Mosley: Report arrives at a turning point in gender ‘medical scandal’

Mosley: Report arrives at a turning point in gender ‘medical scandal’

Spread the love

In a room with a licensed doctor seeing a teenager or preteen and their parents, it is the child with mental health assessment minimized or omitted that leads decisions made because of “embodiment goals.”

That’s the findings of “Treatment for Pediatric Gender Dysphoria: Review of Evidence and Best Practices,” as released Wednesday by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. And that’s the norm not the exception Prisha Mosley has found personally and in talking to friends from coast to coast and border to border in America.

Mosley calls it a “medical scandal.”

“That’s exactly how it happened to me, and my detransition friends,” Mosley told The Center Square in a Monday afternoon interview. “Anything else is called gatekeeping. Anything other than the affirmation model is called gatekeeping. If a child says trans, there’s no way for trans not to happen.

“You hear about it online, in schools … gender dysphoria is a sham diagnosis. That can be put on anybody.”

From children expressing harm from adults or bullies to just about anything, Mosley says.

“Distress. Suicide reality,” is what it should be called, Mosley says.

And there are treatment routes for those.

Within the report, “The ‘gender-affirming’ model of care, as practiced in U.S. clinics, is characterized by a child-led process in which comprehensive mental health assessments are often minimized or omitted, and the patient’s ‘embodiment goals’ serve as the primary guide for treatment decisions. In some of the nation’s leading pediatric gender clinics, assessments are conducted in a single session lasting two hours.”

Some are less.

Mosley moved to North Carolina in third grade, at about age 7. Big Rapids, Mich., is now home for the 27-year-old and her son, he with the bassinet gifted by Mosley’s good friends Riley Gaines and Paula Scanlan.

Mosley is an ambassador with Independent Women, a nonprofit that bills itself with “unique, persuasive methods and trusted brand” that shapes “public preferences, policies, and movements to create a better future for everyone.” Gaines and Scanlan were previously, and remain in a working relationship with the organization.

As a teen, Mosley and parents were part of the growing trend to transition from female to male. She started testosterone at 17, had surgery at 18, and like many in the five to 10 years later range, had regret.

“That’s how long it takes to see the catastrophic results,” Mosley said.

Mosley, like former collegiate swimmers Gaines and Scanlan seeking to protect women’s spaces everywhere with emphasis on sports, is speaking out for detransitioners and peers “who believed the lies like I did.”

“I know what it’s like to be desperate,” Mosley said. “I know what kind of person you have to be trying to find a magical cure. Sometimes the truth hurts. There isn’t a magical cure. You have to learn good coping mechanisms, and fight for better times. Anyone selling a cure that easy is just selling something.”

Mosley understands trust in the medical world. She points to the professionals at the top of the industry chain for blame. Wednesday’s report is peer reviewed, though notably invited but declining were the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Endocrine Society.

“They rely on that trust, that’s how it happens,” Mosley said. “They asked my parents if they wanted a dead daughter or living son … right in front of me in the room.”

The report says, “The evidence for benefit of pediatric medical transition is very uncertain, while the evidence for harm is less uncertain.”

“The American Medical Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics peddled the lie that chemical and surgical sex-rejecting procedures could be good for children,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. “They betrayed their oath to first do no harm, and their so-called ‘gender-affirming care’ has inflicted lasting physical and psychological damage on vulnerable young people. That is not medicine – it’s malpractice.”

Born a female, surgeries in North Carolina were performed to change Mosley to a boy. State law changed this year, with North Carolina becoming the 18th state to define men and women in a law that also increased the statute of limitations to 10 years for those seeking justice for harm from gender transition.

Mosley filed the lawsuit in Gaston County in July 2023. It states that at age 17, testosterone injections were started, and a double mastectomy was performed. Among the eight defendants are a plastic surgeon, two licensed counselors, and a physician.

Part of the case was cleared to proceed in May of last year. The medical malpractice did not go forward due to the prior statute of limitations. In August, Mosley’s legal team filed to reinstate based on the new law.

The judge dismissing her complaint retired two days later. The case now is with the North Carolina Court of Appeals.

“This report marks a turning point for American medicine,” said National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya. “The evidence in it meticulously documents the risks the profession has imposed on vulnerable children. At the NIH, we are committed to ensuring that science, not ideology, guides America’s medical research.”

Even with the report, generational impact is still happening.

