Abstract
Objective
Medical decision-making capacity comprises understanding treatment information, appreciating the context and implications of treatment, and reasoning through risks and benefits before making a clear choice about treatment. The current study examined domains of cognitive, emotional, and executive function as predictors of decision-making capacity for pubertal suppression treatment among transgender and gender diverse (TGD) youth.
Methods
A sample of 45 TGD youth [M(SD) age = 11.3 (1.3) years] primarily recruited from a multidisciplinary gender clinic in the Midwestern United States completed the MacArthur Competence Assessment Tool – Treatment (MacCAT-T) and several measures to assess cognitive, emotional, and executive functioning. Regression analyses were conducted to identify cognitive, emotional, and executive functioning predictors of each decision-making capacity domain.
Results
At a bivariate level, aspects of cognitive, emotional, and executive functioning were related to each domain of decisional capacity. In regression analyses, higher cognitive functioning (β = 0.77, p < 0.001) predicted a greater ability to appreciate the decision. Higher negative affect predicted a greater ability to appreciate (β = 0.59, p = 0.01) and a lower ability to reason (β = −0.74, p = 0.01) through the decision. No cognitive, emotional, or executive functioning variables were predictive of ability to understand the decision.
Conclusions
While cognitive, executive, and emotional functioning were relevant domains to decision-making capacity for pubertal suppression among TGD youth, many of these domains were not strongly predictive of decisional capacity. Cognition and negative affect are relevant correlates to assess and support through the decision-making process. Assessing domains of functioning through behavioral observation, clinical interview, and/or brief screeners may help providers to adapt their approach to counseling TGD youth around pubertal suppression treatment.
Keywords
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
