social pressures of a homophobic environment.... patients must understand that lack a validated scientific foundation and may prove psychologically harmful."</blockquote>
:] (]) 12:29, 24 May 2008 (UTC)


:I would agree with removing yellow, unless an upcoming law has a transitional period between receiving assent and when the ban comes into effect. --] <small>(])</small> 04:05, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
== 'Queer' ==


== not to be confused with "Transgender hormone therapy" ==
Beside this article, there is a box indicating that the article is part of the 'LGBT and Queer studies' series. The word ''queer'' is usually used to associate homosexuality with eccentricity and insanity. Its use in an article about how homosexuality has been treated as an illness is disgusting and inappropriate. Those who wish to can protest its use here: http://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2008_May_19#Category:Queer_studies. ] (]) 05:08, 21 May 2008 (UTC)
:It is an academic term. See Sedgwick's definition...] (]) 09:48, 21 May 2008 (UTC)
::'An academic term' - that's vague. It isn't used by all academics. And academics are not above criticism. ] (]) 10:12, 21 May 2008 (UTC)
:::It's an established term...See Queer Theory. It's not at all meant in the offensive sense. That would be rather laughable.] (]) 10:21, 21 May 2008 (UTC)
:::It's wrong to use a term that is usually used in an offensive way in a positive spirit. You simply can't change the fact that it is an offensive term for most people, and since there already are more generally acceptable positive terms, why even bother trying and cause needless anger in the process? ] (]) 23:04, 21 May 2008 (UTC)
::::] is different from LGBT Studies. Both are academic fields. You may want to read up on it before being so bold.] (]) 00:16, 22 May 2008 (UTC)


@] Since both are "therapy" related to transgender topic and the names do not contain information about their differences, doesn't it merit a template:distinguish there? --by ] (]) at 15:10, 28 July 2024 (UTC)
::::"Queer" and "gay" are not interchangeable terms; "gay" cannot simply be substituted for comfort's sake. Some people object to the very existence of a queer subculture (consisting of people who consider themselves "queer" and not "gay"), but that objection does not make the subculture--and the need for its descriptive term--disappear.
:::: are still offended that the word "gay" has taken on its modern meaning, but so far their offense has failed to change the language. Even words which are universally regarded as offensive are offensive only by consensus--they in themselves. ] (]) 07:41, 31 May 2008 (UTC)


:I'm not seeing much evidence of this confusion, outside of TERFs intentionally misusing the term to paint trans people as being misguided or groomed into transitioning. However, the OED defines one sense of the term as GAC, attributing this to a 1967 journal misusing it in the same way; "Apparently an isolated use". I think we may as well have a hatnote to get ahead of that. –] (] • ]) 15:18, 28 July 2024 (UTC)
== Non ex-gay relapses (removed from article) ==
::I largely agree with this, I think a full disambiguation is unnecessary. I'm honestly not sure how someone looking for THT would end up here rather than at THT. ] (]) 15:40, 28 July 2024 (UTC)
* Terrance Lewis was a minister and former counsellor at Providence Bible College in Winnipeg, Canada who was found guilty in February 2008 for sexually assaulting a young man who sought counselling to make him heterosexual. The alleged victim, now 29, told court he started meeting Lewis for counselling sessions in early 2000 after his parents caught him viewing gay pornography on the family computer. The man said Lewis started a program of “touch therapy,” which included the two kissing and fondling each other and engaging in sexual roleplaying. <ref></ref><ref></ref>


== New Source (Metanoia apology coverage) ==
* In 2006, ], former American ] ] and leader of the ] resigned or was removed from all of his leadership positions after allegations of gay sex and ] were made by ], a former ]. Initially Haggard denied even knowing Mike Jones, but as a media investigation proceeded he acknowledged that some allegations, such as his purchase of ], were true. He later added "sexual immorality" to his list of confessions. After the scandal was publicized, Haggard entered three weeks of intensive counseling, overseen by four ministers. On ], ], one of those ministers stated that Haggard "is completely heterosexual".<ref>{{cite news
| title = Haggard Pronounced 'Completely Heterosexual'
| date = ]
| publisher = Associated Press
}}</ref> The minister later said he meant to say that therapy "gave Ted the tools to help to embrace his heterosexual side."<ref>{{cite news
|title= More Haggard details emerge
|date= ]
|publisher= ''North Jersey Record and Herald News''
|url= http://www.northjersey.com/page.php?qstr=eXJpcnk3ZjczN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXkyNSZmZ2JlbDdmN3ZxZWVFRXl5NzA4MTA0NCZ5cmlyeTdmNzE3Zjd2cWVlRUV5eTI=
|pages= 1
|accessdate= 2007-02-22
}}</ref>On February 6, 2008, Haggard had requested to leave the "restoration program" created for him by the New Life Church. In a press release, the New Life Church states it "recognizes the process of restoring Ted Haggard is incomplete and maintains its original stance that he should not return to vocational ministry. However, we wish him and his family only success in the future."<ref></ref><ref></ref>


Over on ], in the past few weeks has been argued several times as referring to to this subject by @], @], @], @], @] and @], eg this from YFNS:
:Both of these do not belong in the section with the ex-ex-gays. Neither Haggard or Lewis are cited as having claimed to be "ex-gay" at any point--Rather, both appear to have been closeted and acting against their professed belief systems. While both events seem notable, I don't see any connection between Haggard and conversion therapy established by the text. Lewis might be appropriate in the section on abuses occurring during conversion therapy. ] (]) 07:58, 22 June 2008 (UTC)


{{tq | By my count, me, Raladic, DanielRigal, RoxySaunders, Snokalok, and Loki think we should link exploratory therapy to gender exploratory therapy,}}
:The stuff about Ted Haggard certainly didn't belong where it was, and arguably didn't belong in the article at all. I'm not sure why you removed the stuff about Lewis, however. The section it was in is called 'Relapses and other scandals', so it isn't just about ex-ex-gays. This is an example of an 'other' scandal, so it should probably just go back in the article. ] (]) 10:55, 24 June 2008 (UTC)
::Lewis is definitely more borderline. Here's a thought--why not include it in the prior section? It's an abuse by a non-ex-gay counselor of a patient during conversion therapy, even if the patient is not a minor. I think it would be better to include all the "abuses" in one section, and all the "relapses" in another, and chuck the stuff that's neither an abuse nor a relapse, like Haggard. ] (]) 16:07, 24 June 2008 (UTC)
::My point was that the section you removed that from was called, 'Relapses and other scandals.' Thus, its content doesn't necessarily have to be about ex-gays going back to being gay. It could be about pretty much any kind of ex-gay scandal. If necessary, it could be reworded to make this clearer. ] (]) 03:17, 25 June 2008 (UTC)
:::Eh, I'd rather add an "other scandals" section than stick Lewis back in there. The "relapse" scandals go to the heart of the assertion that conversion therapy is ineffective. The section as it is, lacking Lewis, makes that point much more strongly. The documented abuses suffered by those undergoing convesion therapy speak to the assertion that it is fundamentally rooted in homophobia, and a source of oppression rather than psychological help. Adding "bare facts" to sections that don't really mesh well weakens the argument made in those sections. Hence, I'd favor splitting Lewis out into an "other scandals" section--except that he'd look kind of lonely there, and beg the question why he wouldn't be in with the abusers... since his only separating characteristic is that his victim was not a minor. Does that make sense? Actually, I've sufficiently convinced myself, I think I'm going to put it back in that section. ] (]) 05:13, 25 June 2008 (UTC)


I note this source does not say "gender exploratory therapy" anywhere, so it raises again the question: are sources that simply say "explorative therapy" or some variant - in the obvious context of relating to gender - relevant? If so, this undermines some of the prior argument for excluding several notable ].
== Reparative therapy versus conversion therapy ==


I also note that the point of this source is that:
Recently, an editor called 66.30.20.71‎ has been going through articles and changing "reparative therapy" to "conversion therapy." In a few cases, this may be correct, but in most of the cases the editor has done this, it is a serious error. 66.30.20.71‎ has already been cautioned on his talk page about this by two editors, one of them me. 66.30.20.71‎ has tried to justify his editing by pointing to the article on conversion therapy, saying that it does not say that reparative therapy is only one kind of conversion therapy. The reason why the article didn't say that is because 66.30.20.71‎ had changed it. I have changed it back, and it is now correct. ] (]) 04:31, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


* A student was expelled for a petition saying that "explorative therapy" might end up caught in a gender identity conversion practices ban
I gather that 66.30.20.71‎ had a problem with Warren Throckmorton being used as a source, but there's no question that Throckmorton is correct. His article usefully points out a common and serious error, and it would be extremely regrettable if this article is going to be edited in a way that perpetuates the mistake Throckmorton exposed. Please, before anyone decides to change this, find a source suggesting that Throckmorton is wrong. Absent such a source, there's no justification for changing the article back again. ] (]) 04:34, 26 June 2008 (UTC)
* , and both that apology and this Guardian source supports {{tq | as a matter of general principle the validity of the professional belief that children with gender dysphoria should be treated with explorative therapy, rather than being affirmed towards medical intervention}}
* The Cass Review: {{tq | She noted that medical professionals were nervous about being accused of “conducting conversion therapy if … they take a cautious or exploratory approach” }}


66.30.20.71‎ wrote this in the article, '] distinguishes what he calls "reparative therapy" from his own method, which he refers to as ].' The source referred to cannot justify this claim; "reparative therapy" ''is not Throckmorton's term'', so the words 'what he calls "reparative therapy"' do not make sense here. They falsely imply that it is Throckmorton in particular who is responsible for this term, but he didn't coin the expression "reparative therapy"; as Throckmorton points out, the person chiefly responsible for it was Elizabeth Moberly. ] (]) 04:51, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


I think the treatment of this source calls into question the consistency of what YFNS described as {{tq | no consensus that Cass/everybody else are talking about the same thing (though they are)}}
I urge other editors to investigate this situation and undo 66.30.20.71‎'s changing of "reparative therapy" to "conversion therapy" when it is a mistake, which it usually is. I suggest that text visible only while editing be put into these articles to discourage other editors from making the same mistake. ] (]) 04:42, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


I think ], you really have to accept the Cass Review is too, and I think this is something better decided here rather than another page. Arguing that this source justifies a link to this section (because it is allegedly about this subject) while excluding the substance of this source (that Metanoia thinks exploratory therapy is entirely valid, and Cass' warnings about clinicians fearing being accused of conversion therapy for exploratory therapy) makes no sense.
:I am not pleased with the way that Skoojal has framed this discussion, so I have created a ], below. ] (]) 11:13, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


And in that light, I question how sound this action was:
:I hate to engage in this skewed discussion at all, but I have to make one correction. Skoojal stated the following:
::''" didn't coin the expression 'reparative therapy'; as Throckmorton points out, the person chiefly responsible for it was Elizabeth Moberly".''
:Actually, Throckmorton the term to ], not Moberly. ] (]) 11:53, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


{{tq|How does everyone feel about just removing the fact the Cass Review supported it to remove the NPOV tag?}}
== Recent edit by Jokestress ==


When this story provides yet more secondary coverage that it is actually relevant.
Without any prior discussion, Jokestress recently added a large amount of information about transgender issues to this article. It is unclear to me that this was the correct decision, or that this material was properly integrated with existing material. After all, the article reads, 'Today's conversion therapists characterize the movement as offering the possibility of a choice to people who are unhappy with their attraction to the same sex.' That statement is sourced to an article that defines reparative and conversion therapies as being about sexual preference only, not gender identity. If this is correct, then it doesn't make sense to say that conversion therapy is also about transgender issues, which do not necessarily involve homosexuality. Just on that basis alone, I think there is a case for reverting the edits made by Jokestress. ] (]) 05:59, 26 June 2008 (UTC)
:The problem is that this sort of therapy is not used just for sexual orientation, and in some cases therapy for gender variance has been implemented in hopes of preventing homosexuality. The problem is not the additional material, which is all reliably sourced to clinical publications, but the article's bias toward sexual orientation therapies. I agree that the place I put the new material could be discussed, but the article itself focuses primarily on just one of the kinds of therapy. In fact, a case can be made that most conversion therapy is done (especially on children) not because they are gay, but because they '''act''' gay, which is gender identity and expression. There's plenty more info on reparative therapy for gender-variant youth. I am open to discussion. By the way, I am not sure why we are using "conversion therapy" and not "reparative therapy" (which is what I usually see used. ] (]) 06:16, 26 June 2008 (UTC)
:Even granted that the material you added should be in the article at all, you should have thought more carefully about how to add it. It looks plain silly for the article to say both that conversion therapy is about both changing sexual preference and gender identity issues ''and'' that 'conversion therapists characterize the movement as offering the possibility of a choice to people who are unhappy with their attraction to the same sex.' ] (]) 07:15, 26 June 2008 (UTC)
::Those aren't necessarily contradictory statements, if that's what you mean. How would you propose we synthesize both uses of the term? A section for each - GID and homosexuality? ] (]) 07:43, 26 June 2008 (UTC)
::The two statements obviously look contradictory. One asserts that conversion therapy is about both of two different things. The other asserts that it is about only one of those things. Even if the statements didn't ''look'' contradictory, there would still be the problem that the article links to a source that contradicts the material you added.


The best and highest quality definition of what is referred to as "explorative therapy" and "exploratory approach" in this article - which many editors now insist is relevant - is that in the Cass Review:
::And then there's this, in the article, 'According to a response released by American Psychiatric Association, Zucker does not advocate reparative therapy for transgender adults or for trans youth in all cases, and he opposes change therapy for gays under all circumstances: "For all patients, regardless of age, the focus of therapy is the patient's gender identity, not the patient's sexual orientation. Dr. Zucker's therapeutic approach has no relationship to so-called reparative or sexual conversion therapies that attempt to change homosexual orientations to heterosexual ones."' Given the last part of that statement, I wonder whether this material isn't a questionable addition to the article? ] (]) 07:54, 26 June 2008 (UTC)
::A further oddity is that this quote from Zucker seems to be sourced to an article that does not contain it (and spare us the confusions between the American Psychological Association and the American Psychiatric Association). That particular mistake gave me all the reason I needed to remove that material. ] (]) 08:37, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


{{quote frame | Exploratory Approaches - Therapeutic approaches that acknowledge the young person’s subjective gender experience, whilst also engaging in an open, curious, non-directive exploration of the meaning of a range of experiences that may connect to gender and broader self-identity (Bonfatto & Crasnow, 2018; Churcher Clarke & Spiliadis, 2019; Di Ceglie, 2009; Spiliadis, 2019).}} ] (]) 18:29, 9 September 2024 (UTC)
Jokestress' large and inappropriate addition is an attempt to use this page for her own sociopolitical agenda. Jokestress has recently started re-accusing ] and others of conducting reparative therapy. Zucker pointed out in a statement that this was untrue (he works with GID kids and not people who are trying not to be gay). It thus became of interest to Jokestress to expand the definition of "reparative/conversion therapy" to include trans-, so that those terms would to make her prior accusations about Zucker less incorrect.


