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On May 5, 2023, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Rochelle Walensky, in announcing her resignation after more than 2 years of dedicated service, wrote that she “took on this role … with the goal of leaving behind the dark days of the pandemic and moving the CDC — and public health — forward into a much better and more trusted place.”

Three times in the past 3 years I have written a Beyond the White Coat column emphasizing the importance of trust. Trust in the expertise of scientists. Trust in the integrity of medical research and public health institutions. Trust in the commitment of providers — doctors, nurses, therapists, and first responders — to shepherd us through the pandemic and other medical crises in our lives. This column is take four.

Dr. Kevin T. Powell, a pediatric hospitalist and clinical ethics consultant in St. Louis.
Dr. Kevin T. Powell

All human institutions have human imperfections. However, imperfect humans working together in community are more productive and more reliable than nihilism and political polarization. Underlying all of healthcare are compassion and honesty. Honesty means the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Honesty is such a simple concept in the moral formation of children, but the concept has evolved aberrantly in the world of woke adults. There appear to be irresistible temptations to shade that truth for political gain. The dominant current mutation is the half-truth. One tells the part of the truth that appears to advance one’s own political aspirations and at the same time one omits or censors other viewpoints.

On April 17, 2023, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and the American Psychiatric Association wrote an open letter to Congressional leaders advocating for transgender female students’ participation in girl’s and women’s sports. The letter was written “On behalf of the more than 165,000” members of those organizations, though public opinion polls show a majority of those members likely oppose the opinion expressed. The letter goes on to extol the benefits that sports might bring to transgender students, but it contains not one word acknowledging the negative impact that participation has on others. That is a half-truth.

The same half-truth methodology distorts dialogue about various therapies for gender dysphoria in children and young adults.

In April 2022, U.S. Assistant Secretary for Health Rachel Levine in an NPR interview declared that, “There is no argument about the value and importance of gender-affirming care.” That might be a half-truth, since I could not locate U.S. specialists who dare to go on record questioning the party line of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health. However, Dr. Levine’s dismissal of any dissent is bizarre since in the prior 2 years multiple countries, including Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Finland, and the United Kingdom had all issued reports questioning and even rescinding the practices that evolved since the 2012 WPATH guidance. Their main concerns included 1) the marked increase in incidence of gender dysphoria first manifesting in tween and early teenage girls, 2) the inadequate access to mental health screening before considering transitioning, 3) the long-term risks of puberty blockers particularly to bone density, and 4) the low quality of evidence supporting a measurable reduction in suicide rates. There may be reasonable counterarguments to each of those concerns, but a high ranking U.S. government official labeling all those international reports as “no argument” does not produce high quality decision making and does not foster the public’s trust.

Indeed, the public in many cases has decided its elected legislators are more trustworthy on these topics than the medical organizations. As I wrote the first draft of this column, the Missouri state legislators had passed a bill banning gender-affirming health care for transgender minors. They also passed a bill preventing participation of transgender females in women’s sports. Per reckoning by CBS News in the summer of 2023, 16 states had recently enacted laws restricting gender-affirming care and 22 states had restricted transgender participation in sports.

In 2022, I wrote a column claiming that suppressing viewpoints and debate leads to exploding spaceships. I believe the current legislative carnage is just such an explosion. It harms children.

The AAP has experts in advocacy. I am no expert in political advocacy. Perhaps politics has to be played by different rules where half-truths are normalized. Criminal law and advertising use those rules. But this explosion of vitriol and legislative intrusion into medicine should prompt everyone to reassess the use of one-sided advocacy in public and professional circles in healthcare. I want to be associated with a profession that uses evidence-based medicine that is not corrupted with political agendas. I want to be associated with a profession known for telling the whole truth.

In a society that is increasingly polarized, I want to embrace the advice of John Stuart Mill, a 19th century English philosopher best known for utilitarianism, which is often expressed as “the greatest good for the greatest number.” Mr. Mill also wrote on social theory, liberty, and even some early feminist theory. His 1859 work, On Liberty, chapter II, asserts: “He who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that. His reasons may be good, and no one may have been able to refute them. But if he is equally unable to refute the reasons on the opposite side; if he does not so much as know what they are, he has no ground for preferring either opinion.”

