Health
More than 200 children will receive dangerous puberty blockers for new UK study
From LifeSiteNews
An NHS-backed trial will administer puberty blockers to children as young as 10 despite serious harms and is facing legal action from a prominent detransitioner.
Over 200 children in the United Kingdom will be injected with puberty blockers as part of an experiment on the effects of “gender transitioning.”
In November, King’s College London announced the Pathways Trial, which will track 226 gender-confused children as they take puberty blockers that are known to damage fertility, bone density, and brain development.
“Right now, there isn’t enough information about the possible benefits or risks that young people with gender incongruence may experience when taking puberty suppressing hormones,” a press release reads. “PATHWAYS TRIAL aims to help fill this gap in the evidence about what we know.”
READ: HHS study confirms dangers of transgender drugs, surgeries for minors
The Puberty Suppression and Transitional Healthcare with Adaptive Youth Services core trial, will administer puberty blockers to 226 children, from ages 10 to 15 years old, recruited over three years from the NHS.
The children will be divided into two groups and receive the drugs 12 months apart. After being given the drugs, the children will receive ongoing therapy, family counseling, and monitoring for two years.
Researchers claimed that the study has been “carefully checked by independent scientists” and is “overseen by two groups of people who are independent from the research team and the funders.”
Prominent detransitioner and outspoken activist Keira Bell condemned the experiment as a “betrayal of the children it claims to help” in a recent op-ed article published by The Telegraph.
“It will undoubtedly lead to infertility and lack of sexual function, to name only a couple,” she warned. “A child cannot fully understand these effects, let alone those that are unknown.”
On November 14, Bell, along with British psychotherapist James Esses, launched pre-action, demanding disclosure of trial documents. If the documents are not released, the pair promised to demand a judicial review.
📢 PRE-ACTION LETTERS SENT
Under instruction of @JamesEsses and I, legal have sent pre-action letters today to the regulatory bodies in charge of the puberty blocker trial.
They have been playing it sneaky, refusing to provide those important details to us since early this… pic.twitter.com/FVzAo2gVhO
— Keira Bell (@KBtheYoungOG) November 14, 2025
The research, approved and funded by the NHS, comes after puberty blockers were banned last year after a major review exposed the practice as dangerous and medically baseless.
The Cass Review is the world’s largest review into transgender interventions for minors. Dr. Hilary Cass, the pediatrician commissioned by the NHS to review the transgender “services” being made available to gender-confused minors, was scathing in her analysis.
Cass found that “gender medicine” is “built on shaky foundations” and that while these drastic interventions should be approached with extreme caution, “quite the reverse happened in the field of [so-called] gender care for children.”
LifeSiteNews has compiled a list of medical professions and experts who warn against “transgender” surgeries, warning of irreversible changes and lifelong side effects.
Moreover, internal documents from the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) have shown that doctors who offer so-called “gender-affirming care” know that transgender hormones cause serious diseases, including cancer, but have prescribed them anyway.
The internal documents, dubbed the “WPATH FILES,” include emails and messages from a private discussion forum by doctors, as well as statements from a video call of WPATH members. The files reveal that the doctors working for WPATH know that so-called “gender-affirming care” can cause severe mental and physical disease and that it is impossible for minors to give “informed consent” to it.
As LifeSiteNews has previously noted, research does not support the assertions from transgender activists that surgical or pharmaceutical intervention to “affirm” confusion is “necessary medical care” or that it is helpful in preventing the suicides of gender-confused individuals.
In fact, in addition to asserting a false reality that one’s sex can be changed, transgender surgeries and drugs have been linked to permanent physical and psychological damage, including cardiovascular diseases, loss of bone density, cancer, strokes and blood clots, infertility, and suicidality.
There is also overwhelming evidence that those who undergo “gender transitioning” are more likely to commit suicide than those who are not given irreversible surgery. A Swedish study found that those who underwent “gender reassignment” surgery ended up with a 19.2 times greater risk of suicide.
