She rightfully pulls the Tavi up on their extremely poor data management and lack of research.
Helen Webberley live on Facebook at the moment.
She is very clear that the medical team behind GenderGP will continue to prescribe puberty blockers to existing and new patients under 16, because the organisation's consent process is "robust".
She rightfully pulls the Tavi up on their extremely poor data management and lack of research.
But she says that the treatment "definitely saves lives".
Webberley saying the GIDS website should link to Mermaids.
@Transgendertrd advice is "awful" and "transphobic", but they spoke very eloquently in court 🙄
Gender GP will stand firm and will keep fighting for as long as it's needed.
Of course, they only follow the affirmation pathway, so...
Defining moment, people will be galvanised.
The wider families need to speak up, too. Spread the word.
Tavi has stopped, who in the NHS is going to step in?
Helen saying that more GPs need to start prescribing (risking GMC involvement) like she did.
Marianne is encouraging that people take the GP pack to their GPs to "chip away at the resistance".
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1/ Here’s a list of conversational frameworks I’ve picked up that have been helpful.
Please add your own.
2/ The Magic Question: "What would need to be true for you
3/ On evaluating where someone’s head is at regarding a topic they are being wishy-washy about or delaying.
“Gun to the head—what would you decide now?”
“Fast forward 6 months after your sabbatical--how would you decide: what criteria is most important to you?”
4/ Other Q’s re: decisions:
“Putting aside a list of pros/cons, what’s the *one* reason you’re doing this?” “Why is that the most important reason?”
“What’s end-game here?”
“What does success look like in a world where you pick that path?”
5/ When listening, after empathizing, and wanting to help them make their own decisions without imposing your world view:
“What would the best version of yourself do”?
Please add your own.
2/ The Magic Question: "What would need to be true for you
1/\u201cWhat would need to be true for you to\u2026.X\u201d
— Erik Torenberg (@eriktorenberg) December 4, 2018
Why is this the most powerful question you can ask when attempting to reach an agreement with another human being or organization?
A thread, co-written by @deanmbrody: https://t.co/Yo6jHbSit9
3/ On evaluating where someone’s head is at regarding a topic they are being wishy-washy about or delaying.
“Gun to the head—what would you decide now?”
“Fast forward 6 months after your sabbatical--how would you decide: what criteria is most important to you?”
4/ Other Q’s re: decisions:
“Putting aside a list of pros/cons, what’s the *one* reason you’re doing this?” “Why is that the most important reason?”
“What’s end-game here?”
“What does success look like in a world where you pick that path?”
5/ When listening, after empathizing, and wanting to help them make their own decisions without imposing your world view:
“What would the best version of yourself do”?