This paper examines ethical issues associated with the use of puberty suppression in adolescents assigned male at birth, focusing on how potential long-term implications for future sexual wellbeing are communicated to patients and families. Early puberty suppression can influence subsequent possibilities for genital development and surgical options, including the feasibility of various vaginoplasty techniques; however, evidence regarding long-term outcomes remains limited and contested. Although the literature increasingly recognizes the importance of these downstream implications, less attention has been devoted to the ethical challenges of communicating uncertainty, trade-offs, and value-laden considerations in clinical practice. The analysis contends that ethical challenges in this context extend beyond clinical facts to include the assumptions, stereotypes, and biases that may shape how sexuality and sexual wellbeing are presented during counselling. Several recurring issues are explored: (1) the presumption that all transgender women desire genital surgery; (2) normative expectations regarding genital size, function, and use; and (3) the significance attributed to sexual pleasure within broader conceptions of sexual wellbeing. The paper concludes by considering the potential role of clinical bioethicists within multidisciplinary healthcare teams, not as decision-makers, but as facilitators of reflective, non-stereotyped, and developmentally appropriate communication.
Matteo Cresti (Fri,) studied this question.