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Vincent Keane's avatar

In 1936, near a century ago, serious mental health conditions in otherwise physically healthy individuals were treated with an experimental surgical procedure. The Frontal Lobotomy, pioneered by António Egas Moniz, a Portuguese neurologist, involved drilling a hole in the skull and severing the nerve connections to the frontal lobes of the brain.

Moniz's work was initially viewed as a breakthrough in the treatment of serious mental health disorders, earning him the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1949.

At that time innovative/experimental medical interventions did not require the rigorous evidence of efficacy and safety that is mandated today (aka: evidence base). This delayed the realisation that the frontal lobotomy often did more harm than good. Some patients died either during or after the procedure, or were left in vegetative states unable to care for themselves. The last such procedure was performed in the United States in the early 1960’s. The lobotomy epoch is now viewed as a shameful stain on the medical profession.

Fast forward to 2024:

Here we are, 88 years after the Moniz's ‘breakthrough’, our major paediatric teaching hospitals are treating a mental condition in otherwise healthy children with an invasive, irreversible, mutilating, sterilising surgical and hormonal cocktail that is devoid of an evidence base.

Drilling a hole in the skull and severing connections with the frontal lobe of the brain doesn’t seem such a bizarre undertaking when compared with concept and practice of ‘gender transition’ of children

(Note: A diagnosis of gender dysphoria is included in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition, or DSM-5.)

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Viviane Morrigan's avatar

Well done! More evidence for a more cautious therapeutic.approach is nevertheless still needed.

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