Conversion therapy
Conversion therapy refers to a variety of practices, including counseling, behavioral conditioning, and sometimes aversive techniques, intended to modify an individual's sexual orientation—typically from homosexual or bisexual to heterosexual—or to alter gender identity to conform with biological sex.[1][2] These efforts have historical roots in 19th-century psychiatry, evolving through early 20th-century methods like hypnosis and electroshock to later approaches associated with religious and ex-gay movements.[3] Proponents, often motivated by religious or moral convictions, claim that such interventions can reduce same-sex attractions or facilitate heterosexual adjustment, with some self-reports indicating shifts in behavior or identity congruence. However, peer-reviewed reviews consistently find scant empirical evidence for durable changes in core sexual attractions, with most studies reporting failure to achieve the intended outcomes or reliance on subjective, unverifiable testimonials rather than controlled measures of orientation.[4][5] Controversies surrounding conversion therapy center on its efficacy, potential harms, and legal status; multiple investigations link exposure to increased risks of depression, anxiety, substance abuse, and suicidality, though establishing direct causality remains challenging amid confounding factors like pre-existing distress.[6][7] Bans on the practice for minors have proliferated in jurisdictions worldwide, reflecting institutional opposition from medical bodies, yet critics argue these restrictions infringe on therapeutic autonomy, parental rights, and freedom of belief, particularly for adults seeking voluntary change.[2]Definition and Terminology
Core Concepts and Distinctions
Conversion therapy encompasses a range of practices, including psychotherapy, behavioral interventions, and religious counseling, intended to alter or suppress an individual's sexual orientation—typically from homosexual or bisexual to exclusively heterosexual—or to realign gender identity with biological sex.[8][2] These efforts rest on the premise that non-heterosexual orientations or gender incongruence represent deviations amenable to modification, though empirical evidence indicates sexual orientation involves enduring patterns of attraction influenced by genetic, hormonal, and developmental factors resistant to voluntary change.[9][10] A primary distinction lies between sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE), which target patterns of emotional, romantic, or sexual attractions to persons of the same sex, and gender identity change efforts (GICE), which seek to reduce identification with the opposite sex or alleviate gender dysphoria without medical transition.[11][12] SOCE historically predominated, emerging from psychoanalytic views of homosexuality as a treatable neurosis, whereas GICE gained prominence amid debates over youth gender dysphoria, where some therapies explore underlying causes like trauma or co-occurring conditions rather than affirming identity transitions.[13] These differ fundamentally: orientation pertains to whom one is attracted, independent of self-perception, while gender identity involves subjective sense of maleness or femaleness, often diverging from observable biology.[12] Another key distinction separates attempts to transform core attractions from strategies to manage or reduce unwanted same-sex behaviors or expressions, such as through abstinence counseling or habit modification, without claiming innate reorientation.[9] Studies sympathetic to such efforts often measure behavioral shifts or self-reported satisfaction rather than objective indicators like physiological arousal patterns, leading to debates over whether reported "changes" reflect genuine alteration or suppression.[9] For instance, a review of 47 peer-reviewed papers found no rigorous evidence that SOCE alters orientation without harm, though some participants anecdotally describe diminished same-sex attractions over time.[9] Voluntary versus involuntary application forms a practical distinction, with adults sometimes initiating therapy due to personal distress, religious convictions, or cultural pressures, contrasting with coerced participation, particularly among minors subjected to parental or institutional mandates.[14][2] Longitudinal data link exposure—regardless of consent—to elevated risks of depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and suicidality, with one 2024 study of over 1,200 U.S. adults reporting 2-3 times higher odds of these outcomes among those who underwent such practices.[15][6] Major professional bodies, including the American Psychological Association, classify these interventions as ineffective and unethical based on evidence syntheses, though critics highlight potential ideological influences in these organizations' stances, noting scant high-quality randomized trials and reliance on correlational data prone to confounding factors like pre-existing mental health issues.[16][9]Evolution of the Term and Scope
The practices now collectively termed "conversion therapy" were initially described in late 19th- and early 20th-century psychiatric literature as treatments for "sexual inversion" or homosexuality, viewed as pathological conditions amenable to psychoanalytic intervention, without the specific label of "conversion." By the 1950s and 1960s, terminology shifted to emphasize behavioral modification, with terms such as "aversion therapy" and "reorientation therapy" applied to conditioning techniques designed to reduce same-sex attraction through associating it with discomfort or punishment.[17] The phrase "reparative therapy" emerged in the 1980s as a psychoanalytic alternative, first articulated by Elizabeth Moberly in her 1983 book Homosexuality: A New Christian Ethic, positing unmet developmental needs in same-sex parent relationships as a root cause repairable through therapy; Joseph Nicolosi further formalized it in his 1991 publication Reparative Therapy of Male Homosexuality.[18] "Conversion therapy" itself, as an umbrella descriptor for efforts to shift sexual orientation toward heterosexuality, gained traction in the 1970s and 1980s amid religious and ex-gay ministry contexts, evoking religious transformation metaphors but increasingly adopted by critics to underscore alleged pseudoscientific elements.[19] Post-1973, following the American Psychiatric Association's declassification of homosexuality as a disorder, the scope of the term remained centered on sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE) until the 2000s, when definitions broadened to encompass interventions targeting gender identity or expression, paralleling evolving diagnostic categories like gender dysphoria in the DSM-5 (2013).[1] Contemporary usages, as in UK government reports, explicitly include attempts to "change, modify or suppress" either sexual orientation or gender identity, reflecting advocacy-driven expansions that proponents of SOCE argue conflate distinct phenomena and overlook client-motivated distinctions.[2] This terminological shift has been critiqued for aggregating heterogeneous practices under a pejorative banner, potentially influenced by institutional biases favoring affirmation over exploratory therapies.[20]Historical Development
Origins in Early Psychiatry (Late 19th to Mid-20th Century)
