They removed
gender identity disorder* from the sexual disorders category, renamed it
gender dysphoria, and put it in a category of its own.
*They changed the name because it implied that a person was "wrong in the head", as opposed to being in the wrong body.
Sometimes, the only effective treatment is to help with transition.
Here's an interesting article from The Atlantic:
A Gender-Care Debate Is Spreading Across Europe - The Atlantic
Schizophrenia was changed in the DSM to Schizo affective for that same reason. To avoid social stigma and loss of opportunity due to having a label like that.
I have no problem with changing a label for that reason.
The problem is that they are trying to not just change the label but also the treatment application.
Gender dysphoria is a highly complex genetic and nuerological disorder where areas of the brain are just not wired in a way where the individual mind feels they are in the correct body
The issue is that medication and cognitive and behavioral treatment can do a lot for individuals living with this condition. Some may not need to transition
Putting hormones of the opposite gender into an individuals body of they're natural born with physical gender is very dangerous it creates all sorts of problems for the body and the brain. Hormones are very powerful both to our biological and nuerological development. It will shorten they're life span
And the same with massive surgery to change healthy functioning areas of a human beings sexual organs.
What they are failing to address with the new application of diagnosis is that many who suffer from gender dysphoria with less invasive treatment can adapt to either accept the gender they are born with or become comfortable with they're different gender identity and how they want to express that identity without needing major hormonal or body surgery treatments.
This idea that only surgery can affect outcomes is very grossly overexaggerated right now.
In fact surgery and hormone therapy doesn't affect successful outcomes any more then noninvasive treatments do and the complications that can arise both physically and nuerologicaly can result in higher suicidal outcomes as well.
I'll repeat life altering surgery and hormonal therapy was only done when all other treatment decisions were exhausted and the individual had reached the adult age and permanent development of self identity and was able to rationally choose this final course of action after being made fully aware of the long term risks and consequences associated with the procedure.
Hormone therapy at 8 and body altering surgery at 16 was not the correct course of action for a reason. And it is still not the correct course of action.
Not to mention how many trends pharmacies and doctors have fallen into in the past with problems in youth where certain outcomes and treatments are emphasize over others to harmful effects.