Skip to main content
NHS to conduct clinical trials to assess puberty blocker evidence, says Streeting after High Court upholds ban
Health Secretary Wes Streeting leaving Downing Street, London, after a Cabinet meeting, July 9, 2024

THE NHS will conduct clinical trials to assess the potential benefits and harms of puberty blockers, Health Secretary Wes Streeting says.

Sir Keir Starmer welcomed Monday’s High Court ruling that an emergency ban on puberty blockers, which suppress the production of sex hormones to delay puberty, was lawful. The ban, imposed by former health secretary Victoria Atkin, had been challenged in court by the TransActual campaign and a young person who cannot be named.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman told reporters: “The government welcomes the court’s decision. Children’s healthcare must be evidence-led.

Take out shares in the People's Press
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Burnt cars remain in the middle of a street following the re
Features / 22 March 2025
22 March 2025
Ben Chacko asks NIZAR TRABULSI of the now banned Syrian Communist Party (Unified) to explain the country's turbulent, and violent, post-Assad scene
Delegates chat as they leave the Great Hall of the People af
Features / 22 March 2025
22 March 2025
From renewable tech to alternatives to the dollar, BEN CHACKO was encouraged by an optimistic meeting held by the China Media Group this week
Similar stories
Britain / 11 December 2024
11 December 2024
INFLUENTIAL: Retired consultant paediatrician and former pre
Interview / 27 April 2024
27 April 2024
GP and co-chair of the Clinical Advisory Network on Sex and Gender LOUISE IRVINE tells Ros Sitwell what the group would like to see in terms of implementing evidence-based healthcare and safeguarding for those experiencing gender issues in the NHS and beyond