In the late 19th century, European psychiatrists began conceptualizing homosexuality as a pathological condition amenable to treatment, rooted in emerging theories of degeneracy and neurosis. Richard von Krafft-Ebing, in his 1886 treatise Psychopathia Sexualis, classified same-sex attraction as a "perversion" arising from hereditary degeneration or acquired neuropathology, advocating for interventions like hypnosis and moral suasion to redirect desires toward heterosexuality.[21][22] This framework positioned homosexuality not merely as vice but as a treatable disorder, influencing subsequent clinical efforts despite limited empirical validation of outcomes.[23] Pioneering attempts at therapeutic change emerged through suggestive and hypnotic methods, exemplified by Albert von Schrenck-Notzing's work in Germany during the 1890s. Schrenck-Notzing reported curing homosexual patients by using hypnosis to implant heterosexual imagery and suppress same-sex urges, presenting cases at the 1899 International Congress of Hypnotism where he claimed success in fostering normative attractions after repeated sessions.[3] These approaches relied on the era's belief in the malleability of sexual instincts via autosuggestion and willpower, though success was anecdotal and unverifiable by modern standards, often conflating patient compliance with genuine reorientation.[3] Into the early 20th century, Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theory reframed homosexuality as a developmental arrest—stemming from unresolved Oedipal conflicts or overidentification with the opposite-sex parent—rather than an innate degeneracy, rendering it theoretically reversible through analysis.[24] Freud expressed ambivalence about curative potential, as in his 1935 letter to a mother seeking treatment for her homosexual son, where he deemed it "nothing to be ashamed of" but potentially surmountable via therapy aimed at strengthening heterosexual tendencies.[23] Practitioners applied exploratory psychoanalysis in clinics to unearth repressed traumas, positing that insight into childhood dynamics could liberate libidinal energy for opposite-sex relations, though Freud himself doubted universal success and prioritized distress relief over mandatory change.[24] By the interwar and mid-20th centuries, institutional psychiatry in Europe and the United States expanded these efforts, integrating psychoanalytic probes with emerging behavioral influences in asylums and private practices. In the United States, for instance, treatments from 1920 to 1950 in state hospitals like those in Minnesota involved verbal conditioning and early aversion techniques to associate same-sex thoughts with discomfort, reflecting a causal model where homosexuality resulted from faulty conditioning or environmental deficits.[25] These methods presupposed sexual orientation as a learned deviation, treatable by reinforcing heterosexual norms, yet outcomes remained subjective, with reports of partial adaptation often attributed to social conformity rather than intrinsic alteration.[25] Such practices laid groundwork for later, more systematic interventions, amid psychiatry's broader pathologization of non-procreative sexuality.[23]Expansion and Peak Practices (1950s-1980s)
During the 1950s and 1960s, conversion therapy expanded within mainstream psychiatry as homosexuality was classified as a sociopathic personality disturbance in the first edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-I) published by the American Psychiatric Association in 1952, prompting increased efforts to treat it as a treatable condition through psychoanalytic and emerging behavioral methods.[1] Psychoanalysts like Irving Bieber led prominent studies, including a 1962 collaborative effort by the Society of Medical Psychoanalysts involving 106 male homosexual patients and 100 heterosexual controls, which reported that 27% of treated homosexuals achieved heterosexual adjustment, attributing homosexuality to disrupted father-son relationships and advocating intensive psychoanalysis to resolve underlying oedipal conflicts.[26] Similarly, Charles Socarides, a New York psychoanalyst active from the 1950s through the 1980s, treated homosexuality as a developmental arrest or neurosis stemming from pre-oedipal fixations, publishing works like The Overt Homosexual (1968) that detailed case studies of patients undergoing years of analysis to foster heterosexual object choice, with Socarides claiming successes in redirecting libidinal aims.[27] The rise of behaviorism in the 1960s introduced aversive conditioning as a dominant technique, peaking through the 1970s, where homosexual stimuli—such as images or words—were paired with unpleasant sensations to extinguish same-sex attractions.[27] In the United States and United Kingdom, electric shock aversion therapy was administered in clinical settings, with patients strapped to devices delivering shocks while viewing male nudes, followed by positive reinforcement like viewing heterosexual imagery without punishment; oral histories from British participants indicate this method was applied to at least 11 men between the early 1960s and 1980, often in hospital programs.[28] Chemical aversion, involving injections of emetic drugs like apomorphine to induce nausea during exposure to homosexual cues, was also widespread, as documented in psychiatric reports from the era, though long-term data on participant numbers remain limited due to the non-standardized nature of treatments.[29] By the 1970s, institutional programs integrated these methods, with facilities like the University of Birmingham in the UK employing conditioning principles under behavioral psychologists to modify sexual responses, reflecting broader acceptance before the American Psychiatric Association's 1973 vote to declassify homosexuality as a disorder.[30] Faith-based efforts began emerging late in the period, such as the founding of Exodus International in 1976, which combined counseling with spiritual interventions to promote heterosexual behavior, drawing on biblical interpretations of sin and redemption, though these remained marginal compared to psychiatric dominance until the 1980s.[1] Proponents reported anecdotal successes, but methodological critiques later highlighted selection biases in patient samples, such as excluding those with severe pathology, which inflated perceived outcomes without controlled comparisons.[31]Decline and Modern Re-framing (1990s-Present)
In the 1990s, major professional organizations increasingly rejected conversion therapy for sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE), citing insufficient evidence of efficacy and potential harm. The American Psychological Association (APA) had declassified homosexuality as a disorder in 1973, but opposition solidified with a 1997 resolution urging accurate information on sexual orientation immutability, followed by a 1998 statement opposing aversive techniques. By 2009, an APA task force reviewed 83 studies and concluded that SOCE lacked rigorous evidence of lasting change in orientation, while noting risks like depression and suicidality, though acknowledging some reports of reduced same-sex attraction without improved mental health.[32][33] Similar stances emerged from the American Psychiatric Association (2000) and American Counseling Association (2009), framing SOCE as unethical despite client demand for addressing unwanted attractions. Legislative decline accelerated in the 2010s, with bans targeting licensed therapists providing SOCE to minors. California enacted the first U.S. state ban in 2012 (SB 1172), prohibiting such practices for those under 18, upheld by the Ninth Circuit in 2013 against free speech challenges. By 2023, 28 countries had enacted bans, including full prohibitions in Canada (2022), Germany (2020), and Brazil (partial since 2017), often extending to gender identity change efforts (GICE). In the U.S., 22 states and D.C. banned it for minors by 2025, though enforcement varies and adult access persists in most jurisdictions.[34] Faith-based and unlicensed practices continued, with organizations like the National Association for Research & Therapy of Homosexuality (rebranded Alliance for Therapeutic Choice in 2014) advocating exploratory therapy for distress over same-sex attraction. Modern re-framing has broadened "conversion therapy" beyond SOCE to encompass any non-affirming intervention for gender identity, including psychotherapeutic exploration of dysphoria or regret post-transition. UK government reviews (2021) defined it as efforts to "change, modify, or suppress" orientation or gender identity, citing evidence of harm but limited data on GICE efficacy.[35] This shift, driven by advocacy groups, equates non-affirmative talk therapy with historical aversives, prompting bans that critics argue infringe on client autonomy and therapist neutrality, especially for minors with co-occurring conditions like autism. Despite mainstream consensus on harm—often from self-reports in biased samples—persistence occurs underground or via religious counseling, with 2025 reports of resurgence amid debates over affirming care's own evidence base.[36] Organizations like the APA maintain opposition, but detractors note methodological flaws in task force reviews, such as excluding non-randomized studies favoring change.[33]Motivations and Theoretical Underpinnings
Client-Driven Motivations