:I think that there might be a distinction between what we all know that they are talking about and what we can actually demonstrate with Reliable Sources. We can't say things in articles that are not covered in reliable sources, even if anybody with two brain cells knows exactly what they mean, but we also can't be breaking our backs bending over to find tortured excuses to split hairs that have not been explicitly split by Reliable Sources. It is not our job to invent excuses or deflections on their behalf. "Gender exploratory therapy" is uncontroversially recognised as a form of conversion therapy. The term was coined to try to hide, or delay recognition of, that fact. We are already in the realm of deliberate bad faith terminology so we have to be careful. Could there be something completely different called "exploratory therapy"? I guess so? That would be terrible bad luck though. If there are Reliable Sources to prove that there really is a completely different thing which, purely coincidentally, has a similar name then the Reliable Sources have it. If not, I think Occam's Razor applies. "gender exploratory therapy" is a bit of a mouthful and is extremely likely that people might shorten the name, even when not seeking to be deceptive. As yet, nobody has proposed a specific alternative meaning for "exploratory therapy" and I think that they would have if there was one.
You will notice that her large edit contains ''no'' reference supporting her revisionist definition of reparative/conversion therapy.
:Please indulge me in an analogy. If you see an article about "Trump" then your first thought is that it is about the former President of the USA. You might read a little further and discover that it is actually about Mary Trump but not until you see the name "Mary". If you are reading material about Presidents of the USA and it says "Trump" then it would be perverse to assume it meant anybody other than the former President. Similarly, if you are reading material about gender and the phrase "exploratory therapy" comes up then it can safely be assumed to mean "gender exploratory therapy", with all the implications that carries, unless it explicitly provides some other meaning. ] (]) 19:11, 9 September 2024 (UTC)
::{{tq | As yet, nobody has proposed a specific alternative meaning for "exploratory therapy" and I think that they would have if there was one.}}
::I quoted the Cass Review definition in the comment you're replying to, which is derived from and cites Spiliadis (2019).
::{{tq | Similarly, if you are reading material about gender and the phrase "exploratory therapy" comes up then it can safely be assumed to mean "gender exploratory therapy"}}
::So you agree that the Cass Review is talking about the same thing? Because the entire point is that , but all the sources that point out this is controversial are excluded from this page.
::{{quote frame | In her review, Cass said professionals supporting young people with gender incongruence or distress were “overshadowed by an unhelpfully polarised debate around conversion practices”. She noted that some medics were afraid of being accused of conducting “conversion therapy if, again, they take a cautious or exploratory approach” and some clinicians expressed “fearfulness about what colleagues might say if they speak up and express an opinion that is not consistent with theirs”.}}
::A good thought experiment is how would this section look if it was produced only from MEDRS.
::I wrote a suggestion ] for how this would look, using only MEDRS/MEDORG sources, in date order, including the ones that have been wrongly excluded from this page, and directly quoting the equivocal language from the ones that are used (ie, "similarities" and "tantamount") instead of the current strong wikivoice claim.
::We should be basing this from the ground up on the best sources, and there is no good reason not to cite Cass. ] (]) 08:50, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
:@] his website links to Genspect and GETA, which RS identify as the pushers of this nonsense. Some of the things linked there, such as Our Duty, have stated desistance should be the explicit goal of therapy for trans kids, called to end public healthcare for all trans people, and banning trans healthcare for those under 25.
:This man is painfully obviously a fringe conversion therapy pusher.
:My position is consistent. Even if we assumed Cass is talking about something else, Esses would still obviously be a conversion therapy advocate.
:I continue to maintain this article should mention the Cass Review and the fact it's been criticized for pushing conversion therapy. I disagree with your assessment we have to rewrite the section to say "it isn't/might not be conversion therapy because Cass said so". ] (]) 19:15, 9 September 2024 (UTC)
:I mostly agree with DanielRigal here. "Gender exploratory therapy" and similar is often used as a euphemism for conversion therapy. But it's also possible to go to a therapist to explore your gender identity in a not-conversion-therapy way. The main difference is whether the therapist in question is supportive of trans identities or whether they try to discourage the patient by means of constant questioning whereby being trans can never be the correct answer.
:Obviously there is no way to fully disentangle this terminology, so some parsing of the terms in context is necessary, the same way it's often necessary for a bunch of other terms. If I came across an LBJ speech where he was talking about "the war" I would usually assume he meant the Vietnam War, even though he was also responsible for a policy agenda called "the war on poverty". Some contexts might make me change my mind but other contexts would make me even more sure he meant Vietnam.
:In this particular case, I'd normally assume that the words "gender exploratory therapy" in that order mean conversion therapy, because people who mean the other thing usually don't make a clear distinction between it and other reasons one might go to therapy. James Esses is strongly associated with anti-trans groups, so when he says it he almost certainly means the euphemism for conversion therapy. The authors of the Cass Review are sort of an ambiguous case, but just based on the way they talk about it I'm inclined to give them the benefit of the doubt. ] (]) 20:52, 9 September 2024 (UTC)
:I agree with what others are saying. These statements are not in a vacuum, taken in the context of the subject matter, “exploratory therapy” obviously refers to gender exploratory therapy.
:If so and so in Eugene Oregon said he underwent what he called “exploratory therapy” for his depression, that’s different, but in the context of gender dysphoria, trans rights, and psychosocial approaches, “exploratory therapy” is an obvious reference to “gender exploratory therapy”
:Also, Metanoia fully apologized not because it’s not conversion therapy, but because support for such is a legally protected belief under British law.
:I also fully disagree with rewriting this section because a highly criticized report by the British government said it was okay to practice. I’m perfectly okay with including the nervousness quote somewhere though. ] (]) 01:35, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
:How often do we use settlement apologies as Medrs? ] (]) 08:08, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
::How often do we use reports from the Southern Poverty Law Centre to decide MEDRS are FRINGE? ] (]) 08:16, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
:::We don't, void. Not ever. This comes across to me as a mean-spirited jab at hist900 above, but even then that's not what they said at all. --] (]) 08:59, 10 September 2024 (UTC)


== Studies ==
I believe this is a gross abuse of wikipedia and that Jokestress should not be permitted to edit on pages related to the issue.<br/>
—] (]) 14:22, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


* some individuals do become skilled at ignoring same-sex attractions and go on to lead ‘outwardly heterosexual lives’, however this appears to be less common among those who were not to some degree attracted to members of the opposite sex (for example, bisexual in orientation) prior to change efforts.
== Throckmorton ==


I need help deciding how to incorporate this APA quote in the article.
In , I changed the two sentences in the article. Previously, they read:


Unwanted same-sex attraction has reportedly been diminished with talk therapy (but only for adult volunteers). ] (]) 19:08, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
:Sometimes ''reparative therapy'' is misleadingly used synonymously with ''conversion therapy'', though in fact it is only one type of conversion therapy."<ref name="What is RT" />


== ABA in lead ==
I found this assertion curious, as the article itself is called "]"; and the article itself makes no such distinction. I visited the reference for this statement, and determined that the person who presented this definition as was ]. I determined that this reference (Throckmorton's ] website) is not sufficient to claim the "facts" about this definition, particularly considering that the article used to be called "Reparative therapy", but is now called "Conversion therapy": apparently, at some point there was a consensus so clear that it allowed the title of the article to be changed. These were the circumstances under which I attributed this opinion to the person who held it. With my changes, the sentences read:


{{ping|Laurier}} I just undid your expansion to the introduction, for a couple of reasons.
:] distinguishes what he calls "reparative therapy" from his own method, which he refers to as ]. Throckmorton argues that it is erroneous to use "reparative therapy" as an umbrella term, suggesting instead the use of the phrase "reorientation therapy".<sup><span class=plainlinks>]]]</span></sup>
#It created an ungainly mess of a sentence, ending a list with subclause and parenthetical. Particularly up front, we want s more straightforward read ing.
#It interwove ABA and aversion therapy in a way that may or may not be accurate (I'm no expert), but that we do not do within the body of the article. The introduction is supposed to be a summary, and in the article, we have a section on aversion therapy but the only mention of ABA is not in that, but in the GICE section with no further explanation. The introduction is not the place to be synthesizing those two things.
What you want to say may well have a place in the article, but if so, it should appear in relevant portions of the main body, not the introduction. -- ] (]) 17:44, 20 November 2024 (UTC)


:Okay, that's fine. The only thing is: if anyone looks for 'Applied Behavior Analysis' now, they can't find it, so I'll expand that bit (not in the intro) again. ] (]) (]) 12:53, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
]'s response to this was to immediately; stating: "undoing edit that introduced serious error into the article, and which is being used to justify errors in other articles - Throckmorton was correct".
::Also, I combined first two and the fourth paragraphs again: in the Mobile view on my phone, I see the 'Infobox pseudoscience' directly below the first paragraph, so many other people probably see the same thing, and I think the scientific consensus about ineffectiveness and harmfullness is too important to skip. I hope you agree. ] (]) (]) 13:06, 21 November 2024 (UTC)


== “Curbin deception” article cited in effects ==
Currently, we have three self-published sources, all from one person, making an assertion that is not supported elsewhere in this article. In the absence of material which would suggest that Throckmorton's view is widely accepted, we should attribute the opinion to the person who holds it.


In “Effects”, it says, “In 2020, ] published a world survey and report ''Curbin Deception'' listing consequences and life-threatening effects by associating specific public testimonies with different types of methods used to practice conversion therapies.” However, it cites link which is a study about sadomasochism and the “rough sex defense” and how that affects the legal treatment of rape. It is not the right link. I found the actual link (I think) . Also, it spells it wrong. It should be ''Curbing Deception'' not ''Curbin Deception''. Is this alright for me to change? I’m a bit new here and I wasn’t sure if I had to get approval first. ] (]) 21:08, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
Incidentally: in ''none'' of the sources (including the original) does Throckmorton state anything about "conversion therapy" being an umbrella term, with "reparative therapy" being one form of conversion therapy among many. In fact, none of the sources mention the term "conversion therapy" at all. Throckmorton does not present "reparative therapy" as a type of "conversion therapy"; he doesn't even use the latter term. Thus, the assertion that Skoojal made, above, remains unsourced. ] (]) 11:49, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


:Good catch! Yes, you're completely allowed (and encouraged!) to ] and fix these errors yourself. Feel free to ask if you need help. –] (] • ]) 22:20, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
== Reparative therapy for gender variance ==
::When you do, you could also link the report's title to the section about it at ]. –] (] • ]) 22:27, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Perfect, thanks! ] (]) 23:24, 2 December 2024 (UTC)


== Semi-protected edit request on 2 December 2024 ==
Two editors have raised objections about expanding this article to include all forms of reparative therapy, including gender identity and expression. Here are a few salient quotations:


{{edit semi-protected|Conversion therapy|answered=yes}}
*Laura Dean et al. (Journal of the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association, 2000): "An extreme example is found in 'reparative' therapy, which seeks to reverse sexual orientation or gender identification, an approach that may lead to increased self-hatred and mental health problems (Ryan, Bradford, & Honnold, 1999)."
Change the source for “Curbin Deception” to the link . The link it currently cites () is incorrect. Also, replace “Curbin” with “Curbing”. It’s misspelled. Also link the article ] to the title. ] (]) 23:34, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
:Done. -- ] (]) 23:46, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
::Thanks! ] (]) 23:48, 2 December 2024 (UTC)


==Extreme bias==
*Darryl Hill et al. (Haworth 2006): "Zucker and Bradley believe that reparative treatments (encouraging the child to accept their natal sex and associated gender) can be therapeutic for several reasons. They believe that treatment can reduce social ostracism by helping gender non-conforming children mix more readily with same sex peers and prevent long-term psychopathological development (1.e., it is easier to change a child than a society intolerant of gender diversity). Reparative therapy is believed to reduce the chances of adult GID (i.e., transsexualism) which Zucker and Bradley characterize as undesirable."
{{hat|Unproductive and possibly just trolling}}
All I tried to do was to change the article's extreme bias. It says there no working solutions anywhere, when this isn't the case. ] (]) 19:48, 25 December 2024 (UTC)


:I am not sure where "extreme bias" comes into this, apart from in the content that you are trying to add. These are extreme POV claims that Conversion Therapy "works". I am more than 100% sure that this is all complete and utter nonsense but if you, or anybody else, really believe that there are Reliable Sources that actually support these claims then please feel free to discuss them here. These are extraordinary claims and hence will require extremely good sourcing, not anecdotes. Basically they would have to meet ].
* Simon Pickstone-Taylor (Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 2003). "What Bradley and Zucker (1997) suggest for treatment is something disturbingly close to reparative therapy for homosexuals."
:Also, please do not use words like "solutions" in that way. That's absolutely not acceptable language to use on a Talk page. These are not "solutions". Even if Conversion Therapy "worked", which it doesn't, it would not be a "solution" because LGBTQ people are not a problem to be "solved". ] (]) 19:57, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
::Stop putting words in my mouth. I've been homosexual since 2007 and been looking for a cure since then (successfully, may I say, but you may not believe me for all I care). I guess I'm in the minority. Do I have no right to change unwanted sexual orientation? ] (]) 10:09, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:If its "extreme bias" is relying on what ], then that "bias" will have to stay. Your sources for some of the cures were that someone-said-something-in-a-chat-forum, and that falls far below the reliable we'd expect for much of anything, much less for medical information. The claims that you were making about Deep Brain Stimulation were referenced to , which was for where the closest it comes to claiming an effectiveness for conversion is talking about a single patient, and it says "while Heath claimed that the patient had a full recovery and engaged exclusively in heterosexual activities, other sources argued that the patient continued to have homosexual relationships." So no, that source doesn't back up your claim of effectiveness, even in a single patient. -- ] (]) 19:57, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
::"engaged exclusively in heterosexual activities" And why would this be a desirable outcome?] (]) 03:23, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
{{hab}}


== Semi-protected edit request on 8 January 2025 ==
In other words, there are lots of sources indicating that reparative therapy is not limited to sexual orientation. I feel the article should reflect this. Please provide any reasons why you feel it shouldn't, so we can discuss the ways to proceed. ] (]) 16:08, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


{{edit semi-protected|Conversion therapy|answered=1}}
:Remarkable claims require remarkable support, and your references remain disturbingly poor. The Dean reference is a self-published report from an activist organization; the second reference is from Hayworth which publishes about everything they're paid to (it's not on par with the university presses mentioned in WP:RS), and Pickstone-Taylor's statement that they think the things are ''close'' necessarily means that they also think they are different. The great majority of references on this topic provide a definition at variance with your claims. They do not support the large-scale expansion of this page to match more closely the contents of your personal webpages.<br/>
Under the Castration and Transplantation section, the line "In early twentieth century Germany experiments were carried out" has a spelling error. I recommend changing it to "In the early twentieth century, German experiments were carried out". ] (]) 13:04, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
:—] (]) 18:25, 26 June 2008 (UTC)
::How about this summation of the therapy from Zucker himself (1990): two short-term goals are "the reduction or elimination of social ostracism and conflict, and the alleviation of underlying or associated psychopathology. Longer term goals have '''focused on the prevention of transsexualism and/or homosexuality'''." (emphasis mine) I see you are now posting from Zucker's employer the ], so I would not be so quick to make claims about POV agendas. ] (]) 18:32, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


:Dunkin DonEdit completed (]) &#124; (PS: Have a good day) 13:55, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
It is no secret that Zucker is a colleague of mine.<br/>
—] (]) 19:28, 26 June 2008 (UTC)


{{done}}<!-- Template:ESp --> Getting ready to leave the house, but I'll carry it out at Dunkin Donut's Wifi hotspot. Thanks (]) &#124; (PS: Have a good day) 13:18, 8 January 2025 (UTC)
Oh, and provide the complete reference to whatever you're talking about, and I'll look it up. I have a great library.<br/>
—] (]) 19:33, 26 June 2008 (UTC)

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Section sizes
Section size for Conversion therapy (27 sections)
Section name Byte
count
Section
total
(Top) 2,791 2,791
Terminology 2,325 2,325
History 52 6,616
Sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE) 2,676 2,676
Gender identity change efforts (GICE) 3,888 3,888
Motivations 639 639
Theories and techniques 652 29,818
Aversion therapy 3,917 3,917
Brain surgery 2,293 2,293
Castration and transplantation 2,502 2,502
Ex-gay/ex-trans ministries 2,969 2,969
Hypnosis 1,011 1,011
Psychoanalysis 1,734 1,734
Reparative therapy 1,819 1,819
Marriage therapy 1,746 1,746
Gender exploratory therapy 11,175 11,175
Effects 4,032 4,032
Public opinion 1,256 1,256
Legal status 2,853 7,410
Human rights 4,557 4,557
In media 1,375 1,375
Medical views 4,891 4,891
See also 166 166
Notes 36 36
References 28 28
Bibliography 6,055 6,055
Further reading 849 849
Total 68,287 68,287
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    Gender Exploratory Therapy - Cass Review

    The Cass Review has the following to say about exploratory therapy:

    Exploratory Approaches - Therapeutic approaches that acknowledge the young person’s subjective gender experience, whilst also engaging in an open, curious, non-directive exploration of the meaning of a range of experiences that may connect to gender and broader self-identity (Bonfatto & Crasnow, 2018; Churcher Clarke & Spiliadis, 2019; Di Ceglie, 2009; Spiliadis, 2019).

    Spiliadis 2019 is the original "Gender Exploratory Therapy" paper.

    It also says:

    Terms such as ‘affirmative’ and ‘exploratory’ approaches have been weaponised to the extent that it is difficult to find any neutral terminology.

