Anger over UCU’s ‘anti-scientific’ fight against Cass Review

Outcry after UCU motion claims landmark review into gender identity services for young people has ‘serious methodological flaws’

July 3, 2024
Transgender people and their supporters march through central London in a protest against a ban on puberty blockers in London, United Kingdom to illustrate Anger over UCU’s ‘anti-scientific’ fight against Cass Review
Source: Wiktor Szymanowicz/Future Publishing / Getty Images

Academics have condemned the University and College Union’s decision to campaign against a widely praised independent review into NHS treatment for gender-questioning children, claiming its position is “anti-scientific” and could expose researchers to harassment.

The outcry follows the unanimous vote by the UCU’s national executive committee to adopt a motion which claims that the landmark Cass Review into gender identity services for young people, published in April, “falls short of the standard of rigorous and ethical research expected of research professionals” and “provides no evidence for the ‘new approach’ it recommends”.

The 388-page report by Hilary Cass, a former president of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, has been hailed as the most extensive and thorough examination of evidence relating to medical care for gender-dysphoric children.

The report, which found there was “remarkably weak” evidence for the effectiveness of treatment given to under-18s, was welcomed by the Conservatives and Labour.

However, the UCU motion – which was remitted from the union’s congress in May due to an industrial dispute – claims the report has “serious methodological flaws” and is defined by its “selective use of evidence and promotion of unevidenced claims”.

The motion asks the union to “commit to working with trans-led organisations to resist the Cass Report recommendations”.

That stance has been criticised by several union members. On X, one academic said the union’s position was now essentially “researchers against research”, a view echoed by others, one of whom questioned the wisdom of having an “academic union campaigning against research”.

Thomas Prosser, professor of European political economy at Cardiff University, told Times Higher Education that the motion “risks making the union appear anti-scientific”.

“What if some of the researchers who worked on the review are UCU members? If this is the case, UCU may expose its own members to harassment,” Professor Prosser said.

The motion’s reference to the “artificially high evidential standards” of the Cass report is likely to relate to concerns raised that some studies supporting the prescribing of puberty blockers to under-18s were disregarded on the basis that they were “low quality”.  

However, Dr Cass has described the claims spread online as “completely false”, explaining that many studies deemed of “moderate quality” by University of York researchers were included in her “synthesis” of relevant research.


Campus resource: ‘Strengthening institution-wide commitment to trans inclusion is more important than ever’


Using a union motion to argue against a lengthy and detailed report was also unwise, suggested Alice Sullivan, professor of sociology at UCL.

“The notion that the way to counter a scientific report is to vote against it shows a total lack of comprehension of the scientific method. It is sad to see a union which is supposed to represent academics opposing evidence-based medicine,” she said.

THE contacted several NEC members who voted for the motion but none of them responded.

The union has faced criticism before for its interventions on transgender issues, with a motion calling for it to take a stand against gender-critical feminists pulled from its 2022 congress on legal advice that it could breach discrimination law.

A UCU spokesperson said the union was “an unequivocal supporter of trans rights, a position established and repeatedly endorsed by our annual congress”.

“This motion was brought by our members after listening to concerns about the Cass report from the trans community, including LGBTQ charities such as Mermaids and Stonewall.

“Our union will proudly work with trans-led organisations to resist any recommendations that could harm young trans people and will pressure the government for an approach to trans healthcare that affirms and centres the trans community.”

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (9)

Who exactly does UCU represent and how can they stand up against a review led by experts? This is a disgrace
Why is the UCU wasting its time sticking its collective nose into something that is outwith its remit - the legal term is "ultra vires" [beyond its powers]? It is not their role to comment on reviews or research, it's there to represent the membership collectively in pay & conditions negotiations and individually whenever a member needs defending against injustice or abuse. You'd have thought that would have kept them quite busy enough.
Those of us who are UCU members have only ourselves to blame. With a few small exceptions, no one wants to step up and take office, at any level, in the union except for a tiny minority of delusional far-left extremists. This (and the disgraceful statement on Ukraine from last year, which caused many Slavonicist colleagues to quit) is the result. I'm just as guilty. At the next opportunity I'll put my name forward. I really, really, don't want to, but stepping up is the only way to get a leadership that is in any way representative of the of members.
Have now quit UCU. Idiots. Final straw
I long for the day UCU stuck to fighting for the working conditions of members. No wonder membership is haemorrhaging.
UCU should be resisting politicized attacks on academics' work, not leading them
In the Kiera Bell case, the High Court stated that there was effectively only one mode of treatment on offer to patients at GIDS, namely puberty blockers invariably followed by sex hormones. The alternative being no treatment. THAT is why NHSE had to close GIDS: it isn't possible that every patient requires identical treatment varied only by dosage and start date. It's also no coincidence that GIDS received the lowest possible NICE inspection rating of 'inadequate' in 2020, leading to the Cass Review. If you dismiss Cass, the High Court and NICE inspection what do you put in its place?
One of the more bizarre political developments of recent years has been the rise and rise of anti-science positions among both right and left. The only difference is which particular pieces of scientific evidence they dislike. Disappointing but not surprising to see UCU staying on trend.
Can the UCU NEC explain why the number of referrals to gender services has expanded by 3000% of the last 10 years or why the ratio.of prospective transitioners has gone from 80% male to 80% female? Can they explain why the majority of them are same sex attracted or why a third have autism or why so many of them are victims of homophobia or sexual abuse? Gender affirming care will in my opinion turn out to be the biggest medical scandal since lobotomies. It is quack medicine with no evidence base.

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