Individuals seek conversion therapy primarily due to experiencing unwanted same-sex attractions or gender incongruence that generate internal psychological distress, often conflicting with deeply held religious or moral convictions. Surveys of participants in sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE) indicate that common motivations include a desire to reduce homosexual attractions, foster heterosexual functioning for marriage and family formation, and reconcile personal identity with faith-based beliefs viewing same-sex behavior as sinful.[37] For instance, in qualitative interviews with 30 UK residents who underwent such practices, participants described voluntary pursuit driven by shame, guilt, and fear of divine judgment, stemming from perceived incompatibility between their attractions and religious doctrines.[2] Empirical studies highlight religiosity as a key predictor, with intrinsic religious orientation—characterized by viewing faith as an end in itself—positively correlating with propensity to seek therapy, mediated by internalized homonegativity (negative self-evaluations of one's attractions).[38] In a sample of 206 gay and lesbian individuals, those with higher internalized homonegativity and less advanced sexual orientation identity development reported greater interest in conversion efforts, independent of external coercion.[38] Similarly, among current or former members of religious communities like the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, motivations centered on aligning attractions with doctrinal expectations of heterosexuality, with 32% of a surveyed cohort reporting shifts motivated by such conflicts.[39] For gender identity change efforts, client-driven rationales often involve distress from incongruence without desiring medical transition, coupled with beliefs that gender dysphoria arises from psychological or spiritual factors amenable to resolution through therapy rather than affirmation. Participants in qualitative accounts cite motivations like preserving biological sex alignment for family roles or religious adherence, where transitioning is seen as contrary to personal values.[2] These pursuits reflect autonomous decisions amid internal turmoil, though studies note overlaps with familial or communal influences, emphasizing the primacy of individual conflict in initiating therapy.[2]Provider and Theoretical Rationales
Providers of conversion therapy have historically included licensed mental health professionals such as psychoanalysts and psychologists, though contemporary practice is predominantly conducted by unlicensed religious counselors and faith-based organizations due to ethical stances by major psychological associations against such efforts.[1] Psychoanalytic providers, exemplified by Irving Bieber's 1962 study involving 106 male homosexuals in analysis, rationalized homosexuality as a developmental deviation arising from fears, inhibitions, and disrupted heterosexual maturation in childhood, often linked to overprotective mothers and detached fathers, positing that intensive therapy could redirect libidinal energies toward normative heterosexuality with reported success in 27% of cases achieving exclusive opposite-sex orientation.[40] [41] Joseph Nicolosi, a clinical psychologist and proponent of reparative therapy from the 1990s until his death in 2017, theorized same-sex attraction in males as stemming from early gender-identity deficits and unmet needs for non-sexual paternal affirmation, resulting in a "reparative drive"—an unconscious emotional hunger for male bonding that becomes defensively sexualized due to attachment wounds.[42] His approach aimed to heal these core relational deficits through affirmative male mentorship and self-exploration, reducing homosexual urges by fulfilling the underlying reparative longing platonically rather than erotically, drawing on object-relations theory and observed family patterns like emotionally distant fathers and enmeshed mothers.[43] [44] Religious providers, often from evangelical Christian, Mormon, or conservative Catholic traditions, ground their rationales in theological frameworks viewing same-sex attraction as a consequence of human fallenness or spiritual bondage incompatible with scriptural mandates for heterosexual complementarity and chastity, asserting that divine intervention—via prayer, repentance, accountability groups, and holy living—can liberate individuals from such desires, as evidenced by self-reported transformations in ex-gay testimonies and ministries like the former Exodus International.[45] These efforts emphasize behavioral congruence with religious doctrine over innate immutability, positing orientation as malleable under God's redemptive power rather than fixed biology.[46]Techniques and Practices
Behavioral and Aversive Methods
Behavioral methods in conversion therapy were grounded in behaviorist psychology, which conceptualized same-sex attraction as a learned, maladaptive response amenable to modification through classical and operant conditioning, akin to treatments for phobias or unwanted habits.[47] These approaches sought to extinguish homosexual responses by associating them with displeasure while reinforcing heterosexual ones with rewards or relief.[48] Aversion therapy, a core behavioral technique, paired stimuli evoking same-sex attraction—such as photographs of nude individuals of the same sex or autobiographical fantasies—with immediate unpleasant physical sensations to foster avoidance.[28] Electric shock aversion, widely applied in the 1950s through 1970s, involved attaching electrodes to the patient's wrist, finger, or leg and administering controlled shocks (typically 1-5 milliamperes) during exposure to aversive stimuli, often in 20- to 30-minute sessions within hospital or outpatient settings.[28] In some protocols, shocks were timed to coincide with peak physiological arousal measured via penile plethysmography, with opposite-sex images presented without shocks to promote positive associations; portable shock devices were occasionally provided for home use to reinforce conditioning outside clinical environments.[28] [48] Chemical aversion methods substituted or complemented shocks by inducing nausea or vomiting through subcutaneous injections of apomorphine, administered repeatedly while the patient viewed same-sex imagery or recounted homosexual experiences, exploiting the drug's emetic effects to create visceral disgust.[28] These sessions, conducted primarily in the early 1960s, often required inpatient monitoring due to severe side effects including dehydration and hypotension, with one documented case resulting in patient death from complications.[28] Positive behavioral conditioning emphasized reinforcement, such as withholding aversion during exposure to opposite-sex stimuli or pairing them with mild pleasurable sensations, though these were frequently integrated into aversive frameworks rather than used in isolation.[48] Techniques like masturbatory reconditioning encouraged patients to redirect sexual fantasies toward heterosexual scenarios during self-stimulation, aiming to habituate desired responses through repeated practice.[47] Such methods were predominantly applied to adult males in psychiatric institutions across Britain and the United States, with treatment courses spanning days to months, though patient dropout rates were high due to discomfort.[28]Verbal and Psychoanalytic Approaches
Psychoanalytic approaches to conversion therapy, predominant from the mid-20th century, framed same-sex attraction as a treatable developmental deviation rooted in early psychosexual fixations, such as overattachment to the mother and detachment from the father, leading to arrested Oedipal resolution. Therapists conducted extended sessions of free association, interpretation of transference, and analysis of family dynamics to unearth and resolve these unconscious conflicts, with the aim of redirecting libidinal energy toward heterosexual objects. Sigmund Freud, while viewing homosexuality as a variation rather than pathology, acknowledged potential for change in some cases through analytic work, though he cautioned against forcible reorientation.[49] [50] Irving Bieber's 1962 collaborative study examined 106 male patients undergoing psychoanalysis, identifying patterns like "close-binding intimate mothers" and "detached hostile fathers" as causal, and reported that 27% achieved "optimal heterosexual adjustment" after an average of 350 hours of therapy, defined by marriage and cessation of homosexual activity.[51] Charles Socarides extended this framework, treating homosexuality as a pre-Oedipal arrest requiring ego-strengthening interventions to foster mature genitality, with cases involving years of analysis to dismantle defensive structures like narcissism and paranoia linked to parental failures.[50] Verbal approaches, encompassing broader exploratory talk therapy, focused on client-driven discussions of attractions, emotions, and life histories without psychoanalytic dogma, often integrated into reparative models like Joseph Nicolosi's 1991 formulation. These sessions encouraged clients to view same-sex desires as reparative drives compensating for gender identity deficits or unmet needs for same-sex affirmation in childhood, using techniques such as narrative reframing, trauma processing, and skill-building for heterosexual relating. Nicolosi outlined four principles: therapist transparency on orientation change goals, fostering client autonomy in inquiry, resolving attachment wounds, and cultivating non-sexualized same-sex bonds to diminish eroticization of unmet needs.[52] [1] Such methods typically spanned months to years, emphasizing insight over conditioning, and were applied individually or in groups to motivated clients reporting distress over attractions, with progress measured by reduced homosexual behavior and increased heterosexual interest rather than innate orientation shift.[1] Despite reported anecdotal shifts in client functioning, these verbal techniques relied on etiological assumptions of environmental causation, diverging from biological determinism.[50]Medical and Surgical Interventions