Mr. Mill did not like half-truths.
 

 

 

It’s About Trust

My column is not the instrument to debate the use of hormones as puberty blockers or the fairness of transgender women participating in women’s sports. Those judgments will be rendered by others. I may report on those deliberations, but my column’s emphasis is on how professionals, and their organizations, go about making those determinations

For instance, the National Health Service in the United Kingdom spent 2 years reassessing transgender care for children and in October 2022 released a draft proposal to reduce and limit the aggressive therapies. On June 9, 2023, the NHS fully enacted those changes. Puberty blockers for gender dysphoria would be used only in experimental trials. In April 2024 the NHS began implementing those changes, joining other European countries that have imposed similar restrictions.

Similarly, the debate about transgender participation in women’s sports has continued to rage for years. On April 8, 2024, the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics passed a resolution that bans almost all transgender participation in NAIA-regulated intercollegiate women’s sports. Dance and cheerleading are exceptions. Participation is still permissible at the intramural level. The NCAA has different rules.

Go to those sources to learn more substance for those debates. This column is about trust.

A major problem currently facing medicine is the public’s trust in expertise. That trust had been seriously weakened before the pandemic and was repeatedly wounded during the pandemic with arguments over masks, vaccines, and shutdowns. It needs repair.

A parent bringing a baby to a pediatrician’s office needs to trust that physician for the relationship to work. This is especially true for pediatric hospitalists that do not have the opportunity that office-based pediatricians have to build rapport with a family over years. At a recent university conference on diversity, equity, and inclusivity, one female rabbi stated, “I cannot be rabbi to everybody.” I agreed, but as a medical professional, sometimes I must be.

Telling half-truths harms the public’s trust in their personal physicians and in the medical establishment. Once people suspect an organization is making decisions based on ideology rather than science, credibility is lost and difficult to recover.

Let us stop telling half-truths. Let us stop suppressing dialogue. Truth can never be completely captured by humans, but if one side of an issue is suppressed by cancel culture, censorship, accusations of homophobia, or threat of cultural war, the search for truth is severely impaired.

Let us, as medical professionals, adopt Stephen Covey’s habit number 5, “Seek first to understand, then to be understood.” Empower voices. Listen to all stakeholders. And when we finally do speak, remember John Stuart Mill and tell the whole truth.
 

Dr. Powell is a retired pediatric hospitalist and clinical ethics consultant living in St. Louis. Email him at pdnews@mdedge.com.

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On May 5, 2023, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Rochelle Walensky, in announcing her resignation after more than 2 years of dedicated service, wrote that she “took on this role … with the goal of leaving behind the dark days of the pandemic and moving the CDC — and public health — forward into a much better and more trusted place.”

Three times in the past 3 years I have written a Beyond the White Coat column emphasizing the importance of trust. Trust in the expertise of scientists. Trust in the integrity of medical research and public health institutions. Trust in the commitment of providers — doctors, nurses, therapists, and first responders — to shepherd us through the pandemic and other medical crises in our lives. This column is take four.

Dr. Kevin T. Powell, a pediatric hospitalist and clinical ethics consultant in St. Louis.
Dr. Kevin T. Powell

All human institutions have human imperfections. However, imperfect humans working together in community are more productive and more reliable than nihilism and political polarization. Underlying all of healthcare are compassion and honesty. Honesty means the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Honesty is such a simple concept in the moral formation of children, but the concept has evolved aberrantly in the world of woke adults. There appear to be irresistible temptations to shade that truth for political gain. The dominant current mutation is the half-truth. One tells the part of the truth that appears to advance one’s own political aspirations and at the same time one omits or censors other viewpoints.

