Trans Doctor Sued Over Removal Of 14-Year-Old Girl’s Breasts

Trans Doctor Sued Over What She Did to Young Girl

A doctor who the left celebrates as “America’s best-known practitioner of youth gender medicine” is being sued for removing a 14-year-old girl’s healthy breasts, with the lawsuit arguing medical negligence.

Kaya Clementine Breen, who is now 20 years old, has sued Dr. Johanna Olson-Kennedy for fast-tracking her on the path to transgenderism without even bothering to explore her serious mental health problems. Clementine Breen was pushed into taking puberty blockers at 12 years old, hormones at age 13, and a double mastectomy at just 14 years old.

Her lawyers are asserting that Olson-Kennedy; Susan Landon, the therapist she referred Clementine Breen to; Dr. Scott Mosser, the surgeon who surgically removed her healthy breasts; and other medical professionals are all guilty of medical negligence — as they all rushed the child through procedures that have had severe consequences for her future.

“Clementine is a female who suffered from a complex, multi-faceted array of mental health symptoms as a child and adolescent,” the lawsuit states. “She is also a survivor of multiple instances of sexual abuse as a child and adolescent, something that was never explored, addressed, or discussed by Defendants in the course of their purported treatment.”

The lawsuit goes on to state: “Her presentation of symptoms and concerns included, among other things, anxiety, depression, autism, undiagnosed post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), potential bipolarism, as has been suggested by one of her psychiatrists, ongoing confusion regarding her gender, and eventually psychosis (including audio and visual hallucinations), panic attacks, and paranoia. Her family also has a lengthy history of mental health issues. She needed psychotherapy to evaluate, assess, and treat her complex co-morbid mental health symptoms.”

Of course, thanks to the doctor’s insane views on transgenderism, Clementine Breen did not receive any help for these psychological disorders. “Instead, she was fast-tracked onto the conveyor belt of irreversibly damaging puberty blockers (age 12), cross-sex hormones (age 13), and “gender-affirming” surgery (age 14),” the lawsuit states.

“Clementine’s providers deliberately, grossly, and recklessly breached the standard of care in this case as discussed above, by among other things, failing to adequately assess and treat Clementine’s complex array of mental health symptoms and prior trauma before prescribing irreversible and life-altering medications and performing surgery,” the lawsuit continues.

“Instead, the Defendants coerced Clementine and her parents with the threat of suicide, presentation of false information, and concealment of full information, into an ill-advised experimental course of chemical/surgical imitation sex change treatment that was utterly unsupported by any reliable medical research,” the lawsuit adds. “This so-called ‘treatment’ of Clementine by her providers represents a despicable, failed medical experiment and a knowing, deliberate, and gross breach of the standard of care that was substantially certain to cause serious harm.”

The doctor was so brazen in her push to transition the child that she scared her parents into believing that she would kill herself if she did not take cross-sex hormones, but documents indicate that Clementine Breen did not even express such thoughts.

“At that time, Clementine had never had any thoughts of suicide, and she certainly had never expressed anything along those lines to Dr. Olson-Kenned,” the lawsuit states. “Dr. Olson-Kennedy went even further…by telling them that if they did not agree to cross-sex hormone therapy, Clementine would commit suicide.”

The doctor also lied in a letter to Clementine Breen’s surgeon, claiming that she had “endorsed a male gender identity since childhood” — a claim that contradicts the doctor’s own records, and was likely made to convince the surgeon that the child had been identifying as a male for a long time and thus wouldn’t regret surgery.

This is not the first time that Olson-Kennedy’s name made headlines, as last month she revealed in an interview with the New York Times that she had purposefully prevented the publication of a $10 million taxpayer-funded study into the effects of puberty blockers on children — telling the outlet that the study’s publication was blocked because it did not find evidence to prove her insane claim that puberty blockers improve children’s mental health.

“I do not want our work to be weaponized,” she told the New York Times. “It has to be exactly on point, clear and concise. And that takes time.”

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