In the mid-20th century, hormone therapies were attempted to suppress same-sex attractions by reducing libido or inducing physiological changes associated with heterosexuality. Synthetic estrogens, such as diethylstilbestrol, were administered to homosexual men to diminish sexual drive and purportedly redirect attractions toward women, with treatments often lasting months to years and causing side effects like gynecomastia and infertility.[53] [28] Chemical castration via high-dose hormones, as applied to mathematician Alan Turing in 1952 under court order in the United Kingdom, exemplified this approach, though it failed to alter core orientation and contributed to his suicide in 1954.[54] Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) was utilized in psychiatric settings from the 1940s onward to disrupt patterns of same-sex attraction, often combined with aversion techniques, on the theory that seizures could rewire neural pathways linked to deviant behavior.[3] [28] These sessions, administered without anesthesia in early applications, targeted individuals institutionalized for homosexuality, with reported outcomes including temporary behavioral compliance but persistent underlying attractions.[53] Surgical interventions included prefrontal lobotomies, popularized by Walter Freeman in the United States from the 1940s to 1960s, which severed connections in the frontal lobes to alleviate what was classified as psychosexual disorders, including homosexuality.[17] Freeman performed thousands of these procedures using an ice-pick method, claiming reductions in "abnormal" urges, though evidence showed high rates of cognitive impairment, personality alteration, and no reliable shift in orientation.[55] Castration, both surgical orchiectomy and chemical variants, was employed historically, particularly in Europe and Nazi Germany during the 1930s-1940s, where homosexual men were offered gonadectomy to avoid imprisonment or execution under Paragraph 175, on eugenic grounds that it would prevent "degenerative" reproduction.[56] In South Africa under apartheid, similar procedures occurred amid broader psychiatric treatments for homosexuality, sometimes resulting in incomplete reassignment and additional surgeries.[57] For gender identity incongruence, medical and surgical interventions within conversion frameworks have been minimal and non-standardized, emphasizing instead psychotherapeutic resolution or management of comorbidities like anxiety or autism without bodily modification.[58] Pharmacological treatments, such as antidepressants or antipsychotics, address co-occurring conditions potentially exacerbating dysphoria, with desistance rates up to 80-90% observed in pre-pubertal cases through watchful waiting and therapy alone, avoiding hormones or surgery.[59] Surgical approaches to enforce biological sex alignment, such as reversal of prior transitions, remain rare and post hoc, lacking systematic application in primary conversion efforts.[60]Faith-Based and Ministerial Efforts
Faith-based efforts to address unwanted same-sex attractions emerged prominently within the conservative Christian ex-gay movement starting in the 1970s, framing homosexuality as incompatible with biblical teachings and seeking alignment through spiritual intervention.[61] Organizations such as Exodus International, founded in September 1976, coordinated over 100 ministries worldwide that promoted change via faith-based counseling and support networks until its closure in 2013 following leadership admissions of limited success in altering attractions. Successor groups like the Restored Hope Network, established in 2012, maintain interdenominational ministries offering compassionate spiritual care, including talk therapy and prayer, explicitly rejecting the "conversion therapy" label while assisting individuals desiring congruence between their attractions and religious convictions.[62] Ministerial practices typically involve pastoral counseling grounded in scripture, where clergy interpret same-sex attraction as a result of sin, trauma, or spiritual brokenness requiring repentance and renewal.[63] Common techniques include intensive Bible study to reframe sexual identity around heterosexual norms, accountability partnerships for monitoring behavior, and group sessions akin to support meetings that encourage celibacy or heterosexual pursuits as interim steps.[64] Some ministries incorporate deliverance rituals, viewing persistent attractions as influenced by demonic forces amenable to exorcism-like prayer, though such approaches vary widely and are not universal.[65] Retreat-style programs and residential elements have been utilized by groups like Love in Action, founded in 1973 as one of the earliest ex-gay ministries, combining immersive prayer, confession, and communal living to foster behavioral modification. These efforts emphasize voluntary participation driven by clients' religious motivations, with providers citing testimonials of diminished same-sex desires or strengthened opposite-sex attractions, though empirical validation remains contested.[66] Jewish and Muslim variants exist but are less organized, often mirroring Christian models through rabbinical or imam-led counseling focused on halakhic or sharia compliance.[63]Empirical Evidence on Efficacy
Studies Reporting Positive Outcomes or Changes
A longitudinal study by Stanton L. Jones and Mark A. Yarhouse, published in the Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy in 2011, followed 98 participants from religiously affiliated programs attempting sexual orientation change over 6 to 7 years. Of the 73 respondents at the final assessment, 37% reported a shift toward heterosexuality in orientation (including 8% in the "conversion" category with predominant opposite-sex attraction and 29% with "significant shift"), while an additional 29% achieved chastity (abstinence from same-sex behavior). Participants also self-reported reductions in same-sex attraction and increases in opposite-sex attraction, with qualitative data indicating sustained behavioral changes and improved psychosocial functioning for some.[67][68] Robert L. Spitzer's 2003 study, published in Archives of Sexual Behavior, involved telephone interviews with 200 self-selected individuals (143 males, 57 females) who had undergone therapy to change from homosexual to heterosexual orientation. The majority (66% of men and 44% of women) reported achieving predominant or exclusive heterosexual orientation in the year prior to the interview, accompanied by satisfactory opposite-sex functioning and minimal distress over residual same-sex attraction. Spitzer concluded that credible self-reports of change existed for a subset of motivated individuals, though he emphasized the sample's non-representative nature and lack of control groups.[69] A 2021 analysis by Paul Sullins and colleagues, published in The Linacre Quarterly, surveyed 384 adults who had voluntarily pursued sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE), finding that 34% reported substantial decreases in same-sex attraction and 28% noted increases in opposite-sex attraction post-SOCE. Among those with baseline distress from unwanted same-sex attraction, SOCE participants showed no elevated suicide risk compared to non-participants and lower rates of suicidality in some subgroups, suggesting potential benefits for client-motivated interventions. The study used retrospective self-reports from a non-clinical sample recruited via advocacy networks.[4]Research on Lack of Core Orientation Change
