A woman sought help for her mental health and left with a permanent surgery she now regrets.
A former patient reached a $3.5 million settlement after claiming therapists rushed her into a double mastectomy.
It is a heavy thing to trust a doctor with your body and your mind. When that trust is broken, the scars left behind are both physical and deep.
What Happened
Camille Kiefel, 36, went to see therapists in Oregon for help with trauma and depression. She identified as nonbinary at the time. She says two therapists approved her for a double mastectomy after only two short video calls.
Kiefel had the surgery in August 2020. Less than two years later, she realized the procedure did not fix her distress and she began to detransition. She now says the surgery caused lasting physical pain and emotional harm.
She sued the therapists and their employers for malpractice and fraud. Just before the trial was set to start, she reached a confidential settlement reported to be $3.5 million.
What the money/evidence shows
- $3.5 million settlement amount.
- Two video sessions used for surgical approval.
- 2020 year the surgery took place.
- 30 similar lawsuits filed by detransitioners in four years.
- $2 million won in a separate case by another detransitioner earlier this year.
The Bigger Question
We have to ask how the medical system decides who is ready for life-altering surgery. Are we moving too fast to offer permanent fixes for complex mental health struggles?
Patients deserve to know the full risks before they make a choice they cannot undo. We should be looking at whether current standards of care are actually protecting the people they are meant to serve.
The Other Side
The therapists and their employers have not publicly defended their actions in court documents. Because the case settled, the specific arguments they would have used at trial remain private. This makes it hard to know if they believe they followed standard rules or if they simply wanted to avoid a long court battle.
What Happens Now
This case adds to a growing list of legal challenges against gender-affirming care providers. It will likely force clinics to look closer at their screening processes. Regular people seeking mental health support may find that providers are now much more cautious about recommending surgery.
What We Still Don't Know
- What specific criteria did the therapists use to approve the surgery?
- How many other patients were approved by these same providers?
- Will this settlement lead to new state laws regarding surgical referrals?
Transparency notes
Published: May 21, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.
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Sources
External source links were not provided in this article body. Our editors reference publicly available materials and update stories as new verified information arrives.
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