    And:

    The intent of psychological intervention is not to change the person’s perception of who they are but to work with them to explore their concerns and experiences and help alleviate their distress, regardless of whether they pursue a medical pathway or not. It is harmful to equate this approach to conversion therapy as it may prevent young people from getting the emotional support they deserve.

    Cass also stated:

    She noted that some medics were afraid of being accused of conducting “conversion therapy if, again, they take a cautious or exploratory approach”

    Given the weight of this source, how do we square this with the coverage in this section? That is, this whole section does exactly what Cass warns agains, ie conflating conversion therapy with exploratory therapy. The Cass Review has been directly accused of espousing conversion therapy on this basis, by WPATH. The final Review's opinions on this are due here. Void if removed (talk) 20:38, 5 June 2024 (UTC)

    The treatment of the Cass Review in the recent addition after I made this comment takes none of this into account, instead adding this and a whole chunk right next to it about NARTH.
    The same month, the UK Council for Psychotherapy announced it was fine for counsellors to practice GET and in April 2024 it was endorsed by the Cass Review.
    The source doesn't even support this sentence. I'm adding an NPOV tag to this section. Void if removed (talk) 21:57, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    The source doesn't even support this sentence - what?
    From the source: In November 2023, the UK Council for Psychotherapy—the nation’s top professional association—declared that it was fine for counselors to take GETA’s “exploratory” approach to gender. This April, a long-awaited review of gender-related care for youth in England’s National Health Service endorsed exploratory therapy, according to Alex Keuroghlian, an associate psychiatry professor at Harvard Medical School
    Care to explain the NPOV tag? This section's been extensively discussed on the talk page and got consensus. You've been arguing for months that the UKCP and Cass Review endorsing GET should be mentioned, but now it's been mentioned you have an issue? Make it make sense. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 22:08, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    Pinging others who've discussed this section: @Zenomonoz, @NatGertler, @RoxySaunders, @LokiTheLiar, @Hist9600, @Licks-rocks, @Snokalok, @Sweet6970, @Colin. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 22:15, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    My intuition here is actually pretty similar to Void's below, for once. Namely that "gender exploratory therapy" is both a euphemism used by conversion therapists to cover up what they're doing, and a literal self description used by actual credible gender therapists.
    What we do about this, I'm not sure. Especially since I would be truly amazed if we could actually source this split. But it does seem to be what's happening with Cass's quote. I really don't think she means to endorse conversion therapy. Loki (talk) 22:27, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    Can you provide sources to substantiate the idea that there are two different interpretations of "gender exploratory therapy", that refer to two significantly different practices? I've read some ideas about "intuitions", and some ideas that are clearly original research on the matter. But I'm not sure if it makes sense to create some new interpretation of "gender exploratory therapy" if there are not significant independent reliable sources actually saying that there are two major interpretations. Hist9600 (talk) 22:50, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    Yes - the Cass Review says it is not, with a definition quoted above that is not about "change", and the recently added Mother Jones article quotes a conversion therapist saying it is.
    :::::“It truly is very similar to how the Alliance has always approached unwanted SSA ,” she told the assembled therapists. “You approach it as ‘change therapy’—or, even less triggering, ‘exploratory therapy.’” Void if removed (talk) 22:57, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    That's not what I asked. I asked if there are reliable sources substantiating the idea that there are two major and differing interpretations of gender exploratory therapy. Saying that the Cass Review says that gender exploratory therapy is not conversion therapy, is not an answer to the question. Hist9600 (talk) 23:53, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    Like I said, I would be truly amazed if we could actually source this split. No I can't, and I would be very surprised if anyone could. Loki (talk) 03:06, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    The source doesn't even support this sentence - what?
    Ah my bad, I couldn't see the Cass Review mentioned.
    now it's been mentioned you have an issue?
    The Cass Review is a high quality source you've been falsely dismissing as FRINGE for months, and it says that conflating exploratory therapy with conversion therapy is harmful. You've made no effort to render this POV, and instead have slapped the cass review "endorsing GET" right after a section with NARTH chuckling about how it really is code for conversion therapy. No effort has been made at all to show that there is a legitimate medical dispute over trans youth healthcare here, and that when some people say "exploratory therapy" they mean ethical psychotherapy, while others do not. Void if removed (talk) 22:28, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    The Cass Review is indeed a high quality source, but it's only a single high quality source, and it contradicts many other high quality sources on this point.
    What we do when sources contradict each other like this is not always clear, but certainly it's not to just go with the one new source over the five we currently have for Gender exploratory therapy (GET) is a form of conversion therapy. Loki (talk) 03:16, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    Mother Jones is not a reliable source about the Cass Review. YFNS posted something before sourced to them that was so fully of shit I despaired. Henry Carnell is a young journalist, with training in "communication", according to their linked-in, currently looking for work. Psychological therapies, their description and comparisons, are WP:BIOMEDICAL material and thus fall under WP:MEDRS. While the ethics of "conversion therapy" fall outside MEDRS, a claim that a particular therapy has conversion as a goal falls into MEDRS. Carnell is simply not qualified to assess the Cass review and comments by other activists and put two and two together for us here as the added sentence says. I'm struggling also to find where in the Mother Jones piece it says "the UK Council for Psychotherapy announced it was fine for counsellors to practice GET". This open letter makes clear they do not regard any and all kind of "exploratory" therapy to be "conversion therapy" ("To conflate exploratory psychotherapy and conversion therapy is potentially dangerous and harmful to the public." and "Conversion therapy as described in the statement is harmful and must not be practised").
    It is disappointing that this article is indeed falling into the trap recognised by Cass and exploited by activists who want to over simplify a range of approaches into one bucket term they can attack. Cass makes it clear that a trans life is not worse than a cis life. But Cass also does not accept every single child coming to a gender clinic is trans or has a fixed trans identity or that that trans identity must be lived in a body that has been medicalised (can't find the word) to be one of only two genders. I think some of the commentary about therapy is taking the view that any child who goes to a gender clinic and leaves without a prescription for hormones has been converted. Clearly there are a range of opinions among experts and a range of points of view. There are reliable sources saying this matter is in dispute and the everyday word "exploratory" has been weaponised into a bad faith assumption it is always a euphemism for conversion therapy. We have experts who disagree on this and can cite better sources than some rag written by a "communications" graduate. -- Colin° 07:54, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    IMO, we have sources who say that exploratory therapy is a standard psychotherapeutic approach intended to determine if there are underlying causes of gender distress, with no set endpoint in mind, and not conversion therapy, eg.
    Then we have sources who say that the conflation of standard exploratory psychotherapy is conversion therapy is dangerous and harmful, especially in the context of proposed bans on conversion therapy, where practitioners fear being accused of conversion therapy for pursuing standard psychotherapeutic exploration, eg.
    Then we have an opinionated essay from Florence Ashley in 2022 saying that "gender exploratory therapy" (as described in that first link by Spiliadis) has similarities to "conversion".
    And then we have a variety of sources of various levels of quality explicitly calling anything short of the affirmative model conversion therapy, and those who advocate it - including the Cass Review - conversion therapists peddling WP:FRINGE WP:PSEUDOSCIENCE:
    Virtually all these sources make this claim based on that Florence Ashley paper.
    And finally we have actual conversion therapists gleefully saying that "exploratory" or "change" therapy is conveniently a less triggering name for processes like trying to get rid of "unwanted" same-sex attraction:
    And this source also conflates this directed, unethical approach with the undirected, ethical positions taken by the Cass Review and UKCP.
    Meanwhile we have the Cass Review explicitly saying the terms have been weaponised to the extent that neutral terminology is hard to find, and we have NHS England, Finland and Sweden moving away from the affirmative model and toward exploratory psychotherapeutic intervention as a first line treatment.
    I think we can give a good faith rendition of this disagreement and ongoing controversy over contested terms, but it cannot start from the point of view that the Cass Review and UKCP are espousing WP:FRINGE WP:PSEUDOSCIENCE as was failed to be demonstrated six months ago, and it should not be stating in wikivoice that the kind of therapy being adopted by national health services is conversion therapy, because this is an WP:EXTRAORDINARY claim. Void if removed (talk) 09:27, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    And this source also conflates this directed, unethical approach with the undirected, ethical positions taken by the Cass Review and UKCP. You are again presuming there are two major and differing practices for GET. Whether Cass believes that GET is ethical and effective, is a different matter. The major name associated with GET is the Gender Exploratory Therapy Association (GETA), which is promoted by Genspect, with materials produced by SEGM. Both Genspect and SEGM are gender-critical advocacy groups, deeply entrenched in advocating against trans rights, and are both considered anti-LGBTQ+ hate groups by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Hist9600 (talk) 12:29, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    You are again presuming there are two major and differing practices for GET
    No, I'm saying the sourcing for the opening line of this section includes a WPATH statement specifically in response to the Cass interim review and NHS service specification calling the "exploratory therapy" described there (not GET or any other moniker) "tantamount to conversion". Void if removed (talk) 13:13, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    Now the line is between gender "exploratory therapy", and "gender exploratory therapy"? What's next, a new distinction between "affirming care" and "affirmative care"? Is it really appropriate for Misplaced Pages editors to reify a passing remark about gender exploratory therapy into an entirely new interpretation of what that term might mean, when there are numerous sources here that have already provided discourse on what gender exploratory therapy is? As far as I can tell, the assertion that Cass is referring to anything other than conventional gender exploratory therapy, seems to be WP:OR. Hist9600 (talk) 22:46, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    Nub of the issue:
    In November 2023, Michelle Cretella, a board member of the pro conversion therapy group Alliance for Therapeutic Choice and Scientific Integrity (ATCSI, formerly NARTH), gave a speech at an ATCSI conference which endorsed GET and arguing it "truly is very similar to how the Alliance has always approached unwanted same-sex attraction".
    See, here's the problem - you have an actual conversion therapist calling actual conversion therapy "gender exploratory therapy" to hide the fact that it is conversion therapy. And then you have the Cass Review saying that exploratory approaches are not conversion therapy, because actual, ethical, exploratory psychotherapy is not conversion.
    This section needs to make this distinction, rather than saying these two are the same thing.
    So this should not be said like this in wikivoice:
    Gender exploratory therapy (GET) is a form of conversion therapy
    Saying this in wikivoice when we have a MEDRS that says, specifically, that making this comparison is harmful is a huge concern. We have to distinguish between what the cass review means when it says "exploratory approaches" and what Cretella means when she is talking about "exploratory therapy" as a euphemism for conversion therapy. Void if removed (talk) 22:19, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    Gender exploratory therapy (GET) is a form of conversion therapy That's been there for months and you adding a NPOV tag after extensively discussing this and consensus disagreeing with you is disruptive.
    See, here's the problem - you have an actual conversion therapist calling actual conversion therapy "gender exploratory therapy" to hide the fact that it is conversion therapy.... Yeah...
    because actual, ethical, exploratory psychotherapy is not conversion. - you do realize this is literally NARTH's whole thing, right? They opposed "gay affirmative" therapy, arguing that it was necessary that a psychiatrist "ethically explore the roots of a persons same sex attraction", but that it wasn't "conversion" because there was "no preset goal in mind". Literally, same exact argument.
    And it would be a lot easier to take the Cass Review seriously if SEGM and Genspect weren't involved at almost every step of the process. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 22:31, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    Just to note, Cretella is also executive director for ACPeds, so there's direct overlap between the leadership for ATCSI-formerly-NARTH and ACPeds. VintageVernacular (talk) 19:12, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
    • hmm, funny one. First, I think we're agreed on the first sentence void quoted, that looks like an endorsement of exploratory therapy to me, even if they're being quite cagey about it, the sources quoted make it abundantly clear what they're referring to.
    Terms such as ‘affirmative’ and ‘exploratory’ approaches have been weaponised to the extent that it is difficult to find any neutral terminology. I don't care about neutral terminology, I care what the cass report is saying about it, so this is a distraction to me.
    The intent of psychological intervention is not to change the person’s perception of who they are but to work with them to explore their concerns and experiences and help alleviate their distress, regardless of whether they pursue a medical pathway or not. It is harmful to equate this approach to conversion therapy as it may prevent young people from getting the emotional support they deserve.
    Another endorsement of exploratory therapy, again, cagey language, which, judging by the 10+ sources we have already quoted for that section, seems to slightly mis-define it. But we are already aware of what exploratory therapy is from a multitude of other MEDRS, so the misdefinition doesn't really matter, we've established from the first sentence that we're still talking about the same thing.
    This just leaves the question of how we should treat the cass revieuw here. I would call it a primary source (thus needing attribution) that is, indeed, due for a mention. Which leaves me at the result that the contested insertion was probably reasonable. I don't care about the NARTH bit, if you want that moved elsewhere in the section so it doesn't seem like they're of equal quality, do whatever. Having said all that, Isn't an NPOV tag on the entire section a bit much for two sentences? --Licks-rocks (talk) 23:49, 5 June 2024 (UTC)
    I think you’re missing the key underlying point.
    Cass is saying that therapy to merely explore the psychological environment present is not conversion therapy, and what is being described there is a firmly different procedure from what is being described in the article subsection.
    Conversely, it deliberately refuses to at any point tie what it’s describing to the words “gender exploratory therapy”.