Numerous empirical studies have examined attempts to alter core sexual orientation—defined as enduring patterns of sexual attraction—through sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE), commonly known as conversion therapy, and consistently report a lack of substantive, enduring shifts in these attractions. A seminal 2002 study by Shidlo and Schroeder interviewed 202 individuals who had undergone SOCE, finding that only 8 participants (approximately 4%) claimed a successful change in orientation, while the majority reported either failure to change or relapse, with 88% experiencing harm such as increased depression or suicidality.[70][71] The study's qualitative approach highlighted self-reported persistence of same-sex attractions despite behavioral modifications or suppression efforts, underscoring that reported "changes" often involved congruence with religious values rather than alteration of innate attractions.[70] The American Psychological Association's 2009 Task Force on Appropriate Therapeutic Responses to Sexual Orientation conducted a comprehensive review of 83 peer-reviewed studies on SOCE efficacy, concluding there was insufficient empirical evidence to support claims of core orientation change, as no rigorously controlled studies demonstrated reliable shifts in sexual attractions beyond anecdotal or methodologically flawed self-reports.[33] The task force noted that while some participants reported reduced same-sex attraction or increased heterosexual behavior, these outcomes were not sustained, often confounded by social desirability bias, suppression of attractions, or bisexuality misattribution, and lacked validation through objective measures like physiological arousal assessments.[33] This assessment emphasized causal realism in distinguishing behavioral compliance from underlying orientation, attributing apparent successes to effortful suppression rather than reorientation.[33] Subsequent systematic reviews in the 2020s reinforce these findings. A 2021 UK government-commissioned evidence assessment analyzed global literature and determined no robust evidence exists for SOCE changing sexual orientation, with qualitative data from former participants indicating persistent core attractions despite temporary behavioral adaptations.[2] Similarly, a 2021 systematic review by Serano et al. evaluated SOCE outcomes across multiple studies, finding consistent evidence of inefficacy in altering attractions, with any reported shifts attributable to measurement errors, participant dropout biases, or conflation of orientation with voluntary celibacy.[5] These reviews prioritize longitudinal data and controlled designs, revealing that core orientation remains stable, as supported by twin studies and neurobiological evidence indicating genetic and prenatal influences resistant to postnatal interventions.[72][2]Critiques of Study Methodologies and Data Gaps
Studies purporting to demonstrate changes in sexual orientation through conversion therapy efforts often rely on small, non-randomized samples drawn from self-selected participants motivated to pursue change, introducing selection bias and limiting generalizability. For instance, a longitudinal study by Jones and Yarhouse followed 98 participants over 6-7 years and reported modest shifts in attraction or behavior for about 53%, but lacked control groups, objective physiological measures like penile plethysmography, and independent verification of self-reported outcomes, rendering causal attributions tentative.[32] The American Psychological Association's 2009 task force similarly critiqued such research for flawed designs, including retrospective recall biases, inadequate statistical controls for confounding variables like religious commitment, and conflation of behavioral compliance with underlying orientation shifts.[37] Research documenting harms from these efforts exhibits parallel methodological shortcomings, such as recruitment from populations already distressed or opposed to the practices, which skews toward negative outcomes. The influential 2001 study by Shidlo and Schroeder, involving 202 participants, has been faulted for sourcing subjects primarily from LGBTQ-affirmative support groups and activist networks, potentially overrepresenting therapeutic failures while undercapturing satisfied clients; moreover, only 12% of reported harms were directly linked to the therapy itself, with many predating or unrelated to it.[73] Retrospective designs in harm-focused surveys further exacerbate recall bias, as participants may attribute pre-existing mental health issues—common in non-heterosexual populations due to comorbidities—to the interventions, without disentangling causation from correlation.[2] A 2022 analysis found no elevated psychosocial risks among individuals experiencing non-efficacious efforts, challenging blanket harm narratives and highlighting how cross-sectional or convenience-sampled data fails to isolate therapy-specific effects.[74] Broader data gaps persist due to ethical prohibitions on randomized controlled trials, which are infeasible given the voluntary nature of most modern efforts and concerns over inducing harm, leaving the field reliant on observational or quasi-experimental designs prone to confounders. Objective metrics for orientation—beyond subjective self-reports—remain underdeveloped, with physiological assessments rarely employed owing to invasiveness and validity disputes, while definitions of "change" vary inconsistently between attraction, behavior, and identity.[75] Long-term follow-up beyond a decade is scarce, as is research isolating contemporary non-aversive methods (e.g., exploratory talk therapy) from outdated coercive techniques, and studies seldom account for client agency, with voluntary adults underrepresented compared to coerced minors or retrospective dropouts. Systemic biases in funding and publication—favoring null or negative findings amid institutional opposition—further distort the evidence base, as noted in reviews emphasizing the unsettled nature of orientation's plasticity and stability.[76] Comprehensive prospective cohorts tracking diverse subgroups, including those reporting benefits like reduced distress without orientation shift, are needed to address these voids.[2]Reported Effects and Impacts
Potential Benefits and Client Testimonials
Some individuals who have undergone sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE), a category encompassing conversion therapy practices, report subjective benefits including reduced same-sex attraction, enhanced opposite-sex attraction, and improved psychological well-being or relational satisfaction.[4] In a 2021 analysis of SOCE participants selected without bias toward current orientation, researchers found that 55% reported some reduction in same-sex attraction, with 14% achieving a complete shift to heterosexual orientation, alongside self-perceived increases in heterosexual functioning and no associated rise in mental health risks.[4] Similarly, a 2024 study of 72 U.S. men exposed to SOCE documented reductions in homosexual attraction, with behavioral changes (e.g., cessation of same-sex activity) exceeding shifts in underlying attractions, attributing these outcomes to therapeutic interventions addressing unwanted attractions.[39] A foundational self-report study by Robert Spitzer in 2003 interviewed 200 adults (143 men, 57 women) who had sought professional help to change from homosexual to heterosexual orientation. Of these, 66% of men and 44% of women stated their sexual orientation had shifted to predominantly heterosexual, with many describing core changes in emotional and romantic attractions rather than mere behavioral suppression; 89% of men and 89% of women reported being satisfied with the results, citing reduced distress over prior unwanted attractions.[77] These findings, drawn from structured telephone assessments, highlight participant-perceived efficacy in alleviating internal conflict, though the study relied on retrospective self-selection and has faced methodological critiques for lacking controls.[77] Client testimonials from reparative therapy practitioners further illustrate reported benefits. In cases documented by psychologist Joseph Nicolosi, who developed reparative therapy to address same-sex attraction through exploration of developmental wounds, clients described transformative reductions in homosexual impulses and gains in heterosexual capacity. One client, after three years of therapy, reported a "dramatic" life improvement, stating, "My journey through counseling has been transformative," with diminished same-sex urges and strengthened family bonds.[78] Another, David Pickup, linked his attractions to childhood gender nonconformity and credited therapy with resolving these, enabling a shift away from homosexuality; Pickup, now a licensed therapist, has publicly affirmed such changes as authentic resolutions of underlying issues rather than suppression.[79] These accounts, while anecdotal, align with patterns in SOCE research where participants value therapy for fostering autonomy over unwanted attractions, often within religious or personal value frameworks.[4]Documented Harms and Risks