On April 17, 2023, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and the American Psychiatric Association wrote an open letter to Congressional leaders advocating for transgender female students’ participation in girl’s and women’s sports. The letter was written “On behalf of the more than 165,000” members of those organizations, though public opinion polls show a majority of those members likely oppose the opinion expressed. The letter goes on to extol the benefits that sports might bring to transgender students, but it contains not one word acknowledging the negative impact that participation has on others. That is a half-truth.

The same half-truth methodology distorts dialogue about various therapies for gender dysphoria in children and young adults.

In April 2022, U.S. Assistant Secretary for Health Rachel Levine in an NPR interview declared that, “There is no argument about the value and importance of gender-affirming care.” That might be a half-truth, since I could not locate U.S. specialists who dare to go on record questioning the party line of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health. However, Dr. Levine’s dismissal of any dissent is bizarre since in the prior 2 years multiple countries, including Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Finland, and the United Kingdom had all issued reports questioning and even rescinding the practices that evolved since the 2012 WPATH guidance. Their main concerns included 1) the marked increase in incidence of gender dysphoria first manifesting in tween and early teenage girls, 2) the inadequate access to mental health screening before considering transitioning, 3) the long-term risks of puberty blockers particularly to bone density, and 4) the low quality of evidence supporting a measurable reduction in suicide rates. There may be reasonable counterarguments to each of those concerns, but a high ranking U.S. government official labeling all those international reports as “no argument” does not produce high quality decision making and does not foster the public’s trust.

Indeed, the public in many cases has decided its elected legislators are more trustworthy on these topics than the medical organizations. As I wrote the first draft of this column, the Missouri state legislators had passed a bill banning gender-affirming health care for transgender minors. They also passed a bill preventing participation of transgender females in women’s sports. Per reckoning by CBS News in the summer of 2023, 16 states had recently enacted laws restricting gender-affirming care and 22 states had restricted transgender participation in sports.

In 2022, I wrote a column claiming that suppressing viewpoints and debate leads to exploding spaceships. I believe the current legislative carnage is just such an explosion. It harms children.

The AAP has experts in advocacy. I am no expert in political advocacy. Perhaps politics has to be played by different rules where half-truths are normalized. Criminal law and advertising use those rules. But this explosion of vitriol and legislative intrusion into medicine should prompt everyone to reassess the use of one-sided advocacy in public and professional circles in healthcare. I want to be associated with a profession that uses evidence-based medicine that is not corrupted with political agendas. I want to be associated with a profession known for telling the whole truth.

In a society that is increasingly polarized, I want to embrace the advice of John Stuart Mill, a 19th century English philosopher best known for utilitarianism, which is often expressed as “the greatest good for the greatest number.” Mr. Mill also wrote on social theory, liberty, and even some early feminist theory. His 1859 work, On Liberty, chapter II, asserts: “He who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that. His reasons may be good, and no one may have been able to refute them. But if he is equally unable to refute the reasons on the opposite side; if he does not so much as know what they are, he has no ground for preferring either opinion.”

Mr. Mill did not like half-truths.
 

 

 

It’s About Trust

My column is not the instrument to debate the use of hormones as puberty blockers or the fairness of transgender women participating in women’s sports. Those judgments will be rendered by others. I may report on those deliberations, but my column’s emphasis is on how professionals, and their organizations, go about making those determinations

For instance, the National Health Service in the United Kingdom spent 2 years reassessing transgender care for children and in October 2022 released a draft proposal to reduce and limit the aggressive therapies. On June 9, 2023, the NHS fully enacted those changes. Puberty blockers for gender dysphoria would be used only in experimental trials. In April 2024 the NHS began implementing those changes, joining other European countries that have imposed similar restrictions.

Similarly, the debate about transgender participation in women’s sports has continued to rage for years. On April 8, 2024, the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics passed a resolution that bans almost all transgender participation in NAIA-regulated intercollegiate women’s sports. Dance and cheerleading are exceptions. Participation is still permissible at the intramural level. The NCAA has different rules.

Go to those sources to learn more substance for those debates. This column is about trust.