    So the most basic interpretation of the text here, is that the report is not describing gender exploratory therapy at all, itms describing a therapy that it does not assign a name, as says it wishes the word “exploratory” was used in a more well defined way. It’s simply making some broadstrokes musings on the current professional environment. I feel that making that connection on our own would become SYNTH or OR. Snokalok (talk) 05:19, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    To simplify my words, there’s nothing in the review but our own preconceptions to suggest it’s talking about GET at all. And thus, we can’t really add anything here except perhaps a line on Cass lamenting a lack of solid definition of “exploratory” maybe but even that’s fairly tangential Snokalok (talk) 05:22, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    I think this is a fair point, and I considered including a similar analysis in my own comment, but at the time I wrote my comment above, both other participants seemed to agree that the cass revieuw was endorsing, so I decided not to rock the boat. For what it's worth, I think the point hinges a little bet on how explicit we need them to be. If you read the text on a very surface level, your interpretation is or seems correct. As I pointed out above, they're being cagey and stopping just short of naming the practice they're referring to, but looking a little deeper, the sentence about exploratory approaches cites material about exploratory therapy, making it clear that this is at least included in their definition of "exploratory approaches". I obviously can't speak on authorial intent, but the end result behaves as a dog-whistle: strongly different implications depending on who is reading it and how. --Licks-rocks (talk) 10:05, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    The problem with this is that the very first citation for this section is WPATH attacking the Cass Review for recommending it and the NHS Service Specification for going along with it.
    At several points in the document, there is an emphasis on “careful exploration” of a child or young person’s co-existing mental health, neuro-developmental and/or family or social complexities. There is also a suggestion that a “care plan should be tailored to the specific needs of the individual following careful therapeutic exploration…” WPATH, ASIAPATH, EPATH, PATHA, and USPATH are concerned that this appears to imply that young people who have coexisting autism, other developmental differences, or mental health problems may be disqualified, or have unnecessary delay, in their access to genderaffirming treatment. This would be inequitable, discriminatory, and misguided (Coleman et al., 2022). WPATH, ASIAPATH, EPATH, PATHA, and USPATH recommend that puberty suppression, where urgently indicated, can be commenced promptly, and proceed alongside and at the same time as any necessary diagnostic clarification of other conditions, or treatment of other conditions. Whilst careful assessment is imperative, undue delay inherent within a model of care is not a neutral option and may cause significant harm to those accessing services (Coleman et al., 2022). There is an alarming statement in the summary that “the primary intervention for children and young people… is psychosocial (including psychoeducation) and psychological support and intervention.” In another section, the document goes on to state that one outcome from the screening process would be “discharge with psychoeducation…” Disturbingly, this decision might be made without speaking directly with the young person or family. Taking No 8 and 9 together, this document seems to view gender incongruence largely as a mental health disorder or a state of confusion and withholds gender-affirming treatments on this basis. WPATH, ASIAPATH, EPATH, PATHA, and USPATH call attention to the fact that this “psychotherapeutic” approach, which was used for decades before being superseded by evidence-based gender-affirming care, has not been shown to be effective (AUSPATH, 2021; Coleman et al., 2022). Indeed, the denial of gender affirming treatment under the guise of “exploratory therapy” has caused enormous harm to the transgender and gender diverse community and is tantamount to “conversion” or “reparative” therapy under another name. This document reasserts the outdated “gatekeeping model” of access to gender affirming care.
    The first citation I'm afraid widens the scope to exploratory approaches, first-line psychosocial interventions, and directly criticises the Cass Review on that basis.
    This brings us to disagreement between MEDRS on a matter of the ethics of exploratory psychotherapeutic interventions - and Cass, as a high quality MEDRS, definitively supercedes many, if not all, of the other sources.
    You cannot have your cake and eat it here. You cannot employ sources which attack first-line psychotherapeutic gatekeeping as tantamount to conversion, and then exclude MEDRS that say this is a harmful comparison to make.
    And given all these sources it is clear this section should not be titled "gender exploratory therapy" but "exploratory therapy" since that is the only real unifying terminology. Void if removed (talk) 07:25, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    I think we should be careful about putting too much weight on one review here. I've said this before, but I don't believe the cass revieuw is the be-all end-all on this topic. also, it's not just WPATH, it is cosigned by four national organisations, and followed by four more sources. The Cass revieuw can supersede a lot, but we shouldn't tunnel-vision on it either. Especially not when it is being this cagey about a topic. --Licks-rocks (talk) 10:25, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    Citation 2 (which can be found in actual printed form here) says, in a discussion about what constitutes conversion therapy:
    In fact, given the increased visibility of different sexual orientations and gender identities and expressions, efforts nowadays include clinicians gatekeeping life-saving hormonal interventions by encouraging clients to not commit to their transgender identity or initiate gender-affirming care until they are absolutely sure (sometimes euphemistically called “gender exploratory therapy”), or even ascribing transgender identity or asexuality to trauma (ashley, 2023).
    So they are calling psychotherapeutic exploration that examines possible underlying causes of any kind "conversion therapy" and cite Florence Ashley as a basis.
    This is not appropriate for a wikivoice claim that this is definitively true, when a MEDRS like the Cass Review says it is not. Void if removed (talk) 08:22, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    Just to be clear, that quote doesn't say 'examines possible underlying causes', it refers to encouraging clients to not commit to their transgender identity or initiate gender-affirming care until they are absolutely sure as gender exploratory therapy. I think if somebody already has declared a gender identity, then it would be qualified as a conversion attempt under most of the definitions.
    If we are talking about therapy for gender dypshoria, that might not qualify as conversion therapy. Many people with dysphoria do not identify with a gender identity that is discordant with their natal sex. But this is a grey area. Zenomonoz (talk) 09:22, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    I was referring there to ascribing transgender identity or asexuality to trauma. This whole line conflates multiple things - but the cite to Ashley means this is referring specifically to the model described in Spiliadis 2019 which is explicitly an undirected model with no fixed outcome in mind.
    The Cass Review cautions about the diagnostic overshadowing that results from an uncurious affirmative approach. Some youth presenting with gender distress do have underlying causes that, when properly explored by the individual themselves, resolves that distress, and sometimes this is trauma.
    So yes, directed therapy with an intention of changing is unethical. But undirected exploration of the reasons behind someone's desire to transition is not. Dismissing up-front that someone's gender identity is definitively the result of trauma is unethical. Uncovering that it actually is a response to trauma as part of standard exploratory psychotherapy is not.
    But, since that exploration can ultimately lead to desistance, it is being classed here as "conversion".
    And that brings us back to the Cass Review, and clinicians being afraid to engage in exploratory psychotherapy that may result in desistance - even if it isn't intended or clinician-directed - for fear of accusations of "conversion therapy". Void if removed (talk) 09:57, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    You wrote: Some youth presenting with gender distress do have underlying causes that, when properly explored by the individual themselves, resolves that distress, and sometimes this is trauma – I do not think Cass review states this as fact. This is speculation. Nor do they claim that dealing with trauma alleviates dysphoria. As far as I am aware, Littman and ROGD proponents argue that a subset of young natal female individuals are transitioning due cultural ideas about gender, and that they are misinterpreting their mental anguish as evidence of dysphoria. If 'trauma' were causing gender issues, we would expect to see quite a lot of gender dysphoria in war zones and the rest. Regardless, I'd advise against stating this kind of speculation as fact. Plenty of psychological theories claim that 'trauma' causes 'X thing I don't like', but in large well designed studies, there isn't strong evidence for causality. Zenomonoz (talk) 10:10, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    I think we should watch not to argue back and forth about our own ideas and opinions (e.g. "If 'trauma' were causing gender issues, we would expect to see quite a lot of gender dysphoria in war zones and the rest.") If that's an argument against X then cite a good source saying that about X. We'll just end up filling this page with editors arguing about what they meant by "trauma" in that particular case, and not focusing on the article topic. What's the essentials for this page? There are a spread of opinions about how to treat trans children. Loosely we might characterise this at one end is being credulous about whoever walks through the door being trans and also that being trans means hormones and surgery, and the other end is actively preventing trans identities which are viewed as either inferior or mentally unwell or an abomination in the eyes of god or whatever. And varied opinions about what portion of children walking through the door have a certain and fixed trans identity. And almost zero evidence on the portion identifying as non-binary. It isn't really up to us to work out where the truth lies, and be cautious about offering any side's view as "fact". Reality seems to lie between the extremes (nothing like 100% of children referred to gender clinics go onto hormones as children and I don't think any serious expert thinks that should be the case) Both extremes in this culture war are over careless to describe their opinions as fact and to assert things with little or no evidence. We also need to be aware that political battles in this area mean writers at both extremes are unwilling to give an inch or accept there is nuance. Better sources are required or else say less. Don't just run with whatever low-level rubbish turns up on a google search.
    Why is the sentence "The same month... endorsed by Cass" still in this article. The source is not reliable nor does the source mention Cass nor does the UKCP endorse what is being called GET and nor does Cass endorse what is being called GET. Allowing activists to take control of plain English words like "exploratory" is exactly the sort of problem that must be making clinical psychologists despair. Misplaced Pages isn't a trans activist blog any more than it is a gender critical blog. Both such activists use techniques like this (conflating a whole bunch of things into one thing that can be labelled BAD) which wouldn't be acceptable in either proper grown up journalism or in a medical journal. -- Colin° 13:39, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    I think we should watch not to argue back and forth about our own ideas and opinions – well you just wrote a giant paragraph of your own opinions. My comment was a brief "correlation is not causation" statement, clarifying that plenty of psychological ideas are "just so" stories that aren't supported by evidence of causality. Can we stick to WP:NOTFORUM. Zenomonoz (talk) 04:02, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
    I was writing about "What's the essentials for this page" (as as far as trans conversion therapy is concerned). You were arguing on the internet with someone about whether trauma leads to gender distress. Not sure why you feel able to fling NOTFORUM at anyone. And we still have that "The same month..." sentence citing "Mother Jones" and putting internet gossip in wikivoice. -- Colin° 13:22, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
    I do not think Cass review states this as fact.
    I think if there's one takeaway from the Cass Review it is "we don't know", and that applies to a whole swathe of issues. The Cass Review states very little as "fact" but expresses extreme caution about proceeding with medical pathways given the paucity of evidence. Trauma and its possible contribution are discussed as part of the review, happy to dig out the passages if you like, but a neat summary is the figure on page 57 of the interim report which highlights how unresolved sexual abuse/trauma can be one possible presentation that can possibly end up at "Gender dysphoria resolved without transition" as part of the explanation of how complex presentations may have multiple different pathways.
    What the Cass Review says is that the evidence base is not strong enough to rule any of this out. What critics say is that even considering other underlying factors may actually be at root of gender distress is conversion therapy. See one of the current citations:
    GET is just conversion therapy by another name Similarly, proponents of GET often point to issues such as unprocessed trauma, childhood abuse, internalized homophobia or misogyny, sexual fetishism, and autism as the “real” explanation behind one’s transgender identity, rather than accepting that a child who identifies as trans is sharing a real, deep, and even joyful truth about themselves.
    If 'trauma' were causing gender issues, we would expect to see quite a lot of gender dysphoria in war zones and the rest.
    This is overly simplistic. We're talking about complex psychosocial factors, not just "trauma results in gender dysphoria". Void if removed (talk) 14:15, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    one takeaway from the Cass Review it is "we don't know" – this is more moderate. I agree. The Cass review is mostly focused on the effectiveness of puberty blockers, not the cause of dysphoria. It includes a brief overview on speculative causal pathways, but it excluded topic experts, hence it gets rather speculative. Regarding trauma: children with gender dysphoria are atypical in other ways, and we know that children who veer from behavioral norms are more targets for abuse over other children. I.e. correlation is not causation.
    What critics say is that even considering other underlying factors may actually be at root of gender distress is conversion therapy – well, the Slate source is not labelling all therapy for gender dysphoric youth as 'conversion therapy'. It's referring to a very specific subset of therapists who are demanding clients find an external cause (how the heck do they prove this?) and who are opposed to transition in nearly all cases. Mainstream psychology remains open minded to potential causes of dysphoria... it's the groups cited in that piece who are claiming they know (and it must be something bad!) and that they hold the solution.
    The APA statement cites six studies and reviews, which have found that 'gender identity change efforts' (in this case, psychotherapy) are ineffective in treating dysphoria. Whether or not this will apply to a different cohort of transitioners (i.e. the more recent cohort of young natal females/AFAB) is an open question, and seems to be what the Cass review is concerned about. But for now, I think you'll simply have to wait until a clearer picture emerges.
    Zenomonoz (talk) 05:02, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
    The Cass review is mostly focused on the effectiveness of puberty blockers, not the cause of dysphoria.
    This is simply untrue, the Cass Review looked at the entire epidemioloigcal, diagnostic and care pathway, and went far beyond just "blockers".
    it excluded topic experts
    No it did not.
    The APA statement cites six studies and reviews
    And doesn't say the word "exploratory" once, so I don't know why you mention it here. There's no debate that coercive attempts to "change gender identity" are unethical and don't work, that's not the problem.
    This is all a total derailing of the point of this section.
    The very first citation for the section on "gender exploratory therapy" establishing, in wikivoice, that it is conversion therapy, is one calling the Interim Cass Review and NHS service specifications tantamount to conversion therapy. This is a source editors have kept as a consensus for months. See further up this talk WRT WPATH's response to the interim Cass Review and NHS Service Spec:
    WPATH considers GET to be conversion "conversion" or "reparative" therapy under another name. Per WP:MEDASSESS/WP:MEDORG, it is the most high-quality source we have discussed on GET, and settles the question of whether it's conversion therapy or not.
    This source only says "exploratory therapy", and with specific reference to what is described by Cass.