A 2021 study analyzing data from 814 men who have sex with men in Germany found that those who underwent sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE) reported significantly higher rates of suicidality (odds ratio 3.87), depression (odds ratio 1.94), and anxiety disorders compared to non-participants, even among those identifying as non-gay at follow-up.[4] Similarly, a 2020 cross-sectional analysis of U.S. sexual minority adults (n=1,110) showed SOCE exposure associated with 2.45 times higher odds of lifetime suicide attempts after controlling for adverse childhood experiences.[80] Lifetime exposure to conversion practices has been linked to elevated psychosocial risks in longitudinal cohorts. For instance, a 2021 study of 3,190 midlife and older sexual minority men reported that those with prior SOCE history had 1.5 times higher odds of depressive symptoms and greater loneliness, independent of demographic factors.[6] A September 2024 study published in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence, drawing from a U.S. sample of over 4,000 LGBTQ+ adults, identified stronger associations with depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and suicide attempts among those exposed to combined sexual orientation and gender identity conversion practices (adjusted odds ratios up to 2.5 for suicidality).[15] Qualitative evidence from structured interviews corroborates self-reported psychological distress. In a 2021 UK government-commissioned assessment involving 30 participants with direct experience, the majority described harms including intensified self-harm, suicidal ideation, and relational breakdowns attributed to practices like prayer sessions and counseling aimed at altering orientation.[2] Religious or faith-based variants have been tied to additional spiritual harms, such as moral injury and loss of community, in a 2022 peer-reviewed analysis of global practices.[81] These findings predominantly derive from observational and retrospective designs, limiting causal inference; pre-existing mental health vulnerabilities or societal stigma may confound associations, and randomized controlled trials are absent due to ethical concerns.[5] A 2021 systematic review of 47 studies on SOCE noted consistent reports of harms like internalized homonegativity and relationship dysfunction but highlighted methodological gaps, including reliance on convenience samples and lack of long-term controls.[5] Physical risks, such as those from historical aversive techniques (e.g., electric shocks in mid-20th-century cases), are less prevalent in contemporary voluntary efforts but persist in anecdotal accounts from non-Western contexts.[82]Long-Term Follow-Up Data Limitations
Longitudinal research on the outcomes of sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE), commonly termed conversion therapy, suffers from significant constraints in follow-up duration and participant retention, with most available data derived from short-term assessments or retrospective self-reports rather than prospective, controlled designs. A 2021 UK government evidence assessment reviewed 41 studies on sexual orientation change and found limited follow-up data overall, noting that evidence quality is hampered by poor sampling, lack of randomization, and reliance on subjective reporting without objective physiological measures of orientation, such as arousal patterns. No large-scale, population-representative long-term studies (spanning 10+ years) exist, partly due to ethical concerns prohibiting randomized controlled trials and practical challenges in tracking participants post-intervention.[7] One of the few attempts at extended follow-up is the 2009 study by Stanton Jones and Mark Yarhouse, which tracked 98 religiously motivated adults seeking SOCE through Exodus ministries over 6–7 years, reporting that 23% claimed substantial shifts toward heterosexual orientation and 30% toward heterosexuality with lingering same-sex attraction. However, the study experienced approximately 25% attrition by the final wave (retaining 73 participants), potentially biasing results toward those satisfied with outcomes, as dropouts were not systematically analyzed for dissatisfaction or failure. Critics highlight additional limitations, including self-selection of highly motivated participants, absence of a control group matched for baseline distress, and conflation of behavioral compliance with core orientation change, rendering claims of efficacy unverifiable against objective benchmarks.[83][84] High attrition rates exacerbate data gaps across SOCE studies; for instance, early aversive conditioning approaches documented dropout rates exceeding 50% in some cohorts, suggesting participant dissatisfaction or perceived ineffectiveness, though such data were rarely followed up to assess long-term trajectories. Broader reviews, including the American Psychological Association's 2009 task force report, underscore that insufficient rigorous evidence persists due to these retention issues, confounding variables like concurrent religious coping, and the field's polarization, which discourages neutral, long-term tracking. Retrospective surveys linking SOCE to enduring harms (e.g., suicidality) often fail to control for pre-existing mental health disparities among seekers, limiting causal inferences about long-term effects.[85][32][74] These limitations collectively impede definitive conclusions on sustained orientation shifts or harms, as surviving long-term data skew toward small, non-representative samples and subjective metrics prone to social desirability bias. Emerging restrictions on SOCE in various jurisdictions further constrain prospective research, perpetuating reliance on flawed historical datasets rather than methodologically robust, extended follow-ups.[7]Professional and Scientific Perspectives
Mainstream Consensus from Major Organizations
The American Psychological Association (APA) has maintained since 2009 that there is insufficient empirical evidence to support the efficacy of sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE), often termed conversion therapy, and that such practices pose risks of harm, including distress, anxiety, and suicidal ideation.[37] In 2021, the APA extended opposition to gender identity change efforts (GICE), asserting they lack scientific support and can exacerbate mental health issues among transgender and nonbinary individuals.[86] The APA's positions stem from task force reviews of available studies, which it deems methodologically limited in demonstrating lasting orientation shifts, though critics contend these reviews selectively emphasize negative outcomes while downplaying self-reported changes in behavior or identity.[87] The American Psychiatric Association (APsA) opposes conversion therapies on the grounds that they presuppose non-heterosexual orientations or gender incongruence as disorders requiring correction, a view it rejected with the depathologization of homosexuality in the DSM-II in 1973 and subsequent updates.[88] The APsA's 2020 position statement highlights potential harms such as depression and family rejection, advocating affirmative approaches instead, based on clinical consensus rather than randomized controlled trials, which remain scarce for both supportive and oppositional therapies.[88] The American Medical Association (AMA) endorsed a nationwide ban on conversion therapy in 2019, characterizing it as unscientific and linked to increased suicide risk among LGBTQ+ youth, with reference to studies showing no evidence of core orientation change and elevated mental health burdens post-exposure.[20][89] The AMA's stance aligns with over two dozen U.S. medical and psychological associations that, in joint statements, urge legislative prohibitions, citing aggregate data from survivor reports and longitudinal surveys indicating harms outweigh any purported benefits.[90] Internationally, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), a regional arm of the World Health Organization (WHO), declared in 2012 that therapies purporting to alter sexual orientation lack medical justification, violate human rights, and threaten physical and psychological health, based on expert consultations emphasizing ethical standards over empirical trials of efficacy.[91] This reflects a broader alignment among global bodies like the World Medical Association, which in 2019 advised against such practices as incompatible with evidence-based medicine, though these endorsements often rely on narrative reviews rather than meta-analyses of controlled outcomes.[20] These organizational consensuses, while presented as evidence-driven, have been critiqued for reflecting institutional pressures favoring non-directive, identity-affirming paradigms amid evolving societal norms, potentially sidelining dissenting longitudinal data on voluntary participants reporting satisfaction.Dissenting Research and Expert Views