A major problem currently facing medicine is the public’s trust in expertise. That trust had been seriously weakened before the pandemic and was repeatedly wounded during the pandemic with arguments over masks, vaccines, and shutdowns. It needs repair.

A parent bringing a baby to a pediatrician’s office needs to trust that physician for the relationship to work. This is especially true for pediatric hospitalists that do not have the opportunity that office-based pediatricians have to build rapport with a family over years. At a recent university conference on diversity, equity, and inclusivity, one female rabbi stated, “I cannot be rabbi to everybody.” I agreed, but as a medical professional, sometimes I must be.

Telling half-truths harms the public’s trust in their personal physicians and in the medical establishment. Once people suspect an organization is making decisions based on ideology rather than science, credibility is lost and difficult to recover.

Let us stop telling half-truths. Let us stop suppressing dialogue. Truth can never be completely captured by humans, but if one side of an issue is suppressed by cancel culture, censorship, accusations of homophobia, or threat of cultural war, the search for truth is severely impaired.

Let us, as medical professionals, adopt Stephen Covey’s habit number 5, “Seek first to understand, then to be understood.” Empower voices. Listen to all stakeholders. And when we finally do speak, remember John Stuart Mill and tell the whole truth.
 

Dr. Powell is a retired pediatric hospitalist and clinical ethics consultant living in St. Louis. Email him at pdnews@mdedge.com.

On May 5, 2023, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Rochelle Walensky, in announcing her resignation after more than 2 years of dedicated service, wrote that she “took on this role … with the goal of leaving behind the dark days of the pandemic and moving the CDC — and public health — forward into a much better and more trusted place.”

Three times in the past 3 years I have written a Beyond the White Coat column emphasizing the importance of trust. Trust in the expertise of scientists. Trust in the integrity of medical research and public health institutions. Trust in the commitment of providers — doctors, nurses, therapists, and first responders — to shepherd us through the pandemic and other medical crises in our lives. This column is take four.

Dr. Kevin T. Powell, a pediatric hospitalist and clinical ethics consultant in St. Louis.
Dr. Kevin T. Powell

All human institutions have human imperfections. However, imperfect humans working together in community are more productive and more reliable than nihilism and political polarization. Underlying all of healthcare are compassion and honesty. Honesty means the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Honesty is such a simple concept in the moral formation of children, but the concept has evolved aberrantly in the world of woke adults. There appear to be irresistible temptations to shade that truth for political gain. The dominant current mutation is the half-truth. One tells the part of the truth that appears to advance one’s own political aspirations and at the same time one omits or censors other viewpoints.

On April 17, 2023, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and the American Psychiatric Association wrote an open letter to Congressional leaders advocating for transgender female students’ participation in girl’s and women’s sports. The letter was written “On behalf of the more than 165,000” members of those organizations, though public opinion polls show a majority of those members likely oppose the opinion expressed. The letter goes on to extol the benefits that sports might bring to transgender students, but it contains not one word acknowledging the negative impact that participation has on others. That is a half-truth.

The same half-truth methodology distorts dialogue about various therapies for gender dysphoria in children and young adults.

In April 2022, U.S. Assistant Secretary for Health Rachel Levine in an NPR interview declared that, “There is no argument about the value and importance of gender-affirming care.” That might be a half-truth, since I could not locate U.S. specialists who dare to go on record questioning the party line of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health. However, Dr. Levine’s dismissal of any dissent is bizarre since in the prior 2 years multiple countries, including Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Finland, and the United Kingdom had all issued reports questioning and even rescinding the practices that evolved since the 2012 WPATH guidance. Their main concerns included 1) the marked increase in incidence of gender dysphoria first manifesting in tween and early teenage girls, 2) the inadequate access to mental health screening before considering transitioning, 3) the long-term risks of puberty blockers particularly to bone density, and 4) the low quality of evidence supporting a measurable reduction in suicide rates. There may be reasonable counterarguments to each of those concerns, but a high ranking U.S. government official labeling all those international reports as “no argument” does not produce high quality decision making and does not foster the public’s trust.

