Oh, you found that in the 56 studies reviewed in the analysis I linked to and found that they were all or mostly questionnaires with that problem then?
No I checked the first two, found that they are both scientifically invalid (as in, they are set up so that it is literally impossible for them to support your claim), and stopped.
That would be surprising as that's simply not the case.
Then show one that actually supports your claim. It's not my job to wade through dozens of invalid studies to maybe find one that actually supports your claim.
There are limitations that all the studies share, but that's primarily the fact that transgender people are such a small subset of the population.
Again, no. Here is the methodology of those first two studies: A group N of people have transitioned, later on a subset K of N is then chosen based on 1. not having died from suicide (or anything else) in the meantime and 2. still happy and willing to cooperate with the medical team. This subset K then, unsurprisingly, expresses mostly positive results and a lack of deaths from suicide.
The way those studies select their samples makes them simply invalid scientifically, and that has nothing to do with how many transgender people there are in the general population. These problems are noted extensively in the Medicare literature overview I linked to earlier, by the way.
The study itself and the author explicitly disagree with your conclusion.
The study itself obviously doesn't. And if your appeals to the author are based on that interview on the advocacy site, I've checked some of the studies linked to which are presented as a counter, and they are just as methodologically invalid as those others you linked to.
Again, the study did not address the entire process or steps that constitute 'transitioning' as a whole, but specifically on one type of surgery. Let me try to be more clear; your point is a straw man. I'm thinking it is an accidental straw man, but I did not claim that the surgery itself had the outcomes I described.
It is, as far as I've seen, the only study which doesn't explicitly exclude from consideration those post-transition people who have died from suicide. If you can't see how excluding deaths from suicide in studies purporting to support lowered suicidality simply invalidates them then I don't really know what to tell you.