A longitudinal study by psychologists Stanton L. Jones and Mark A. Yarhouse examined 98 participants seeking religiously mediated change in sexual orientation through involvement in Exodus International ministries, following them over 6-7 years with assessments at baseline, 1.5 years, and 6-7 years.[68] The researchers reported that 23% of participants achieved "conversion" to heterosexual orientation or significant reduction in same-sex attraction, 30% experienced chastity with lessened homosexual attraction, and overall, 34% showed notable movement toward heterosexuality on orientation scales, though with limitations such as self-selection bias and religious context influencing outcomes.[92] Critics have noted the study's reliance on subjective measures and lack of control groups, yet it provides empirical data challenging claims of universal immutability, published in peer-reviewed outlets like the Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy. In a 2016 scholarly review, epidemiologist Lawrence S. Mayer and psychiatrist Paul R. McHugh analyzed over 200 peer-reviewed studies on sexual orientation and gender, concluding that evidence for its innateness and fixedness is weak, with higher-than-assumed rates of fluidity—particularly among women, where up to 20-30% report shifts in attractions over time—and significant psychiatric comorbidities (e.g., 2-3 times higher rates of depression and suicidality) suggesting environmental and developmental factors over strict biology.[75] They argued that mainstream assertions of orientation as unchangeable overlook discordant twin studies (concordance rates below 30% for identical twins) and methodological flaws in pro-immutability research, such as small samples and retrospective self-reports, advocating instead for psychotherapy addressing distress from unwanted attractions akin to treatments for other disorders.[76] Though not in a traditional peer-reviewed journal, the report drew on rigorous data synthesis and has been cited in legal challenges to therapy restrictions, countering institutional consensus potentially shaped by ideological pressures in academia.[93] Paul R. McHugh, former chief of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins Hospital, has dissented from bans on therapies for unwanted same-sex attraction, viewing homosexuality as a developmental disorder amenable to psychotherapeutic intervention rather than affirmation, comparable to treating anorexia by challenging body image delusions rather than enabling starvation.[94] In amicus briefs and writings, McHugh emphasizes client autonomy and evidence of behavioral change through therapy, critiquing professional organizations like the APA for policy shifts post-1973 declassification that prioritized activism over longitudinal data on fluidity and harm reduction.[95] Recent fluidity research supports this, with a 2022 review documenting shifts in self-identified orientation in 10-25% of adults over decades, especially females, indicating potential for therapeutic influence absent in rigid biological models.[96] These views highlight gaps in consensus formation, where dissenting data from motivated clients is often dismissed without equivalent scrutiny of affirmation outcomes.Influences on Consensus Formation
The mainstream consensus against conversion therapy, particularly within bodies like the American Psychological Association (APA), emerged amid historical pressures from activist disruptions starting in 1970, which targeted professional meetings and contributed to the 1973 declassification of homosexuality as a disorder in the DSM-II, framing sexual orientation as immutable and non-pathological.[97] This shift prioritized normative acceptance over therapeutic exploration, influencing subsequent organizational stances by associating change efforts with stigma rather than evidence-based inquiry.[98] The APA's pivotal 2009 Task Force Report on Appropriate Therapeutic Responses to Sexual Orientation reviewed 83 peer-reviewed studies and concluded that sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE) showed insufficient evidence of enduring change in core attractions, while noting potential harms like distress, though acknowledging methodological limitations in the data.[33] Critiques of the report highlight selection biases in its composition—no task force members supported SOCE—and inconsistent application of evidentiary standards, such as excluding 34 psychoanalytic studies involving over 500 patients with reported successes, while retaining comparably flawed studies favoring affirmative approaches.[99] These factors suggest an ideological predisposition toward gay-affirmative therapy, potentially amplified by the task force's prior endorsements of depathologization, limiting the review's ability to neutrally assess client-reported benefits or longitudinal data gaps.[99] The report's accompanying press release further shaped consensus by asserting that efforts to change sexual orientation "cannot be successful," a stronger claim than the document's qualified findings, which media outlets echoed and policymakers cited in enacting restrictions like California's Senate Bill 1172 in 2012.[99] This dissemination created a reinforcing dynamic, where organizational declarations, influenced by cultural alignment and aversion to controversy, marginalized dissenting research—such as Jones and Yarhouse's 2009 study tracking behavioral shifts in 98 participants over 6-7 years—despite similar methodological critiques not applied to opposing evidence.[99] Such patterns indicate that consensus formation has been swayed less by comprehensive causal analysis of orientation's malleability and more by institutional incentives to avoid litigation risks and align with prevailing societal norms, sidelining first-hand accounts of voluntary change seekers.[97]Legal and Policy Landscape
Global Bans and Restrictions
As of October 2025, at least 25 countries have implemented national bans or restrictions on conversion therapy, defined as practices intended to alter an individual's sexual orientation or gender identity. These measures predominantly target licensed mental health professionals and often include prohibitions on advertising or performing such interventions, with penalties ranging from fines to imprisonment. Bans vary significantly: some apply universally to all ages, while others are limited to minors; coverage may encompass both sexual orientation and gender identity or focus solely on one.[100][101] In Europe, eight EU member states have enacted national bans by late 2024: Malta in 2016 (all ages, with consent for adults permitted), Germany in 2020 (minors and vulnerable adults), France in 2022 (all ages, no consent recognized), Greece in 2022 (minors and vulnerable adults), Belgium in 2023 (all ages), Cyprus in 2023 (all ages), Spain in 2023 (all ages), and Portugal in 2024 (all ages). Non-EU European nations like Albania (2020) and Iceland (2023) have also imposed comprehensive prohibitions. These laws typically criminalize coercive practices but may exempt voluntary adult participation in certain cases, such as Malta and Germany.[102][100] Latin America features early adopters, with Argentina banning the practice in 2010 for all ages covering both sexual orientation and gender identity, followed by Ecuador (2012), Uruguay (2017), Brazil (2018), and more recent enactments in Chile (2021), Peru (2021), Bolivia (2022), and Paraguay (2022). In Asia, Taiwan became the first to ban it in 2018, with Vietnam following in 2022; both apply to all ages. Canada (2022) and New Zealand (2022) represent North America and Oceania, respectively, with nationwide bans for all ages. Mexico extended its federal prohibition to all ages in June 2024, imposing up to six years' imprisonment.[100][101]| Country | Year | Scope (Ages and Coverage) |