Indeed, the most loving and helpful approach to people who think they are a different sex is not to validate them in their confusion but to show them the truth.
A study on the side effects of transgender “sex change” surgeries discovered that 81 percent of those who had undergone “sex change” surgeries in the past five years reported experiencing pain simply from normal movement in the weeks and months that followed — and that many other side effects manifest as well.
Alberta
Premier Smith explains how private clinics will be introduced in Alberta
Premier Smith and Hospitals and Surgical Health Services Minister Matt Jones laid out Alberta’s new dual practice model for surgeons. This change will let doctors perform more surgeries, cut wait times, keep talent in Alberta, and move patients through the system faster, all while protecting publicly funded care.
Health
BREAKING: CDC quietly rewrites its vaccine–autism guidance
In a stunning shift, the CDC now says its own “vaccines don’t cause autism” claim was not evidence-based.
For the first time in a generation, the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has rewritten its official position on whether vaccines can cause autism.
This is a change that could reshape one of the most politically charged and emotionally fraught debates in modern medicine.
In a website update published on 19 November 2025, the agency now states that the long-standing claim “vaccines do not cause autism” is “not an evidence-based claim” because scientific studies “have not ruled out the possibility that infant vaccines cause autism.”
The page also acknowledges that “studies supporting a link have been ignored by health authorities.”
It’s difficult to overstate the significance of these statements. For nearly two decades, they would have been unthinkable for a federal public health agency.
The timing is equally striking.
The change arrives at a moment when the political and scientific landscape around vaccine safety is undergoing a marked shift inside the Trump–Kennedy administration.
For months, critics have accused Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr and several of the administration’s appointees of holding unconventional views on vaccine safety.
The CDC’s revised language now places the agency closer to Kennedy’s long-standing argument that federal agencies had ignored crucial evidence.
The CDC explains the shift by pointing to the Data Quality Act, which requires federal communications to accurately reflect the evidence.
Because studies have not excluded the possibility that infant vaccines could contribute to autism, the agency concedes that its long-standing categorical statement was not scientifically justified.
The update states plainly that scientific uncertainty remains, particularly for vaccines administered in the first year of life.
Scientific uncertainty finally acknowledged
The information on the website draws a sharp distinction between the infant vaccine schedule — which includes DTaP, HepB, Hib, IPV, PCV and others — and the measles–mumps–rubella (MMR) vaccine.
For the MMR, the CDC continues to cite observational evidence showing “no association … with autism spectrum disorders,” describing the conclusion as supported by “high strength of evidence.”
But the agency also acknowledges that these studies had “serious methodological limitations” and were all retrospective epidemiological analyses, the type that cannot establish cause and effect or identify subgroups who may be more vulnerable.
The acknowledgement of limitations is unusually candid for a federal agency discussing vaccines and autism.
For the infant vaccine schedule, the shift is even more dramatic.
The CDC cites a series of authoritative reviews — including the 1991 and 2012 Institute of Medicine’s assessments, and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality’s review in 2021 — all concluding that the evidence was “inadequate to accept or reject” a causal relationship between early-life vaccines and autism.
In other words, the fundamental scientific question remains unresolved.
Political dynamite
The political context makes this change even more consequential. Senator Bill Cassidy, who chairs the Senate Health Committee, has been one of the most vocal critics of Kennedy’s vaccine views.
Cassidy has repeatedly insisted that the science on autism and vaccination was settled years ago. Now the CDC states that the claim “vaccines do not cause autism” does not meet evidence standards.
Remarkably, the CDC states that the headline phrase remains on the page only “due to an agreement with the chair of the U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee.”
The implication — that the wording is a political compromise rather than a scientific one — will undoubtedly invite scrutiny on Capitol Hill.
Attorney Aaron Siri, who has spent years litigating against federal agencies for greater transparency around vaccine safety, said the update marks a long overdue shift in honesty from the CDC.