    Your interpretation of other sources and what they may or may not be referring to isn't relevant. Current editorial consensus here, supported by WP:RS is that what is described by WPATH as only "exploratory therapy" in the Cass Review and NHS Service Spec is "gender exploratory therapy", and also that this is the best quality source establishing it is "conversion therapy".
    But the final Cass Review is a high quality MEDRS explicitly saying it is not conversion therapy and that the weaponisation of these terms is scaring clinicians and is harmful to vulnerable youth in need of the best possible care.
    So - how to resolve this? None of this can be safely rendered in wikivoice the way it is at present, and the conflict and difference of opinion needs rendering, taking into account that there are no neutral terms and terminology is contested. Void if removed (talk) 09:06, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
    Unless you're sitting on some massive chapter that somehow hasn't come up yet (which, fair, it's a long read, I might've missed it), the cass revieuw doesn't actually say that much about gender exploratory therapy.
    As already established in your original comment, they don't actually talk about "gender exploratory therapy" at all! they talk about "exploratory approaches" which snokalok above already points out may or may not be the same thing, or a category including that thing. And the WPATH comment comes in the middle of a long series of related points establishing a pattern within multiple parts of the cass revieuw, striking me as more of a sidenote building up to a larger point (and indeed, the main point of that alinea is medical gatekeeping in general, not endorsement of gender exploratory therapy).
    I think the cass revieuw being a MEDRS doesn't actually end up factoring into it all that much. All six sources under discussion fit the MEDRS label and we always need to look beyond the cover to establish due weight. I think the weight of the cass revieuw just doesn't weigh all that heavy here, due to the lack of on-topic content. Granted, I think the same goes for the WPATH&co. statement, but again, that's why we don't just cite to them, as you seem to keep implying. --Licks-rocks (talk) 11:23, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
    Yeah, again, my intuition here is that Cass's comments aren't about the euphemism for conversion therapy, but about people who take the fact that it's a euphemism for conversion therapy to mean that anyone who does therapy about gender exploration is a conversion therapist. Loki (talk) 15:56, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
    Genuine question, how is exploratory therapy supposed to work? You say But undirected exploration of the reasons behind someone's desire to transition is . Dismissing up-front that someone's gender identity is definitively the result of trauma is unethical. A trans kid (let's say 16) comes into a clinic, knows they're trans, already socially transitioned, and is seeking medical transition. Just how much "exploration of the reasons behind someone's desire to transition" should be required before they can transition? Who gets to decide? When does the therapist say, "alright, we've explored everything, you're free to go"? What's stopping the therapist preventing their transition indefinitely?
    For the record, there is no evidence GET is effective or helpful. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 20:42, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    Void, your most recent comment includes sources which support my point. Cass review and others are arguing therapy for gender dysphoria (rather than gender identity) cannot necessarily be taken as a form of conversion therapy. Zenomonoz (talk) 09:39, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    When a "gender questioning" child is referred, in Europe at least, to a clinical psychologist, what is it that various bodies think that person should do. It clearly isn't "That's nice. Here's a referral to endocrinology for hormones". Only a minority of referred children go down that path as children. So when do we reach "conversion therapy" vs what clinical psychologists actually do for a living. -- Colin° 10:02, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    So when do we reach "conversion therapy" vs what clinical psychologists actually do for a living? When kids who are sure they're trans, have already socially transitioned, and wish to medically transition are made to go through an indefinite period of a therapist trying to make them explore "what made you trans? trauma? the internet? we have to look at everything before I say you're trans enough in my book to recieve medical care". The population is not, as you called them, "gender questioning" children being met with an immediate Here's a referral to endocrinology for hormones". As the infallible Cass Review said:
    • 12.18 Clinicians have said that most children have already socially transitioned before reaching the specialist gender service
    • 12.32 Early research cited in Chapter 2 found low rates of persistence of childhood gender incongruence into adulthood, around 15% (for example, Zucker, 1985). Papers from this period were criticised because the children were not formally diagnosed using ICD or DSM. At that time, it was rare for children to have socially transitioned before being seen in clinic.
    • 12.33 Later studies, which showed higher rates of persistence at 37% (for example Steensma et al., 2013) did use formal diagnostic criteria, but by that time a greater proportion of the referrals had socially transitioned prior to being seen.
    Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 20:24, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    I was hoping for a reply that addressed the question. And any answer suggesting research from 2013 has much to say about the cohort presenting to childhood gender clinics in 2024 is missing reality. If only we could, you know, write an article about a medical therapy and what is and is not acceptable professional practice without having to argue that perhaps some nonsense claims in Mother Jones are wrong. Letting any old fool on the internet write about serious medical stuff is how we got all that MMR autism nonsense. It is frustrating to see Void above have to point out very basic errors like claims Cass "excluded topic experts" which is the sort of misunderstanding that comes when one's feed of information is activist bloggers. -- Colin° 13:39, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
    I was hoping for a reply that addressed the question. Your question was based on a flawed premise, you said "gender questioning kids", while we are talking about "trans kids sure of their gender seeking medical transition".
    So when do we reach "conversion therapy" vs what clinical psychologists actually do for a living. - when you presume that being transgender and wanting to transition is (or, likely is) a mental disorder due to trauma, and argue that trans kids medical care should be indefinitely placed on hold (possibly forever) while you "explore" the reasons you think the kid isn't "really" trans. If a "gender questioning kid" comes in and says "I don't know if I'm trans, I might be, I want to explore that" - nobody is just giving them hormones ffs. Nobody is against them being free to explore and supported in that. The conflation of "kids questioning their gender" and "kids sure of their gender" is precisely the kind of imprecise nonsense we are supposed to avoid.
    The TLDR: the line is when you make indefinite "exploration" a nebulously defined requirement for people sure they're trans instead of a choice for those who actually want to explore whether they are.
    Here are 6 MEDORGS stating that Cass endorsed "exploratory therapy" which they consider a form of conversion therapy. There continues to be no evidence whatsoever that GET is beneficial or effective.
    Arguments here that "yes, there is a kind of conversion therapy called GET, pushed by organizations X, Y, and Z, AND Cass was criticized by MEDORGS for endorsing it BUT Cass endorsed a different GET that just happens to cite the definitions provided by X, Y, and Z. are silly.
    • For the record, they are even sillier when you argue a MEDRS source is needed to say "members of X, Y, and Z were advisors to the review" even thought WP:MEDPOP obviously applies: Conversely, the high-quality popular press can be a good source for social, biographical, current-affairs, financial, and historical information in a medical article.
    Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 14:56, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
    guys, is this relevant? --Licks-rocks (talk) 15:15, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
    Perhaps? I'm trying to stick to sources say. Can we all agree on these basic facts?
    1. The Cass review says GET shouldn't be conflated with conversion therapy because it's not directed. Cass based this definition of Spiliadis 2019, a SEGM member who coined the term GET.
    2. There is no evidence GET is effective or necessary or studies of it in action.
    3. Florence Ashley's piece directly notes it's comparison to "reparative therapy" and interrogates Spiliadis's definition: The attempt to distance and distinguish gender-exploration therapy from conversion practices is also familiar. After California banned conversion practices, Joseph Nicolosi wrote an essay claiming that his reparative therapy did not directly aim at altering same-sex attraction but, rather, encouraged inquiry and exploration into its underlying cause. The positive-sounding language of inquiry and exploration sanitizes his approach despite him viewing “most same-sex attractions as reparations for childhood trauma”
      • VIR removed this and probably shouldn't have - the key point was the similarity of the "undirected exploration" narrative because that's exactly what NARTH peddled .
    4. We have a bunch of reliable sources saying GET is conversion therapy pushed by SEGM/Genspect/GETA/NARTH, largely citing Ashley
    5. We have sources saying exploration is already encouraged and allowed under the affirmation, just not mandatory sessions trying to find pathological roots for wanting to transition.
    6. We have 6 medical organizations saying that Cass is endorsing GET, which is conversion therapy, also citing ashley.
    There seem to be 3 main ideas in the thread for how to handle this.
    1. Some think the section should be rewritten on the grounds if Cass says GET isn't conversion therapy we can't say it is
    2. Some think the section should note the Cass Review endorsed GET / said it shouldn't be called conversion therapy
    3. Some think there is conversion therapy GET, and there is Cass Review GET, but agree there's no sources specifying they're different
    Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 16:23, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
    Well it at least seems that Cass is in agreement about how GET is defined, and agrees about its definition, as laid out by a member of SEGM. So it's an idea about GET that comes from a group that is deeply involved in anti-trans advocacy, and has been classified by the SPLC as an anti-LGBTQ+ hate group.
    Notably, SEGM seems to hold the view that the term "conversion therapy" is only applicable to sexual orientation, so by definition, they would reject the label of conversion therapy. This, of course, is not a mainstream view. Hist9600 (talk) 21:33, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
    So what we have is:
    • A four-year multidisciplinary review that came to conclusions which proponents of gender-affirming care don't like, favouring an exploratory approach and criticising the over-affirmative approach employed by GIDS, while also cautioning that equating exploratory therapy with conversion therapy is harmful to vulnerable youth and scaring ethical clinicians.
    • The opinions of Florence Ashley - a strong proponent of zero-gatekeeping - which were only ever an expression that there are "similarities" between exploration and conversion, based on the (deliberately) obfuscatory language used by "reparative" therapists, being cited repeatedly by other sources as concrete equivalence, and thus presented here in wikivoice as definitively true.
    • An independent statement from WPATH criticising Cass for endorsing gatekeeping and exploration.
    VIR removed this and probably shouldn't have
    The removed part was a definitive, wikivoice statement that A "psychotherapeutic” approach viewing gender incongruence as a mental health disorder or a state of confusion was used for decades, has not been shown to be effective, and was superseded by an evidence-based gender-affirming approach which is way, way overstating things, and the very conflict the Cass Review weighs in on, on the side of evidence and caution. This was making broad medical claims where the strongest MEDRS do not agree at all, and it was based on WPATH's response to Cass, exemplifying this dispute.
    Cass is interrogating the whole basis for offering medical treatments to young people, ie what condition is being treated, how is it diagnosed, on what basis and are these even the best treatments, what is the safest and most effective holistic pathway for this group of youth.
    But Florence Ashley argues that medical transition should be no more gatekept than contraception because there is no medical condition being treated.
    These are irreconcilable viewpoints, and those with Ashley's perspective will always view any gatekeeping of medical transition as an attempt at "conversion". It simply arises logically from this different perspective.
    I think we have a lot of reliable sources for stating the beliefs and strong opinions of people, but not reliable sources for factual, wikivoice statements that exploratory therapy is conversion therapy.
    The existence of the Cass Review, as a MEDRS, weighing in on this topic to the contrary, means we should not be taking one "side" of this as definitive as the section currently does. At best, there is a clear difference of medical opinion over how exploratory/affirmative approaches are framed, given that all parties seem to be talking about the exact same things. Void if removed (talk) 11:17, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
    The Cass Review is out of step with existing medical sources, and it is referencing members of SEGM, so we should be very careful there. Florence Ashley is a bioethicist who studies conversion therapy, and their research on the matter is important in the field, which is why other medical reliable sources may reference Ashley. Ultimately, Cass doesn't have a lot to contribute on this topic, as it just appears to parrot some views trying to say that GET is not conversion therapy, while using SEGM definitions of GET. The stance is the same as what SEGM also says. It just shows how closely Cass is aligned with the views of GET that come from SEGM / Genspect / GETA / Therapy First. Hist9600 (talk) 12:57, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
    Florence Ashley is a bioethicist who studies conversion therapy
    From the standpoint that gatekeeping is dehumanising, desistence is irrelevant, and puberty blockers are necessary.
    Ashley's opinion is diametrically opposed to a neutral assessment of the evidence.
    Cass is aligned with the views of GET that come from SEGM / Genspect / GETA / Therapy First.
    So you now agree with my original point which is that the exploratory approach advocated by all those organisations are one and the same as what is put forward by the Cass Review, and which the Cass Review says is not conversion therapy.
    So we have a MEDRS source saying it isn't conversion therapy and equating the two is harmful, a WPATH statement attacking that source saying it is "tantamount" to conversion, an opinionated essay saying it has "similarities", and a load of sources based off them.
    Which means we should not be saying it definitively is conversion therapy, in wikivoice, but should make an effort to reflect what these different sources actually say. Void if removed (talk) 13:20, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
    No, I see one source (Cass) that is closely aligned with fringe anti-LGBTQ+ groups on this issue, against the medical consensus. It says more about Cass than it does about other sources, not that Cass actually evaluated the effectiveness of GET, or bothered to do any actual analysis of it. Hist9600 (talk) 19:32, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
    The removed part was not the thing I am talking about...
    You changed Bioethicist Florence Ashley found that GET had strong conceptual and narrative similarities with previous conversion practices such as "reparative" and "reintegrative" therapy, noting they portrayed themselves as exploring the underlying psychological causes of same-sex attraction rather than directly aiming at altering it. to Commenting on gender exploratory therapy in 2022, bioethicist Florence Ashley argued it had similarities to conversion therapy.
    You took out 1) what specific historical form of conversion therapy she compared it to and 2) why. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 13:26, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
    Ah I see, I misunderstood - I'll try and reword it. Void if removed (talk) 13:51, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
    But we also have sources calling what the Cass Review is discussing conversion therapy, and criticising that fixating on a diagnosis of "gender dysphoria" is pathologising. These aren't different things. Void if removed (talk) 10:04, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
    Also: the section is in the wrong place, it should be under "techniques". I'll move it down unless anyone has a good reason not to. Void if removed (talk) 12:11, 7 June 2024 (UTC)