|---|---|---|
| Argentina | 2010 | All ages; sexual orientation and gender identity |
| Malta | 2016 | All ages; consent for adults allowed |
| Brazil | 2018 | All ages; sexual orientation and gender identity |
| Germany | 2020 | Minors and vulnerable adults |
| Canada | 2022 | All ages; sexual orientation and gender identity |
| France | 2022 | All ages; no consent recognized |
| Mexico | 2024 | All ages; up to 6 years imprisonment |
United States Status and Key Cases (Including 2025 Supreme Court Developments)
As of March 2025, 23 U.S. states and the District of Columbia had enacted comprehensive bans prohibiting licensed mental health professionals from performing conversion therapy on minors, with an additional five states imposing partial restrictions, such as limitations on state funding or insurance coverage for such practices.[103] [104] No federal prohibition exists, leaving regulation primarily to state legislatures, where bans typically target counseling by licensed providers aimed at changing a minor's sexual orientation or gender identity, often citing potential psychological harm.[34] These laws do not uniformly apply to adults or unlicensed practitioners, and enforcement varies, as evidenced by a 2025 settlement in Virginia that prevented the state from enforcing core elements of its 2020 minor-focused ban following legal challenges.[34] Early federal court challenges to state bans centered on First Amendment free speech and Fourteenth Amendment due process claims. In Pickup v. Brown (2013), the Ninth Circuit upheld California's 2012 ban on sexual orientation change efforts (SOCE) for minors by licensed therapists, ruling it a valid regulation of professional conduct rather than protected speech, with the Supreme Court denying certiorari in 2014. Similarly, in King v. Governor of New Jersey (2014), the Third Circuit affirmed New Jersey's ban, distinguishing therapeutic speech from pure expression and deferring to legislative findings on inefficacy and risks. These rulings established a pattern of upholding bans as conduct regulations, though dissenters argued they infringed on therapists' professional judgment and clients' autonomy. The 2025 Supreme Court term featured Chiles v. Salazar, argued on October 7, 2025, which directly tested the constitutionality of Colorado's 2020 law barring licensed professionals from conversion therapy on patients under 18.[105] Brought by Christian counselors represented by the Alliance Defending Freedom, the case challenged the ban as viewpoint discrimination against speech promoting change in sexual orientation or gender identity, following a district court injunction that was reversed by the Tenth Circuit in 2024, which classified the prohibition as conduct regulation immune to strict scrutiny.[93] During oral arguments, a majority of justices, including conservatives, expressed skepticism toward the ban, questioning whether it impermissibly targeted disfavored professional speech and drawing analogies to regulated medical advice, with potential implications for similar laws in over 20 states.[106] [107] A decision remains pending as of October 26, 2025, but signals suggest it could narrow or invalidate such restrictions on First Amendment grounds.[108]Arguments on Legality, Rights, and Autonomy
Opponents of conversion therapy bans argue that such laws infringe on First Amendment protections by regulating the content of professional speech, as counseling involves verbal communication aimed at influencing thoughts and behaviors, which courts have historically shielded from viewpoint-based restrictions.[109][110] In the 2025 U.S. Supreme Court case Chiles v. Salazar, challengers to Colorado's ban on providing conversion therapy to minors contended that the statute imposes strict liability on licensed therapists for discussing certain topics, regardless of client consent or therapeutic context, potentially subjecting it to strict scrutiny as a content- and viewpoint-discriminatory rule.[107][111] During oral arguments on October 7, 2025, several justices expressed skepticism toward the ban's scope, questioning whether it unconstitutionally compels therapists to withhold information clients seek and drawing parallels to prior rulings protecting advisory speech in professional settings, such as NIFLA v. Becerra (2018).[112] Proponents of bans counter that they constitute valid occupational regulations targeting harmful conduct rather than pure speech, akin to prohibitions on false advertising or unlicensed practice, and thus warrant only intermediate scrutiny under precedents like Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc. (2011).[113][114] The Tenth Circuit upheld Colorado's law in 2024, ruling it regulates professional conduct by denying reimbursement for discredited practices and does not broadly censor discussion outside billing contexts.[114] However, dissenting views highlight that empirical claims of inherent harm often rely on self-reported data from advocacy-linked studies, potentially overstating risks while ignoring client-reported benefits in non-coercive settings, thereby undermining the state's compelling interest justification.[115] For adults, bans raise sharper autonomy concerns, as competent individuals possess a fundamental right under substantive due process to pursue therapeutic interventions aligned with personal values, including religious convictions against same-sex attraction, without state interference absent imminent harm.[116] Most U.S. jurisdictions permit adults to consent to conversion-oriented counseling, recognizing that autonomy encompasses rejecting mainstream norms in favor of self-directed change efforts, provided no fraud or coercion occurs; efforts to extend bans to adults, as proposed in some analyses, risk paternalism by presuming state experts superior to individual judgment.[14][117] Regarding minors, bans implicate parental rights under the Fourteenth Amendment, as parents hold a presumptive authority to direct medical and psychological care, including exploratory therapies addressing unwanted attractions, unless clear evidence of abuse exists.[117] Critics argue that overriding parental discretion based on contested harm assessments—often from organizations with ideological stakes—echoes historical state overreach, as in Troxel v. Granville (2000), and may compel affirmative endorsement of identities parents and children wish to question.[118][119] Free exercise claims further contend that bans burden religious practitioners by prohibiting faith-integrated counseling, potentially violating Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye v. City of Hialeah (1993) if selectively enforced against traditional views on sexuality.[109][119]Societal and Cultural Dimensions
Public Opinion Trends and Polling Data
In the United States, multiple polls indicate consistent majority opposition to conversion therapy, especially when applied to minors, with support for bans ranging from 56% to 59% in recent surveys. A YouGov/Economist poll conducted October 10–13, 2025, among 1,500 U.S. adults found 59% favored legislation banning conversion therapy, 20% opposed it, and 22% were unsure; notably, majorities across political parties supported bans, including 52% of Republicans.[120][121] This aligns with a June 2025 Data for Progress survey of 1,200 likely voters, where 57% opposed conversion therapy and a plurality believed the Supreme Court should uphold state bans on it for minors.[122] Earlier data from a 2019 Reuters/Ipsos poll showed 56% of adults viewing conversion therapy as illegal for minors, suggesting relative stability in attitudes over time despite increased media attention.[123]| Poll Organization | Date | Sample Size | Support for Bans on Minors (%) | Opposition (%) | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| YouGov/Economist | October 2025 | 1,500 U.S. adults | 59 | 20 | Bipartisan support; 52% Republicans favor.[120] |
| Data for Progress | June 2025 | 1,200 likely voters | 57 oppose practice | N/A | Favor upholding state bans.[122] |
| Reuters/Ipsos | 2019 | U.S. adults | 56 | N/A | Focused on minors.[123] |