“What are we going to tell the young people who can’t have children because the medical profession stole that from them?” said Assistant Secretary for Health Dr. Brian Christine. “Our report is an urgent wake up call to doctors and parents about the clear dangers of trying to turn girls into boys and vice-versa.”

Mosley says people identifying as trans are not doing well.

“The whole message is a medical scandal,” Mosley said. “That includes for adults. Adults can’t consent to lies, or medical experiments when not given all the information. None of it is being tracked. It’s a big experiment, and no one can consent to that.

“It’s a death cult that no one has been put on top of. We’re at a turning point.”

The report is clear, Mosley says, that “there isn’t really a magical cure for that. And people are terrified out of their minds.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois quick hits: Pope reacts to Pritzker bill signing

Illinois quick hits: Pope reacts to Pritzker bill signing

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Pope reacts to Pritzker bill signing Pope Leo XIV says he is very disappointed that Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed Senate...
Study reveals top U.S. states for K-12 education

Study reveals top U.S. states for K-12 education

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square Massachusetts and Virginia rank as the top states for K-12 education, with strong academics, high graduation rates and supportive school environments, according to a new...
2025: More than 2.5 million removed, record number of violent offenders arrested

2025: More than 2.5 million removed, record number of violent offenders arrested

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Under new Trump administration policies, more than 2.5 million people were removed from the U.S. this year, including a record number of violent offenders. This...
Trump to meet Zelensky in Florida Sunday

Trump to meet Zelensky in Florida Sunday

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square President Donald Trump will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Florida on Sunday, according to the Ukrainian president. The two world leaders are expected...
manhattan fire district graphic logo.3

Construction Advances on New Manhattan Fire Station; Ambulance Repairs Scheduled

Manhattan Fire Protection District Meeting | Nov. 17, 2025 Article Summary: Fire Chief Steve Malone updated the board on the progress of the new fire station, reporting that the apparatus...
Will County Board Graphic.04

County Approves Engineering for Peotone Road and Safety Upgrades

Will County Board Meeting | December 18, 2025 Article Summary: The County Board approved a Phase I engineering contract for improvements to Wilmington-Peotone Road and authorized an agreement for license...
U.S. Coast Guard broke records across the board in 2025

U.S. Coast Guard broke records across the board in 2025

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square (The Center Square ) – In 2025, the U.S. Coast Guard broke records across the board as the Trump administration poured an historic amount of...
Don’t count on lower electricity prices in 2026

Don’t count on lower electricity prices in 2026

By Lauren JessopThe Center Square For 67 million people relying on electricity from the regional power grid, PJM, cheaper utility bills in 2026 are little more than a pipe dream....
Screenshot 2025-12-20 at 12.27.11 PM

Lincoln-Way Board Approves $731,000 Freshman Laptop Purchase

Lincoln-Way Community High School District 210 Meeting | December 18, 2025 Article Summary: The District 210 Board of Education authorized the purchase of 1,750 Lenovo laptops to equip the incoming...
Will County Board Graphic.01

Monee Solar Farm Projects Granted Extensions

Will County Board Meeting | December 18, 2025 Article Summary: The Will County Board granted six-month extensions for two special use permits related to commercial solar energy facilities in Monee...

WATCH: Report: Americans are still paying off credit debt from last Christmas

By Carleen JohnsonThe Center Square If your last-minute Christmas shopping requires a credit card, you are not alone. According to a new WalletHub report, many Americans are still paying off...
Congressional Conflicts: Curb on lawmakers’ stock trades draws fire for being weak

Congressional Conflicts: Curb on lawmakers’ stock trades draws fire for being weak

By Mark StricherzThe Center Square A limited ban on stock trading by Congress might get a vote next year after a 2012 law did not do enough to stem the...
Wyoming's year in review: Education savings, contentious spending

Wyoming’s year in review: Education savings, contentious spending

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Wyoming lawmakers passed legislation to expand education savings accounts and property tax protections in 2025. However, the legislature remained divided on substantial spending increases to...
Sufyan Farhan

Frankfort Man Arrested in Gas Station Robbery Found Hiding in McDonald’s Restroom

Article Summary: Sufyan Farhan, 27, was arrested on December 21 following an armed robbery at a Frankfort Circle K. Deputies located the suspect hiding in a nearby McDonald's restroom after...
U.S. House advances GOP-backed energy reliability bill

U.S. House advances GOP-backed energy reliability bill

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Legislation looking to lower energy prices nationally successfully passed the U.S. House on a slightly bipartisan vote. H.R. 3628, titled the “State Planning for Reliability...