    I agree with Void that Misplaced Pages cannot simply assume the idea that exploratory approaches are definitely conversion therapy is an undisputed truth. British doctors have come to a jarringly different conclusion to their American counterparts, as seen in the Cass Review and the statement from the UK Council for Psychotherapy last November. Two more sources defending an exploratory approach: D'Angelo 2018 and Spiliadis 2019. Even Florence Ashley, who opposes this approach, acknowledges that exploratory therapy is being presented as having a different goal to conversion therapy. Anywikiuser (talk) 16:39, 20 June 2024 (UTC)

    Robert D'Angelo is the president and a founding member of SEGM He argues in that piece that Statements and bans on conversion therapy usually problematically merge gender identity with sexual orientation, which is misleading as these are very different constructs - a WP:FRINGE view as every medical org and human rights org agrees bans should cover both types of conversion therapy. He also says A priori assumptions, either that trans identification is always a healthy development or that trans identification is always pathological, violate this foundational principle - but there is an overwhelming consensus that trans identities aren't pathological. He's a political activist who has never worked in trans healthcare and has done thinks like argue in court that a 16 year old should be denied gender affirming care.
    Anastassis Spiliadis is a member of the IATDD (a group founded by Lisa Littman, known for methodologically flawed research, to promote the ROGD hypothesis) alongside other founding members of SEGM/Genspect.
    D'Angelo and Spiliadis are WP:FRINGE activists linked to pro-GET lobbying groups. Those sources you linked are from years ago, and all the medical orgs and human rights orgs which have said "GET is conversion therapy" have done so based on the definitions put forth by them.
    Even Florence Ashley, who opposes this approach, acknowledges that exploratory therapy is being presented as having a different goal to conversion therapy. - I agree this should be better included since we have the sources to note that GET's proponents argue that GET isn't conversion therapy since it's undirected. As Ashley notes though, that is exactly what NARTH said about reparative therapy based on the same reasons.
    • Descriptions of reintegrative therapy by people who offer it are reminiscent of how gender-exploratory therapy is described by its proponents. Clinicians promoting gender-exploratory therapy have notably insisted that the approach is “not the same as ‘conversion,’ as the latter implies a therapist agenda and an aim for a fixed outcome” (D’Angelo et al., 2021, p. 10) and emphasized that they “do not aim to change someone’s gender or sexuality related feelings but rather engage in a dialogue exploring the meaning-making around identity development” (Spiliadis, n.d.)
    • Proponents of gender-exploratory therapy acknowledge that some consider it a form of conversion practice, paradoxically resenting the suggestion while opposing bans on conversion practices on account that it would prohibit their approach. As for critiques of gender-exploratory therapy, they are presented as evidence of trans health care’s ideological capture. Yet a close comparison of gender-exploratory therapy and conversion practices reveals many conceptual and narrative similarities. How proponents talk about gender-exploratory therapy is nearly identical to how individuals offering conversion practices targeting sexual orientation frame their own work.
    Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 17:14, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
    I agree with YFNS. The president of an anti-trans lobbying group, and a member of a lobbying group founded by the author of the most infamously sloppy research in the topic area, are not reliable sources here. Loki (talk) 18:25, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
    This is circular.
    They are described as "anti-trans lobbying group" by people who describe what they espouse as "conversion therapy" - and what they espouse must be "conversion therapy" because they are an "anti-trans lobbying group".
    They insist it is not, and WP:RS agree. Calling Spiliadis WP:FRINGE when he is cited by Cass in the definition of what exploratory therapy is, is absurd.
    There is a difference of perspective in MEDRS and absolutely none of the definitive claims should be in wiikivoice. Void if removed (talk) 08:31, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
    I agree it is circular. Also, it is ad hominem, something that is all too common in debates on this fraught, polarised topic. If one must resort to ad hominem arguments, they at least ought to be factually correct. I pointed to two papers whose authors are not merely "activists"; they are both psychotherapists who have worked in gender medicine. Ironically, Spiliadis used to work at the Gender Identity Development Service, a clinic that was accused of being too cavalier in using the affirmative approach. Anywikiuser (talk) 09:38, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
    You cite Cass for Spiladis being a RS, while Cass cites Spiladis for their one-sentence comment on exploratory approaches, which I remind you again doesn't even mention GET by name. In every discussion about this subject so far, I've never seen you deviate from your single-minded focus on what the Cass-report says. The Cass report is not god, and I would suggest you should take it deviating from every other RS as a sign that it might be wrong, instead of everything else. --Licks-rocks (talk) 10:51, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
    You cite Cass for Spiladis being a RS
    No, I cite this to demonstrate it is clearly not FRINGE, and using FRINGE in this hyperbolic way to exclude entirely legitimate sources is inappropriate and question-begging.
    single-minded focus on what the Cass-report says
    That is the subject of this current topic.
    it might be wrong
    It is not for us to say which is wrong - it is for us to give a neutral rendition of what reliable sources say. Void if removed (talk) 11:10, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
    If you think a scientific article or other high-quality source can't support a fringe perspective I have a couple asteroid craters in Spain to sell you. The subject under discussion is GET, about which the cass report only barely even says one sentence, which we seem to have concluded is due for inclusion here but is way too short to do anything else with, and that brings me to my final point here, which is that my problem with you isn't that you refuse to rebut the Cass report, the problem is that you consistently, throughout multiple discussions now, refuse to seriously consider any other source, regardless of relevance, quality (WPATH guidelines come to mind), or DUE-ness. In short, I don't think responding beyond this point is a productive use of my time. --Licks-rocks (talk) 11:15, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
    Ashley cites Spiliadis as a proponent of "gender exploratory therapy", whereas Cass cites him in defining "exploratory approaches", and Spiliadis proposes a "gender exploratory model" and several times in the paper uses the phrase "exploratory work". That's an example of how different exact wordings may be used for the same concept, though the use of "exploratory" is consistent. I don't think anyone disputes that "GET" and other phrases containing "exploratory" could be used as a cover for conversion therapy, but there's also clear evidence that it's being used for a concept of conducting a therapy with a different goal in mind. Anywikiuser (talk) 11:35, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
    SEGM argues that conversion therapy has never been practiced on trans people (a FRINGE statement), lobbies against bans on conversion therapy (more fringe advocacy), lobbies against public funding for transition for adults (so spare the "think of the children" shtick, that's pure bigotry), and works with the American College of Pediatricians.
    Even if SEGM didn't advocate it's own new form of conversion therapy, it would be FRINGE, so no, it's not circular to point out they're WP:QUACKS. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 12:31, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
    There are two key NPOV problems here: 1) The wikivoice states that "Gender Exploratory Therapy (GET) is a form of conversion therapy". This is too strong a claim for the wikivoice given that other sources have, even when not using the exact same three words, have argued that "exploratory" approaches are distinct from conversion therapy (see UK Council of Psychotherapy in November 2023 and the Cass Review). As Cass notes, even proponents of the affirmation model argue that it can still include "exploring the meaning of that experience in a non-directive therapeutic relationship." 2) It barely says what proponents of exploratory therapy actually claim, even for the purposes of refuting them. Anywikiuser (talk) 20:09, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
    1) The UKCP withdrew from the memorandum of understanding on conversion therapy signed by every other professional body in the UK. Their views are an outlier even in the UK. A sentence in the Cass Review does not outweigh the many sources saying it's conversion therapy, especially when many are specifically calling out the review on that basis
    1.5) As Cass notes, even proponents of the affirmation model argue that it can still include "exploring the meaning of that experience in a non-directive therapeutic relationship." - we already note that the affirmative model already encourages exploration without making it a prerequisite for care
    2) Yes we do. We note GET proponents claim it's not conversion therapy because it's an undirected exploration of why kids think they're trans. We note they believe that kids are identifying as trans due to trauma, autism, social contagion, and homophobia. We note who supports it. We note the proponents argue that bans on conversion therapy make it more difficult to practice GET. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 20:27, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
    Therefore, it is incorrect to say that it is the unanimous, undisputed view of the medical community. Anywikiuser (talk) 10:25, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
    We don't care about unanimity here, only consensus. A sufficiently strong consensus is equivalent to unanimity. Loki (talk) 15:07, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
    Strongly condemning those who disagree is not the same as "strong consensus". It is pretty clear this is disputed, but sources which dispute it are continually (exhaustingly) accused of being WP:FRINGE, which is circular. Void if removed (talk) 15:15, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
    Sourcing from an author so closely associated with SEGM / Genspect would be inappropriate. These are classified as anti-LGBTQ+ hate groups by the SPLC, and they generally oppose trans rights, and trans healthcare, and also oppose conversion therapy bans. Hist9600 (talk) 05:05, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    SPLCs designations have to be attributed, precisely because they are somewhat unreliable, hyperbolic and highly partisan. We don't have to afford this any weight when considering sources, especially when the claims are circular and non-independent like this, and wander into an area where MEDRS apples. Void if removed (talk) 07:39, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    The SPLC is very much green at WP:RSP. Attribution is for bias, not unreliability. Loki (talk) 12:07, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    And SPLC's biased opinion carries no weight when evaluating MEDRS. Void if removed (talk) 12:23, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    Ok but we don't go to SEGM and genspect because they're fringe and promote bad science like rogd (there's no evidence for it). Them being a hate group clearly shows they're biased and as Misplaced Pages editors we should be careful with what they say, but from a Medrs pov, they just don't care about science and only use it as a tool LunaHasArrived (talk) 12:25, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    Can you explain how citing Spiliadis (2019) is "going to SEGM and genspect"? Void if removed (talk) 17:22, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    I'd wager a guess and say it's because Spiliadis is an advisor of SEGM...
    Also, wrt And SPLC's biased opinion carries no weight when evaluating MEDRS.
    • 1) MEDRS are pretty unequivocal that there is no evidence GET works or is necessary
    • 2) MEDRS are overwhelmingly clear it's conversion therapy pretending not to be
    • 3) We don't use the SPLCs designations in this article (though we should). We don't even use them to say GET is conversion therapy. We use them for relevant facts like the obviously anti-LGBT group the American College of Pediatricians supports GET and cites SEGM to do so.
    • Friendly reminder that ACPeds directly recommends GET/GETA
    • 4) WP:PARITY says: The prominence of fringe views needs to be put in perspective relative to the views of the entire encompassing field; limiting that relative perspective to a restricted subset of specialists or only among the proponents of that view is, necessarily, biased and unrepresentative.
    SEGM, Genspect, GETA, and the ACPeds continue to be fringe anti-trans groups and the fact they're the biggest proponents of GET matters Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 18:26, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    I'd wager a guess and say it's because Spiliadis is an advisor of SEGM
    So Spiliadis' 2019 paper about the term he coined in 2017, written when he was a clinician at the Tavistock GIDS, is uncitable because Spiliadis went on to advise SEGM after it was founded in 2020. That's your answer? Void if removed (talk) 21:43, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    You asked Can you explain how citing Spiliadis (2019) is "going to SEGM and genspect"? I answered. As RS have noted for years, SEGM is a small group of quacks who make ridiculous claims (which he has also made, ie that trans people don't experience conversion therapy) and lobby against trans rights - his position there does make him less reliable.
    More importantly: Spiliadis 2017 and 2019 are primary sources where he lays out a new approach: in 2019 he said I attempted to move away from current theoretical polarities around psychosocial support for gender questioning young people and invite the reader to a different approach, the Gender Exploratory Model.
    His papers and model proposed therein have been extensively criticized by RS and medical orgs. Neither paper has any weight as neither are secondary or independent - GET is only notable because other sources discuss it. We weigh and discuss those, not the primary source. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 23:02, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    In fact this paper Says spiliadalis developed GET and cites this paper so it would be the most primary source. LunaHasArrived (talk) 23:16, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    As I noted at the start, Spiliadis 2019 is the originator of the term and the formalisation of the model.
    That paper you cite is notable for its description:
    Responding to the increased visibility of detransition journeys, another model has emerged: the exploratory approach. Developed by Anastassis Spiliadis in England, this approach acknowledges the uncertainty inherent in trans journeys and underscores the clinician’s responsibility in facilitating exploration before undertaking a transition (Spiliadis, 2019). While recognizing the importance of contextual understanding and the dynamic nature of gender for appropriate support (Ashley, 2019; Coleman et al., 2022; Wren, 2019), some critique the exploratory approach’s suggestion that exploration should precede transition (Ashley, 2019).
    All this says is it is a proposed model that has been critiqued. It doesn't say it is illegitimate or "conversion".
    I also think that's a strange final citation. It is Ashley 2022 that was the first direct critique of exploratory therapy.
    Ashley 2019 however does contain lines such as:
    From the premise that facilitating exploration should be our starting point in caring for trans and gender creative youth, puberty blockers must be seen as the default position, to be readily prescribed since they leave the largest space for future identity development and negotiation.
    Which is of course completely at odds with the eventual findings of the Cass Review, and why Ashley is so opposed.
    We're simply talking about fundamentally different models of what "best practice" looks like, and those in favour of affirmative-medical-transition-on-demand consider any psychotherapeutic gatekeeping to be "conversion therapy", while those who view it as essential in determining who would benefit from medical interventions, do not. Void if removed (talk) 08:49, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
    "and why Ashley is so opposed" prove it. --Licks-rocks (talk) 10:50, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
    Secondary/tertiary sources are things like systematic reviews, meta-analyses, textbooks and standards of care. A source that discusses something mentioned in another primary source doesn't make it a secondary source. Most of the sources here are either primary medical sources or popular press articles, which can be acceptable for a topic like this that probably hasn't been discussed directly in any secondary sources, but it is not true that we are excluding primary sources. Anywikiuser (talk) 23:18, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
    And so I invite you to read once again my comment at the top of this section which states that the Cass Review notes this dispute, and warns against considering exploratory therapy to be conversion therapy.
    Everyone has gone round the houses in this discussion and wound up right back at the start, which is to concede my original assertion which is that when all these sources are talking about exploratory therapy/exploratory psychotherapy/gender exploratory therapy/exploratory approaches they are all talking about the exact same thing.
    Florence Ashley and WPATH have both likened this to conversion therapy (similarities/tantamount to), and other sources have subsequently cited them for these positions.
    The Cass Review has said comparing it to conversion therapy is "harmful".
    So this entire section should be rendered as a disagreement between MEDRS, with contested terminology.
    What you keep trying to do is use ad hominem to exclude sources - directly or indirectly - and force one "side" of a real dispute between MEDRS into wikivoice. It is entirely inappropriate. Void if removed (talk) 08:33, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
    Why not WP:DROPTHESTICK for a while. This thread is enormous now. Zenomonoz (talk) 08:47, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
    This would not be a resolution. One possible way around is to replace the initial phrase by saying that "The denial of gender-affirming treatment under the guise of Gender Exploratory Therapy (GET)" is a form of conversion therapy. Anywikiuser (talk) 13:03, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
    Do we have RS that use the term GET and doesn't refer to it as conversion therapy. We certainly have RS that use Gender Exploratory model but that's not one to one the same (as WPATH SOC 8 says that's a term with many different meanings). If not we have to say that GET is conversion therapy (although I'd be happy to suggest that the part saying that GET is not gender exploration by itself should become more prominent in the section). LunaHasArrived (talk) 13:44, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
    That's the heart of the issue, that intentional GI conversion therapy disguised as "exploration" should not be confused with the concept of gender exploration that (as Cass notes) even some proponents of the affirmative model consider an acceptable practice as part of a care pathway. Anywikiuser (talk) 15:18, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
    Your problem there is that you'd have to remove the citation to WPATH's criticism of the interim Cass Review, because that says "exploratory therapy" is tantamount to conversion therapy.
    And this also means you're disagreeing with other editors (and the currently cited sources) that these are all the same thing.
    You then have to reconcile that these sources all reference Spiladis 2019, but so does the Cass Review, in defining "exploratory approaches".
    You then have to reconcile any source (like the Mother Jones article) which states Cass endorses "gender exploratory therapy".
    And if you take out WPATH-attributed claims, none of this carries any MEDORG weight at all, making the highest MEDRS source on this subject the Cass Review.
    The limitation you're trying to achieve won't work, and IMO the only feasible way through is to present this as the clear difference of opinion about ill-defined and contentious terms that it is, by stating what the Cass Review says about the use of these terms.
    Because the heart of the dispute is that proponents of the affirmative model do not think that access to medical transition should be behind psychotherapeutic gatekeeping, and proponents of an ethical exploratory model think it should, and proponents of conversion therapy will call whatever barbarism they practice by whatever euphemism sounds palatable. Void if removed (talk) 08:18, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
    The RS's say that GET is a term used by (seemingly almost exclusively) conversion therapists as a euphemism for denying any care indefinitely. Some go further and criticise individual documents (or people) for promoting this whilst not actually using the term GET (see WPATH on interim Cass). Cass (full) seems to be worried that people are thinking you can't have both a medical pathway and psychological interventions (as a side effect of this, affirmative Vs exploratory approach) but wants kids to have time to explore their gender and not feel 'pushed' down any pathway. WPATH SOC 8 says affirmative model and exploratory model are undefined terms. Is any of the above incorrect?
    Based on this Misplaced Pages should say GET is a form of conversion therapy and is characterised by a denial of care. That gender exploration shouldn't be confused with GET. Then there's any details about organisations or documents Misplaced Pages should or shouldn't include.
    Our current section does the above pretty well (I might argue the not confused with bit could be placed better, but it's alright) I fail to see where the npov problem with the entire section comes from. LunaHasArrived (talk) 11:17, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
    Based on this Misplaced Pages should say GET is a form of conversion therapy and is characterised by a denial of care.
    But "gender exploratory therapy" as described by Spiliadis (2019) and reflected in Cass' citation of it and others as an "exploratory approach" is not that at all.
    Therapeutic approaches that acknowledge the young person’s subjective gender experience, whilst also engaging in an open, curious, non-directive exploration. of the meaning of a range of experiences that may connect to gender and broader self-identity (Bonfatto &. Crasnow, 2018; Churcher Clarke & Spiliadis, 2019; Di Ceglie, 2009; Spiliadis, 2019).
    What you put forward is overly simplistic and if that were all there was to it, there wouldn't be this disparity between Cass and WPATH. You're trying to draw a distinction that does not exist and that the cited sources do not themselves draw.
    What Cass advocates is considered by WPATH tantamount to conversion therapy, which makes Cass' insistence that it is not a direct conflict between MEDRS, and one that absolutely should be reflected. And Cass' interpretation of Spiliadis (2019) carries more weight than Ashley (2022), which is foundational to this entire section.
    Nothing here should be in wikivoice, it has to be a difference of attributed opinion only. Void if removed (talk) 12:13, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
    Sorry Cass (full) doesn't mention Gender Exploratory therapy or Exploratory therapy anywhere so it's impossible to say that Cass supports that definition of GET. Cass uses Spiliadas once in a glossary for a definition they use (being generous and just searching the word exploratory) 4 times in the actual text. It seems like your and anywikiuser's arguments aren't convincing anyone. I'm going to drop the stick here and I'd recommend you do the same. LunaHasArrived (talk) 13:19, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
    Adding this new paper which is an explicit response to Ashley (2022), which - again - rejects the idea that exploratory therapy is conversion therapy.
    According to Ashley, conversion practices include not only direct attempts to change a person’s gender identity or gender expression, but any form of psychotherapy that examines possible causes of a person’s gender related distress or leads to any delay in medical transition
    To resolve the POV issues, I propose:
    • Open with a statement like The role and nature of psychotherapeutic approaches to treating gender dysphoria is controversial.
    • Describe Spiliadis (2019) as proposing "gender exploratory therapy" as a name for undirected therapy for gender dysphoria with no fixed outcome in mind.
    • Describe Ashley (2022) as critiquing this as reminiscent of conversion or reparative therapy
    • Describe the evolving conflict between the affirmative/exploratory model as exemplified by the disagreement between WPATH and the Cass Review, with WPATH claiming Cass' endorsement of exploratory approaches are tantamount to conversion, and the Cass Review stating that comparing exploratory therapy to conversion is harmful.
    • Add attributed claims from eg. Caballero saying it is conversion therapy, and attributed claims from this new paper directly responding to Ashley saying it is not
    • Note eg. Mother Jones' reporting of usage of term "exploratory therapy" euphemistically by some gay conversion practitioners
    • Stop using the abbreviation "GET" as if it is a singular coherent defined practice that everyone agrees is the same, when various sources use gender exploratory therapy, exploratory therapy, exploratory approaches, exploratory psychotherapy, ethical exploratory approaches, and now (in this new paper) psychodynamic psychotherapy for gender dysphoria, and it is clear they are all discussing the same thing and responding to/accusing/criticising each other of various degrees of bias and misrepresentation
    • Retitle the section "Gender exploratory therapy controversy"
    Void if removed (talk) 08:52, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
    That's a perspective piece (opinion), so let's look at the credentials of the author:
    • 1) her total published contributions to transgender healthcare are 3 letters (including this one) to the editor citing SEGM/GENSPECT/GETA to argue that trans healthcare is bad and ROGD is real.
    • 2) She signed a letter by the Foundation Against Intolerance and Racism (a culture war advocacy group) arguing the American Academy of Pediatrics gender-affirming care textbook should be recalled because it's biased and activistic. If you want to play the fun game of how many board members of indisputable conversion therapy advocacy orgs like ACPeds, NARTH, and the IFTCC signed it - I counted 4 at a glance (upwards of a dozen if you include SEGM/GENSPECT/GETA members known for publicly campaigning against gender-identity conversion therapy bans or arguing trans people have never experienced conversion therapy).
    • 3) We do have an actually strong source, Decoding the Misinformation-Legislation Pipeline: an analysis of Florida Medicaid and the current state of transgender healthcare, which states: According to Florida Medicaid, Littman (2018) is one of multiple studies to introduce “additional subtypes of gender dysphoria” (in this case, ROGD) . It is not clear which studies outside of Littman’s 2018 article do propose additional subtypes, as--at this time--no such studies exist in the peer reviewed literature outside letters to the editor, specifically by Sinai et al (2022), Littman (2022), and Hutchinson et al (2020) . Rather, the only published original research that follows up on Littman’s 2018 study on ROGD “...did not find support within a clinical population for a new etiologic phenomenon of rapid onset gender dysphoria during adolescence” . In other words, the existence of ROGD is unsupported in current research.
    • 4) Our duty, an org whose explicit goals banning transition for those under 25, banning public healthcare for trans healthcare, and making desistance ("no longer identifying as trans") the "stated goal of treatment" for young people believes that she's a reliable source and cites her in anti-trans legislation
    • 5) I've exhausted anything close to relevant expertise of hers
    In short, this is an incredibly weak and biased source and doesn't justify any of the changes you present here.
    P.S., as an aside, Cretella straight up uses "gender exploratory therapy", not the shortened version, and NARTH always practiced conversion therapy on trans people too. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 10:04, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
    Generally in agreement. We should not bring WP:FRINGE views into the article and misrepresent them as viable and important mainstream views, or present the matter as "controversial" on that basis. Especially when those weak sources are known to be closely aligned with known anti-trans advocacy groups. Misplaced Pages should not lend prominence to fringe views and pseudoscience on the topic of conversion therapy. Hist9600 (talk) 03:14, 29 June 2024 (UTC)

    NPOV tag

    Void if removed added a NPOV tag to the GET section a while ago and discussion here died down, do the other editors agree it's needed? There seems to be a clear consensus there is a form of conversion therapy labelled GET pushed by practioners of conversion therapy. RS are clear it exists, and specifically call out it relies on the reparative therapy trick of it's not conversion therapy if it's undirected exploration of what trauma made this person gay trans. And international medical consensus is that being transgender is not a mental health issue. We really only have one source saying it's not, the Cass Review, and per the article the fact they endorse GET has been a subject of major criticism. There are very weak sources, commentaries and primary sources, from WP:FRINGE lobbying groups that argue GET isn't conversion therapy. GET is supported by many conversion therapy orgs like NARTH and the IFTCC. Some thought they are talking about different things both labelled GET, but per all the sources they are talking about the same GET.

