Sun. Apr 5th, 2026

Teenagers’ Mental Health Does Not Improve After Gender Treatment, Major Study Finds


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Adolescents who seek gender-related medical treatment continue to experience significant mental health difficulties even after undergoing gender reassignment, according to a major new study from Finland. The findings raise serious questions about the assumption that medical intervention relieves the psychiatric burden carried by young people with gender dysphoria.

The study, published in Acta Paediatrica, tracked over 2,000 individuals under the age of 23 who contacted specialist gender identity services in Finland between 1996 and 2019. Each participant was matched with eight population controls for comparison, giving researchers a large and nationally representative picture of psychiatric need over nearly three decades.

Before attending gender identity services, 45.7% of the gender-referred group had already received specialist-level psychiatric treatment, compared with 15% of controls. Two or more years after referral, that figure rose to 61.7% in the gender-referred group, while the control group remained stable at around 14.6%. The scale of the difference is striking and persisted across both males and females.

Among young people who went on to receive medical gender reassignment, the increase in psychiatric need was particularly sharp. Those who underwent feminising treatment saw psychiatric morbidity rise from 9.8% before referral to 60.7% in follow-up. For those who received masculinising treatment, rates climbed from 21.6% to 54.5%. These figures challenge the widely cited expectation that gender-affirming medical care substantially reduces mental health difficulties in adolescents.

Researchers also found that those who first contacted gender identity services after 2010 carried a heavier psychiatric burden than earlier cohorts. Around half of those referred between 2011 and 2019 had already needed psychiatric care before they attended gender services. This proportion had doubled compared with those seeking assessments in the period from 1996 to 2010, suggesting a meaningful shift in the profile of young people now being referred.

The study used multivariable analysis to control for prior psychiatric history, birth year, and year of referral. Even after these adjustments, gender-referred adolescents faced risks of subsequent psychiatric treatment that were approximately three times higher than female controls and five times higher than male controls. Crucially, this elevated risk was consistent regardless of whether the individual had undergone medical treatment or not.

The authors note that oestrogen has been associated with depressive symptoms in some research contexts, which may partly account for the increased psychiatric need seen among those who received feminising treatment. They also point out that the overrepresentation of prior psychiatric history among those who did not receive medical treatment likely reflects established clinical practice, where severe mental health conditions can act as a contraindication for proceeding with gender reassignment.

The researchers argue that thorough psychiatric assessment and ongoing support are essential throughout any medical gender reassignment process. Mental health treatment needs must be addressed in their own right, regardless of a young person’s gender identity or treatment pathway.

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