Indeed, the public in many cases has decided its elected legislators are more trustworthy on these topics than the medical organizations. As I wrote the first draft of this column, the Missouri state legislators had passed a bill banning gender-affirming health care for transgender minors. They also passed a bill preventing participation of transgender females in women’s sports. Per reckoning by CBS News in the summer of 2023, 16 states had recently enacted laws restricting gender-affirming care and 22 states had restricted transgender participation in sports.

In 2022, I wrote a column claiming that suppressing viewpoints and debate leads to exploding spaceships. I believe the current legislative carnage is just such an explosion. It harms children.

The AAP has experts in advocacy. I am no expert in political advocacy. Perhaps politics has to be played by different rules where half-truths are normalized. Criminal law and advertising use those rules. But this explosion of vitriol and legislative intrusion into medicine should prompt everyone to reassess the use of one-sided advocacy in public and professional circles in healthcare. I want to be associated with a profession that uses evidence-based medicine that is not corrupted with political agendas. I want to be associated with a profession known for telling the whole truth.

In a society that is increasingly polarized, I want to embrace the advice of John Stuart Mill, a 19th century English philosopher best known for utilitarianism, which is often expressed as “the greatest good for the greatest number.” Mr. Mill also wrote on social theory, liberty, and even some early feminist theory. His 1859 work, On Liberty, chapter II, asserts: “He who knows only his own side of the case, knows little of that. His reasons may be good, and no one may have been able to refute them. But if he is equally unable to refute the reasons on the opposite side; if he does not so much as know what they are, he has no ground for preferring either opinion.”

Mr. Mill did not like half-truths.
 

 

 

It’s About Trust

My column is not the instrument to debate the use of hormones as puberty blockers or the fairness of transgender women participating in women’s sports. Those judgments will be rendered by others. I may report on those deliberations, but my column’s emphasis is on how professionals, and their organizations, go about making those determinations

For instance, the National Health Service in the United Kingdom spent 2 years reassessing transgender care for children and in October 2022 released a draft proposal to reduce and limit the aggressive therapies. On June 9, 2023, the NHS fully enacted those changes. Puberty blockers for gender dysphoria would be used only in experimental trials. In April 2024 the NHS began implementing those changes, joining other European countries that have imposed similar restrictions.

Similarly, the debate about transgender participation in women’s sports has continued to rage for years. On April 8, 2024, the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics passed a resolution that bans almost all transgender participation in NAIA-regulated intercollegiate women’s sports. Dance and cheerleading are exceptions. Participation is still permissible at the intramural level. The NCAA has different rules.

Go to those sources to learn more substance for those debates. This column is about trust.

A major problem currently facing medicine is the public’s trust in expertise. That trust had been seriously weakened before the pandemic and was repeatedly wounded during the pandemic with arguments over masks, vaccines, and shutdowns. It needs repair.

A parent bringing a baby to a pediatrician’s office needs to trust that physician for the relationship to work. This is especially true for pediatric hospitalists that do not have the opportunity that office-based pediatricians have to build rapport with a family over years. At a recent university conference on diversity, equity, and inclusivity, one female rabbi stated, “I cannot be rabbi to everybody.” I agreed, but as a medical professional, sometimes I must be.

Telling half-truths harms the public’s trust in their personal physicians and in the medical establishment. Once people suspect an organization is making decisions based on ideology rather than science, credibility is lost and difficult to recover.

Let us stop telling half-truths. Let us stop suppressing dialogue. Truth can never be completely captured by humans, but if one side of an issue is suppressed by cancel culture, censorship, accusations of homophobia, or threat of cultural war, the search for truth is severely impaired.

Let us, as medical professionals, adopt Stephen Covey’s habit number 5, “Seek first to understand, then to be understood.” Empower voices. Listen to all stakeholders. And when we finally do speak, remember John Stuart Mill and tell the whole truth.
 

Dr. Powell is a retired pediatric hospitalist and clinical ethics consultant living in St. Louis. Email him at pdnews@mdedge.com.

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