“It is an excellent step in the right direction for CDC to start telling the truth to the public about its past misdeeds and misrepresentations,” said Siri.
“Telling the truth and apologizing for its prior misrepresentations is the only way the CDC will ever rebuild trust with the public,” he added.
How the Wakefield saga shaped debate
For years, any attempt to revisit the vaccine–autism question was coloured by the fallout from the “Wakefield saga.”
The retracted 1998 Lancet paper became a shorthand for misinformation, and it allowed public health agencies to dismiss all subsequent concerns as if they were simply a continuation of that controversy.
The episode became a kind of cultural firewall.
Invoking Wakefield was an easy way to shut down inquiry, even when parents were describing patterns that had nothing to do with the MMR vaccine and everything to do with the expanding infant schedule.
The CDC’s admission that the evidence for early-life vaccines is “inadequate to accept or reject” a causal link — and that some studies “supporting a link have been ignored” — breaks the long-standing habit of waving away legitimate questions by pointing back to a decades-old scandal.
A broad recalibration
The CDC’s shift also aligns with a broader recalibration underway across federal health agencies in the US.
The Trump administration has ordered new NIH reviews of vaccine safety science, reinstated the Task Force on Safer Childhood Vaccines, and rejuvenated the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).
The pattern is unmistakable: agencies that once treated certain questions as “settled science” are now reopening them and its impact is likely to reverberate across the globe.
The CDC now admits the science has not ruled out potential links for vaccines given in infancy.
The website also notes that “about one in two surveyed parents of children with autism” believe vaccination played a role, often pointing to shots given in the first months of life or around the one-year mark.
Until now, those parents were often told their concerns were baseless. The agency’s new wording fundamentally alters that dynamic.
Changing the conversation
In the US at least, public health agencies will no longer be able to respond to parental concerns with blanket denials.
Moreover, researchers studying plausible mechanisms — such as aluminium adjuvants, neuroinflammation, mitochondrial vulnerabilities and immune activation — will find themselves in an environment that formally recognises these questions as scientifically legitimate.
Informed consent practices may need to be revisited as the existence of uncertainty is formally acknowledged.
And lawmakers who insisted that the science was settled will now face uncomfortable questions about why federal agencies relied on definitive messaging that did not meet evidence standards.
To be clear — the CDC’s update does NOT assert that vaccines cause autism. What it does say — with clarity the agency has avoided for years — is that the available evidence has not established that they do not, at least for the vaccines given in early infancy.
That distinction may seem subtle, but it represents a profound shift in how the conversation is framed and will undoubtedly impact the personal experiences of families raising autistic children.
For the first time that I can remember, the question of vaccines and autism is no longer treated as taboo. It has been recast — at the CDC’s own hand — as a research question that demands proper investigation.
The shift may prove to be one of the most consequential public health developments of the decade, and it suggests that something significant is moving behind the scenes in the federal agencies that once seemed immovable.
OLD CDC WEBSITE:
UPDATED CDC WEBSITE:
Your paid subscription is what sustains my work.
Please upgrade your subscription to ensure independent investigations continue.
-
Alberta2 days agoNational Crisis Approaching Due To The Carney Government’s Centrally Planned Green Economy
-
Carbon Tax1 day agoCarney fails to undo Trudeau’s devastating energy policies
-
Health1 day agoNEW STUDY: Infant Vaccine “Intensity” Strongly Predicts Autism Rates Worldwide
-
Agriculture2 days agoFederal cabinet calls for Canadian bank used primarily by white farmers to be more diverse
-
Business1 day agoThe UN Pushing Carbon Taxes, Punishing Prosperity, And Promoting Poverty
-
Great Reset2 days agoCanadian government forcing doctors to promote euthanasia to patients: report
-
Business1 day agoClimate Climbdown: Sacrificing the Canadian Economy for Net-Zero Goals Others Are Abandoning
-
Alberta1 day agoAlberta to protect three pro-family laws by invoking notwithstanding clause