    @Void if removed, @LokiTheLiar, @Hist9600, @Colin, @VintageVernacular, @Licks-rocks, @Snokalok, @Zenomonoz, @Anywikiuser, @LunaHasArrived - do you believe a NPOV tag is necessary? Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 18:22, 23 July 2024 (UTC)

    I disagree that even the Cass Review endorses GET, as opposed to therapy that encourages exploration of gender, no euphemisms. Which is to say, no I don't think the tag is appropriate. Loki (talk) 18:26, 23 July 2024 (UTC)
    I do not believe an NPOV tag is necessary Snokalok (talk) 18:26, 23 July 2024 (UTC)
    My earlier posts are still on this page. This is political game playing. Your comments about medical consensus is not representing how youth gender clinics actually work, in Europe at least. There is no medical consensus that 100% of youth referrals to gender clinics, which are all psychiatric clinics in Europe, must immediately write out a referral to endocrinology and surgery, and anything short of doing that is GET/conversion therapy. This is some new invented nonsense by activists who can't accept a middle ground as that is giving an inch to US politicians. Actual reality is complex and nuanced and this silly Mother Jones piece is just trash activist journalism. -- Colin° 20:32, 23 July 2024 (UTC)
    That is a strawman, please stop accusing everyone who disagrees with you of playing politics.
    There is no medical consensus that 100% of youth referrals to gender clinics, which are all psychiatric clinics in Europe, must immediately write out a referral to endocrinology and surgery - nobody has said there is. WPATH doesn't even endorse this. This is a boogeyman.
    GET - what we're taking about, is characterized by indefinite mandated "exploration" of "what trauma made you want to transition" while delaying all medical options. It is pushed by a few small conversion therapy groups. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 20:59, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    I don't think the NPOV tag is needed. We shouldn't allow tags to linger if there is no consensus that there is an issue that needs to be addressed. And we definitely should not allow tags to linger if the objections are based on fringe views and pseudoscience from anti-trans advocacy groups. Hist9600 (talk) 23:10, 23 July 2024 (UTC)
    I think Void described the problem well elsewhere. That essentially you have one side who thinks every single child referred to a gender clinic is trans, and is trans in a way that requires cross-sex hormones and put on the waiting list for surgery when 18, and anyone who delays that should be in prison. And the other side who thinks no child is trans, that they are all deluded by the cult of gender ideology, and anyone forcing hormones and surgery on mentally ill children should be in prison. Neither side, it seems, think nonbinary people exist or forget they exist. Both side say "Don't listen to the other side, they are a fringe advocacy group, expounding a dangerous ideology". Meanwhile actual scientists and actual medical professionals are doing their job in a way that bears no resemblance to what either side claim is going on or should be going on. We have a problem that both sides are writing terrible terrible sources that are no better than rants in the Daily Mail for their level of fact checking and accuracy. How we got into a situation where some activist blogging in their bedroom is considered more reliable than systematic reviews in medical journals is deeply troubling to me from a MEDRS point of view.
    I do not think for a moment Cass endorses conversion therapy. They have said so themselves and there's no indication they are a dishonest person or ignorant of what that means. They fully agree a trans life is not an inferior life or a second best choice, that hormones and surgery have a place. Wiser people than the Mother Jones authors, people who do actually know their stuff because its their job, are working out how best the psychiatrists should handle this group (and despite what YFNS keeps saying, it is psychiatrists) when they are referred gender questioning children. There will be a law banning trans conversion therapy in England and Wales, the Labour government committed to it in the King's speech the other day. Scotland has been consulting on the wording of such a law for they have their own legal system. Clearly this will also be compatible with the Cass recommendations, though there is anxiety that if badly worded it is so vague in scope no psychiatrist would want to work in that field. I have no doubt the concerns of both sides will be addressed in a way that makes both sides not entirely happy but could we leave the details and nuance of that all to professionals rather than trash magazine writers.
    What we currently have in the article is hyperbolic claims by one activist side. It doesn't need tagged. It needs removed. -- Colin° 07:45, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    I would agree that some of the stuff Currently in the article is hyperbole. I heavily disagree that the entire section is activist hyperbole. There are groups of people out there performing conversion therapy under the name of GET (no evidence of recommending anyone go to endocrinology and their measure of success is people being happy with not transitioning), this phenomenon has a place in this article. I honestly think the only problem with the section is the statement "recommended by the Cass review". LunaHasArrived (talk) 09:06, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    Frankly I don't see how you can square yours and Loki's this has nothing to do with Cass perspective with YFNS comment at the top of this section which is adamant about the relevance. If you think that, you need to remove all the sources which direct their criticism at the Cass Review, which in particular means WPATH.
    And you need to deal with the fact that Cass references Spiliadis, and so does Ashley - and virtually all the sources cite Ashley - so either they're talking about the same thing or they aren't.
    And as for hyperbole you need to deal with the fact that the currently cited MEDRS are far more equivocal than currently implied by this section ("likened to", "tantamount to", "it seems doubtful" etc).
    I see no substantive effort to deal with that so far or any of the issues I've raised, and conflicting opinions in this section already. Void if removed (talk) 09:26, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    From memory Cass barely mentions GET by name. WPATH criticised interim Cass, Final Cass used Spiliadas as a reference for a glossary (for a term barely used in the full report). It seems likely that Cass may have taken this criticism on board for the final report. LunaHasArrived (talk) 09:42, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    It seems likely that Cass may have taken this criticism on board for the final report.
    This is pure speculation when quite the opposite seems to be the case, since Cass specifically criticised the conflation of exploratory approaches with conversion, as WPATH did.
    And both the interim and final Cass cited Spilliadis in the same way.
    And note that current citations like this reference both Spilliadis and Ashley, and talk about a "gender exploratory model of care" and "exploratory model". None of this terminology is as neat or as definite or separable as editors would like it to be. Void if removed (talk) 10:22, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    Cass is not a significant source for this page, as we've already seen. It contains no more than passing reference to this topic. People end up speculating about what it means by exploratory therapy, but it's not really relevant, because the review contains practically nothing about this topic. Hist9600 (talk) 14:58, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    I repeat:
    I don't see how you can square yours and Loki's this has nothing to do with Cass perspective with YFNS comment at the top of this section which is adamant about the relevance. If you think that, you need to remove all the sources which direct their criticism at the Cass Review, which in particular means WPATH.
    I don't see how sources explicitly criticising Cass are relevant, but Cass isn't. Please explain. Void if removed (talk) 15:23, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    Cass has so little on this topic, and what it does have requires interpretation. If someone has sources that provide meaningful interpretation / analysis, then that source may be due. But using Cass directly require novel interpretation / analysis from editors, which should be avoided. Hist9600 (talk) 19:22, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    For the record, here's
    • PATHA saying Cass endorsed GET, covered in RNZ and the Gay Times
    • WPATH/ASIAPATH/EPATH/USPATH/PATHA saying Cass endorsed GET
    • Here's a peer-reviewed paper on the Cass Review heavily criticizing its endorsement of GET
    • Here's a piece in the Guardian noting a Tavistock staff member said Cass's recommendations are pushing GET.
    Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 21:29, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    • PATHA says that a number of people involved in the review ... have promoted non-affirming ‘gender exploratory therapy’, which is not saying that the review itself does.
    • WPATH et al say that the interim report endorsed GET, which is not saying that the final report does.
    • The Horton paper is concerned about the Cass Review's support for "non-affirmative" therapy in general, and does not at any point say it endorsed GET per se. In fact, it comes the closest to saying what I'm saying, in that it distinguishes between gender exploration within an affirmative approach and so-called “exploratory therapy” offered by non-affirmative practitioners who do not regard trans identities as valid
    • The Guardian article is about the interim report, which is again not the final report.
    Loki (talk) 23:09, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    How does everyone feel about just removing the fact the Cass Review supported it to remove the NPOV tag? I'll note that Cass Review links here and one of it's heaviest criticisms has been it's endorsement of GET, but we can leave that for the Cass Review article. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 21:16, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    Presenting sources in such a way as to leave out the relevant fact that they are directed at the Cass Review in order to avoid dealing with what the Cass Review says on this subject isn't NPOV. Void if removed (talk) 21:40, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    Believe me, I think the Cass Review should be mentioned here, but so far we have:
    • a clear consensus there are conversion therapists practicing under the cover of GET and the section is due in the article
    • no consensus that Cass/everybody else are talking about the same thing (though they are)
    • absolutely no consensus to rewrite the section to say "sources disagree on if GET is conversion therapy" considering how many conversion therapists support it
    If you want to propose a rewrite of the sentence mentioning Cass that leaves everyone happy, I'm all ears. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 22:03, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    I'm fine with this. Loki (talk) 23:20, 24 July 2024 (UTC)
    I would be fine with that as well. But if there are reliable sources saying that the Cass Review does support it, then those may be relevant. Depending on the sources, attribution may be appropriate. Hist9600 (talk) 03:39, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
    I have collated 20 sources in a table here
    These are sources either currently cited or that have been discussed on talk. I may have missed some, but it should be the major ones.
    It is useful to sort by date to see the evolution of this from Spiliadis' original case study, to Ashley's opinion on it, to increasing polarisation and hyperbolic/definitive claims in a variety of sources.
    I've tried to tag each source whether I think it is MEDORG, MEDRS, RSOPINION etc, I've probably got these wrong so input here is welcome.
    I have indicated whether a source is currently cited in this article, and also whether I believe the text of the source supports a wider interpretation of this section, either because it uses language other than strictly "gender exploratory therapy" (eg. exploratory approaches, exploratory psychotherapy) or because it directly references Cass or Spiliadis.
    By my count, of those 20, 14 support an interpretation that goes beyond simply "gender exploratory therapy" and encompasses other terms and the Cass Review, of which 6 are already cited on this article (ie, fully half the relevant citations).
    Notable excluded sources are The Cass Review, UKCP, Spiliadis, D'Angelo and Sinai. The rationale for their exclusion has varied from:
    • They are not relevant (which I dispute, by a reading of even just the currently cited sources)
    • They are WP:FRINGE (which I dispute, as the basis for that is a circular argument and largely relies on hyperbole from PARTISAN sources like SPLC).
    I also note that much of the language is opinion, and caveated ("critics consider", "tantamount to", "said", "my view" etc) and does not support the bold wikivoice claims being made.
    I think at this stage if you seriously want to argue this only and strictly about "gender exploratory therapy" and claim the Cass Review is not relevant, you need to remove the following citations:
    At which point you a) lose the strongest MEDORG source and b) call into question all the MEDRS that cite Ashley 2022.
    And in any case I don't think deliberately selecting sources in that way would result in NPOV. Void if removed (talk) 10:09, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
    1) most of what you labelled RSOPINION is just RS (the SPLC continues to be an RS and not a SPS)
    2) Spiliadis, D'Angelo and Sinai are indeed FRINGE, we've extensively discussed on this page how they're tied to FRINGE lobbying groups that would still be FRINGE if not mentioning GET.
    3) Rewriting this to say GET isn't conversion therapy is a non-starter, you've been crusading to change it for months and consensus disagrees with you.
    4) I just removed the pov tag per the consensus it's not needed, I also removed the sentence on the UKCP and Cass since it's obviously contentious. If you want the Cass review and UKCP to be included, please propose a version you'd be ok with. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 16:32, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
    Thanks, this is an improvement. Generally in agreement about some of those sources being fringe, and we shouldn't waste time and space revisiting them. Hist9600 (talk) 18:08, 25 July 2024 (UTC)
    SPLC continues to be an RS and not a SPS)
    It is an SPS. They wrote it and published it themselves. That's the definition of an SPS. And given the note on WP:SPLC your continued use of them as an authoritative source on subjects well out of their wheelhouse is inappropriate. The biased opinion of a highly partisan US-based lobbying group does not override MEDRS, least of all internationally.
    To demonstrate the problems with this section and the continued refusal to cite Spiliadis, here's what Mackinnon et al says:
    The gender exploratory therapy model is characterized by required, in-depth talk therapy over an extended period of time in an attempt to foster an understanding of underlying factors that may be contributing to gender-related distress . Proponents argue that this approach is developmentally-informed while also enabling clinical discrimination between gender dysphoria and mental illness prior to facilitating medical/surgical interventions . Practitioners of gender exploratory therapy also often view medical transition as a last resort availed to patients only after judicious therapy and evaluation . To date, known practitioners of this model primarily work clinically with children and adolescents , however Spiliadis states that gender dysphoric children, adolescents, and adults alike could benefit from gender explorative therapy. To date, there are no known empirical studies that examine psychosocial or medical/surgical outcomes following the gender exploratory model of care and some authors have raised questions regarding its clinical practices. For instance, this model has been likened to gender identity conversion therapy given that some practitioners avoid using clients’ affirmed name and pronouns, while aiming to question trans identification in children and adolescents . However, Spiliadis’ differentiates the exploratory model from identity conversion therapy, stating that practitioners of the former are advised to acknowledge patients’ gender identities, and to collaborate with them without any active guidance toward a specific identity or outcome .
    This citation presents all of the problems you, Loki, and Hist6900 refuse to grapple with, namely:
    • It cites Spiliadis, whose terminology is "gender exploratory model", so we know that's what we're talking about (which therefore brings in Cass, which also cites Spiliadis and is talking about the exact same thing)
    • It does not treat Spiliadis as FRINGE (and nor does Cass)
    • It couches language in a far more balanced way ("has been likened to" is VERY different to "is", and Spiliadis' explanation of the distinction is included)
    • It uses multiple overlapping terms, including "exploratory model", as juxtaposed with the "affirmative model" (which again brings in Cass, because this is not just about the specific phrase "gender exploratory therapy", but is exactly the exploratory/affirmation contrast Cass addressed)
    MacKinnon et al is one of the stronger citations on the page, as it is an actual study and not just an opinionated essay published in a journal, and - IMO - this passage above gives a very clear indication of how we should be presenting this subject, and the language that should be used.
    Rewriting this to say GET isn't conversion therapy is a non-starter, you've been crusading to change it for months and consensus disagrees with you.
    Please see upthread for what I've been reasonably proposing, which is balance and a description of the various perspectives, ie that some say it is and others say it depends what you mean but you shouldn't conflate ethical psychotherapy with conversion. All perspectives need to be fairly represented, as in MacKinnon et al, which you cite, especially when different sources mean different things with overlapping terms.
    Editors keep insisting that sources that aren't about "gender-exploratory therapy" aren't relevant, but of the sources on this page, only seven talk only about "gender-exploratory therapy", with the rest using broader terminology. McKinnon brings in multiple terms. Note that the direct quote from the actual conversion therapy advocate in the Mother Jones piece uses the terms "change therapy" and "exploratory therapy".
    “It truly is very similar to how the Alliance has always approached unwanted SSA ,” she told the assembled therapists. “You approach it as ‘change therapy’—or, even less triggering, ‘exploratory therapy.’”
    The highest authority source in this section WPATH's direct response to the interim Cass Review, which also doesn't even say "gender exploratory therapy". How do you justify neither the Interim Cass Review nor the Cass Review being relevant given that citation? How do you justify selectively including some sources which use broader terminology, while excluding others as "not relevant" when they use the same terminology?
    Snipping Mother Jones' reference to UKCP and the Cass Review is not a suitable solution to the clear POV issues. All the Mother Jones piece does is confirm what I have said for months, which is that the Cass Review is relevant. I know you accept it is relevant, you've said so. I agree. The solution is not to exclude the most relevant sources to preserve a particular POV, but to neutrally render what RS say. The selective interpretation of sources that actually use multiple terms or snipping the parts of the Mother Jones article that bring in Cass is very clear WP:CHERRYPICKING, which violates NPOV by selectively presenting one point of view from available reliable sources that actually support two or more points of view that may conflict with each other. Void if removed (talk) 12:30, 27 July 2024 (UTC)
    I support the statements made here - Cass, and the UKCP statement, seems very relevant. To remind ourselves on UKCP: after validating the exploratory approach they are very explicit:
    • "exploratory therapy must not be conflated with conversion therapy which seeks to change or deny a person’s sexual orientation and/or gender identity. Conversion therapy as so defined is harmful and must not be practised".
    Peckedagain (talk) 22:32, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
    Because it fails the Duck test - if something looks like conversion theory, sounds like conversion theory and smells like conversion theory, then it's probably conversion theory. A different name doesn't change that (which is why this discussion had ended several weeks ago with no consensus for inclusion). Many worldwide experts have called it what it is, as has been explained above in the thread. Repeating the same argument over and over is why we have behavioral guidelines. Raladic (talk) 22:39, 19 August 2024 (UTC)
    It is not for you to apply the duck test yourself, it is for you to stick to what reliable sources say. And accusing an editor of IDHT for their first contribution on this talk is inappropriate. Void if removed (talk) 07:48, 20 August 2024 (UTC)
    I'll add that your comment here is at odds with your argument here. If you think that simple mentions of "exploratory therapy" and comments from the Cass Review about conversion therapy are relevant to establish an in-quote link in an other article to this section on "gender exploratory therapy", then you should be consistent in arguing that relevance here, where the majority have argued against it, even removing material about Cass to that effect. I think that your argument that this article justifies a link to this section means the whole perspective that the Cass Review and sources about "exploratory therapy" are relevant. I don't think you can have it both ways. Void if removed (talk) 08:56, 27 August 2024 (UTC)

    Pending or proposed (yellow) category on the map

    It's obvious that yellow "pending or proposed" category on the map is pure WP:CRYSTAL and must be removed. Cyanmax (talk) 18:41, 25 July 2024 (UTC)

    I would agree with removing yellow, unless an upcoming law has a transitional period between receiving assent and when the ban comes into effect. --Minoa (talk) 04:05, 30 November 2024 (UTC)

    not to be confused with "Transgender hormone therapy"

    @LunaHasArrived Since both are "therapy" related to transgender topic and the names do not contain information about their differences, doesn't it merit a template:distinguish there? --by Huhu9001 (talk) at 15:10, 28 July 2024 (UTC)

    I'm not seeing much evidence of this confusion, outside of TERFs intentionally misusing the term to paint trans people as being misguided or groomed into transitioning. However, the OED defines one sense of the term as GAC, attributing this to a 1967 journal misusing it in the same way; "Apparently an isolated use". I think we may as well have a hatnote to get ahead of that. –RoxySaunders 🏳️‍⚧️ (💬 • 📝) 15:18, 28 July 2024 (UTC)
    I largely agree with this, I think a full disambiguation is unnecessary. I'm honestly not sure how someone looking for THT would end up here rather than at THT. LunaHasArrived (talk) 15:40, 28 July 2024 (UTC)

    New Source (Metanoia apology coverage)

    Over on this talk, in the past few weeks this source has been argued several times as referring to to this subject by @Raladic, @Snokalok, @RoxySaunders, @DanielRigal, @Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist and @LokiTheLiar, eg this from YFNS:

    By my count, me, Raladic, DanielRigal, RoxySaunders, Snokalok, and Loki think we should link exploratory therapy to gender exploratory therapy,

    I note this source does not say "gender exploratory therapy" anywhere, so it raises again the question: are sources that simply say "explorative therapy" or some variant - in the obvious context of relating to gender - relevant? If so, this undermines some of the prior argument for excluding several notable WP:RS.

    I also note that the point of this source is that:

    • A student was expelled for a petition saying that "explorative therapy" might end up caught in a gender identity conversion practices ban
    • Metanoia fully apologised, and both that apology and this Guardian source supports as a matter of general principle the validity of the professional belief that children with gender dysphoria should be treated with explorative therapy, rather than being affirmed towards medical intervention
    • The Cass Review: She noted that medical professionals were nervous about being accused of “conducting conversion therapy if … they take a cautious or exploratory approach”


    I think the treatment of this source calls into question the consistency of what YFNS described as no consensus that Cass/everybody else are talking about the same thing (though they are)

    I think if you're going to make strong arguments this source is relevant, you really have to accept the Cass Review is too, and I think this is something better decided here rather than another page. Arguing that this source justifies a link to this section (because it is allegedly about this subject) while excluding the substance of this source (that Metanoia thinks exploratory therapy is entirely valid, and Cass' warnings about clinicians fearing being accused of conversion therapy for exploratory therapy) makes no sense.

    And in that light, I question how sound this action was:

    How does everyone feel about just removing the fact the Cass Review supported it to remove the NPOV tag?

    When this story provides yet more secondary coverage that it is actually relevant.

    The best and highest quality definition of what is referred to as "explorative therapy" and "exploratory approach" in this article - which many editors now insist is relevant - is that in the Cass Review:

    Exploratory Approaches - Therapeutic approaches that acknowledge the young person’s subjective gender experience, whilst also engaging in an open, curious, non-directive exploration of the meaning of a range of experiences that may connect to gender and broader self-identity (Bonfatto & Crasnow, 2018; Churcher Clarke & Spiliadis, 2019; Di Ceglie, 2009; Spiliadis, 2019).

    Void if removed (talk) 18:29, 9 September 2024 (UTC)

    I think that there might be a distinction between what we all know that they are talking about and what we can actually demonstrate with Reliable Sources. We can't say things in articles that are not covered in reliable sources, even if anybody with two brain cells knows exactly what they mean, but we also can't be breaking our backs bending over to find tortured excuses to split hairs that have not been explicitly split by Reliable Sources. It is not our job to invent excuses or deflections on their behalf. "Gender exploratory therapy" is uncontroversially recognised as a form of conversion therapy. The term was coined to try to hide, or delay recognition of, that fact. We are already in the realm of deliberate bad faith terminology so we have to be careful. Could there be something completely different called "exploratory therapy"? I guess so? That would be terrible bad luck though. If there are Reliable Sources to prove that there really is a completely different thing which, purely coincidentally, has a similar name then the Reliable Sources have it. If not, I think Occam's Razor applies. "gender exploratory therapy" is a bit of a mouthful and is extremely likely that people might shorten the name, even when not seeking to be deceptive. As yet, nobody has proposed a specific alternative meaning for "exploratory therapy" and I think that they would have if there was one.
    Please indulge me in an analogy. If you see an article about "Trump" then your first thought is that it is about the former President of the USA. You might read a little further and discover that it is actually about Mary Trump but not until you see the name "Mary". If you are reading material about Presidents of the USA and it says "Trump" then it would be perverse to assume it meant anybody other than the former President. Similarly, if you are reading material about gender and the phrase "exploratory therapy" comes up then it can safely be assumed to mean "gender exploratory therapy", with all the implications that carries, unless it explicitly provides some other meaning. DanielRigal (talk) 19:11, 9 September 2024 (UTC)
    As yet, nobody has proposed a specific alternative meaning for "exploratory therapy" and I think that they would have if there was one.
    I quoted the Cass Review definition in the comment you're replying to, which is derived from and cites Spiliadis (2019).
    Similarly, if you are reading material about gender and the phrase "exploratory therapy" comes up then it can safely be assumed to mean "gender exploratory therapy"
    So you agree that the Cass Review is talking about the same thing? Because the entire point is that this is controversial, but all the sources that point out this is controversial are excluded from this page.
    In her review, Cass said professionals supporting young people with gender incongruence or distress were “overshadowed by an unhelpfully polarised debate around conversion practices”. She noted that some medics were afraid of being accused of conducting “conversion therapy if, again, they take a cautious or exploratory approach” and some clinicians expressed “fearfulness about what colleagues might say if they speak up and express an opinion that is not consistent with theirs”.
    A good thought experiment is how would this section look if it was produced only from MEDRS.
    I wrote a suggestion here for how this would look, using only MEDRS/MEDORG sources, in date order, including the ones that have been wrongly excluded from this page, and directly quoting the equivocal language from the ones that are used (ie, "similarities" and "tantamount") instead of the current strong wikivoice claim.
    We should be basing this from the ground up on the best sources, and there is no good reason not to cite Cass. Void if removed (talk) 08:50, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
    @Void if removed his website links to Genspect and GETA, which RS identify as the pushers of this nonsense. Some of the things linked there, such as Our Duty, have stated desistance should be the explicit goal of therapy for trans kids, called to end public healthcare for all trans people, and banning trans healthcare for those under 25.
    This man is painfully obviously a fringe conversion therapy pusher.
    My position is consistent. Even if we assumed Cass is talking about something else, Esses would still obviously be a conversion therapy advocate.
    I continue to maintain this article should mention the Cass Review and the fact it's been criticized for pushing conversion therapy. I disagree with your assessment we have to rewrite the section to say "it isn't/might not be conversion therapy because Cass said so". Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 19:15, 9 September 2024 (UTC)
    I mostly agree with DanielRigal here. "Gender exploratory therapy" and similar is often used as a euphemism for conversion therapy. But it's also possible to go to a therapist to explore your gender identity in a not-conversion-therapy way. The main difference is whether the therapist in question is supportive of trans identities or whether they try to discourage the patient by means of constant questioning whereby being trans can never be the correct answer.
    Obviously there is no way to fully disentangle this terminology, so some parsing of the terms in context is necessary, the same way it's often necessary for a bunch of other terms. If I came across an LBJ speech where he was talking about "the war" I would usually assume he meant the Vietnam War, even though he was also responsible for a policy agenda called "the war on poverty". Some contexts might make me change my mind but other contexts would make me even more sure he meant Vietnam.
    In this particular case, I'd normally assume that the words "gender exploratory therapy" in that order mean conversion therapy, because people who mean the other thing usually don't make a clear distinction between it and other reasons one might go to therapy. James Esses is strongly associated with anti-trans groups, so when he says it he almost certainly means the euphemism for conversion therapy. The authors of the Cass Review are sort of an ambiguous case, but just based on the way they talk about it I'm inclined to give them the benefit of the doubt. Loki (talk) 20:52, 9 September 2024 (UTC)
    I agree with what others are saying. These statements are not in a vacuum, taken in the context of the subject matter, “exploratory therapy” obviously refers to gender exploratory therapy.
    If so and so in Eugene Oregon said he underwent what he called “exploratory therapy” for his depression, that’s different, but in the context of gender dysphoria, trans rights, and psychosocial approaches, “exploratory therapy” is an obvious reference to “gender exploratory therapy”
    Also, Metanoia fully apologized not because it’s not conversion therapy, but because support for such is a legally protected belief under British law.
    I also fully disagree with rewriting this section because a highly criticized report by the British government said it was okay to practice. I’m perfectly okay with including the nervousness quote somewhere though. Snokalok (talk) 01:35, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    How often do we use settlement apologies as Medrs? LunaHasArrived (talk) 08:08, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    How often do we use reports from the Southern Poverty Law Centre to decide MEDRS are FRINGE? Void if removed (talk) 08:16, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
    We don't, void. Not ever. This comes across to me as a mean-spirited jab at hist900 above, but even then that's not what they said at all. --Licks-rocks (talk) 08:59, 10 September 2024 (UTC)

    Studies

    • some individuals do become skilled at ignoring same-sex attractions and go on to lead ‘outwardly heterosexual lives’, however this appears to be less common among those who were not to some degree attracted to members of the opposite sex (for example, bisexual in orientation) prior to change efforts.

    I need help deciding how to incorporate this APA quote in the article.

    Unwanted same-sex attraction has reportedly been diminished with talk therapy (but only for adult volunteers). Uncle Ed (talk) 19:08, 5 October 2024 (UTC)

    ABA in lead

    @Laurier: I just undid your expansion to the introduction, for a couple of reasons.

    1. It created an ungainly mess of a sentence, ending a list with subclause and parenthetical. Particularly up front, we want s more straightforward read ing.
    2. It interwove ABA and aversion therapy in a way that may or may not be accurate (I'm no expert), but that we do not do within the body of the article. The introduction is supposed to be a summary, and in the article, we have a section on aversion therapy but the only mention of ABA is not in that, but in the GICE section with no further explanation. The introduction is not the place to be synthesizing those two things.

    What you want to say may well have a place in the article, but if so, it should appear in relevant portions of the main body, not the introduction. -- Nat Gertler (talk) 17:44, 20 November 2024 (UTC)

    Okay, that's fine. The only thing is: if anyone looks for 'Applied Behavior Analysis' now, they can't find it, so I'll expand that bit (not in the intro) again. Laurier (xe or they) (talk) 12:53, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
    Also, I combined first two and the fourth paragraphs again: in the Mobile view on my phone, I see the 'Infobox pseudoscience' directly below the first paragraph, so many other people probably see the same thing, and I think the scientific consensus about ineffectiveness and harmfullness is too important to skip. I hope you agree. Laurier (xe or they) (talk) 13:06, 21 November 2024 (UTC)

    “Curbin deception” article cited in effects

    In “Effects”, it says, “In 2020, ILGA world published a world survey and report Curbin Deception listing consequences and life-threatening effects by associating specific public testimonies with different types of methods used to practice conversion therapies.” However, it cites this link which is a study about sadomasochism and the “rough sex defense” and how that affects the legal treatment of rape. It is not the right link. I found the actual link (I think) here. Also, it spells it wrong. It should be Curbing Deception not Curbin Deception. Is this alright for me to change? I’m a bit new here and I wasn’t sure if I had to get approval first. Mjsayshey (talk) 21:08, 2 December 2024 (UTC)

    Good catch! Yes, you're completely allowed (and encouraged!) to WP:be bold and fix these errors yourself. Feel free to ask if you need help. –RoxySaunders 🏳️‍⚧️ (talk • stalk) 22:20, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
    When you do, you could also link the report's title to the section about it at ILGA#Curbing Deception. –RoxySaunders 🏳️‍⚧️ (talk • stalk) 22:27, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
    Perfect, thanks! Mjsayshey (talk) 23:24, 2 December 2024 (UTC)

    Semi-protected edit request on 2 December 2024

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    Change the source for “Curbin Deception” to the link here. The link it currently cites (here) is incorrect. Also, replace “Curbin” with “Curbing”. It’s misspelled. Also link the article ILGA#Curbing Deception to the title. Mjsayshey (talk) 23:34, 2 December 2024 (UTC)

    Done. -- Nat Gertler (talk) 23:46, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
    Thanks! Mjsayshey (talk) 23:48, 2 December 2024 (UTC)

    Extreme bias

    Unproductive and possibly just trolling
    The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.

    All I tried to do was to change the article's extreme bias. It says there no working solutions anywhere, when this isn't the case. KirillMarasin (talk) 19:48, 25 December 2024 (UTC)

    I am not sure where "extreme bias" comes into this, apart from in the content that you are trying to add. These are extreme POV claims that Conversion Therapy "works". I am more than 100% sure that this is all complete and utter nonsense but if you, or anybody else, really believe that there are Reliable Sources that actually support these claims then please feel free to discuss them here. These are extraordinary claims and hence will require extremely good sourcing, not anecdotes. Basically they would have to meet WP:MEDRS.
    Also, please do not use words like "solutions" in that way. That's absolutely not acceptable language to use on a Talk page. These are not "solutions". Even if Conversion Therapy "worked", which it doesn't, it would not be a "solution" because LGBTQ people are not a problem to be "solved". DanielRigal (talk) 19:57, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
    Stop putting words in my mouth. I've been homosexual since 2007 and been looking for a cure since then (successfully, may I say, but you may not believe me for all I care). I guess I'm in the minority. Do I have no right to change unwanted sexual orientation? KirillMarasin (talk) 10:09, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
    If its "extreme bias" is relying on what reliable sources for medical information say, then that "bias" will have to stay. Your sources for some of the cures were that someone-said-something-in-a-chat-forum, and that falls far below the reliable we'd expect for much of anything, much less for medical information. The claims that you were making about Deep Brain Stimulation were referenced to this abstract, which was for this journal article where the closest it comes to claiming an effectiveness for conversion is talking about a single patient, and it says "while Heath claimed that the patient had a full recovery and engaged exclusively in heterosexual activities, other sources argued that the patient continued to have homosexual relationships." So no, that source doesn't back up your claim of effectiveness, even in a single patient. -- Nat Gertler (talk) 19:57, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
    "engaged exclusively in heterosexual activities" And why would this be a desirable outcome?Dimadick (talk) 03:23, 26 December 2024 (UTC)

    Semi-protected edit request on 8 January 2025

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    Under the Castration and Transplantation section, the line "In early twentieth century Germany experiments were carried out" has a spelling error. I recommend changing it to "In the early twentieth century, German experiments were carried out". GloatyUK (talk) 13:04, 8 January 2025 (UTC)

    Dunkin DonEdit completed (3OpenEyes's talk page. Say hi!) | (PS: Have a good day) 13:55, 8 January 2025 (UTC)

     Done Getting ready to leave the house, but I'll carry it out at Dunkin Donut's Wifi hotspot. Thanks (3OpenEyes's talk page. Say hi!) | (PS: Have a good day) 13:18, 8 January 2025 (UTC)

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