Wednesday, March 24, 2021

"Republicans are pushing sweeping bans on trans youth healthcare"

 


“Lawmakers in Arkansas are voting this week to restrict medical care for transgender children and punish doctors who treat them, in one of more than a dozen US states where Republicans are pushing sweeping bans on trans youth healthcare.
 
“Proponents of the healthcare bans argue that kids are too young to consent to treatments like hormone therapy and puberty blockers and that the bills aim to prevent ‘medical experimentation’ on children. Some bills claim that trans kids ‘will outgrow’ their identities.

“But supporters of gender-affirming healthcare, including major medical associations, human rights groups and affected families, say that the treatments are well established and part of a gradual process that has been shown to dramatically improve the mental health of the most vulnerable kids. The bills, they argue, misrepresent the care model with false and fearmongering narratives. Trans teens who have received treatments say they would suffer serious harm if they were stripped of the care.
 
“‘We’re talking about criminalizing doctors for providing best-practice medical care to their patients, and making it child abuse for parents to support access for their children,’ said Kasey Suffredini, CEO of Freedom for All Americans, an LGBTQ+ rights group. ‘These bills are very, very extreme … and these are life and death issues.’

“The bills are part of an escalating culture war involving trans kids. As Joe Biden has vowed to protect LGBTQ+ people and a 2020 supreme court ruling protected trans rights in the workplace, conservative legislators have introduced more than 80 bills restricting trans rights – most that would either block trans kids’ use of gender-affirming care or limit their access to certain sports teams. It is the highest number of anti-trans legislative proposals ever filed in a single year…
 
“The number of kids receiving gender-affirming care in the US is limited. Jules Gill-Peterson, professor of gender, sexuality, and women’s studies at the University of Pittsburgh, said that access to the treatment is extremely restricted, given that there are few clinics that do this work and that families often need significant time and money to advocate for and get treatment.

“‘We’re facing the proposition of banning forms of healthcare that almost no trans kids even have access to,’ she said. She noted that at a clinic in Pittsburgh, some families drive from five hours away to get care. ‘We’re talking about healthcare that at the moment is generally accessible only to upper-middle-class families.’ Some families wait months to get an appointment, said Dr Jack Turban, a child psychiatry fellow at Stanford.

“The gender-affirming care model targeted in the bills is aimed at alleviating the severe distress many trans children face while forced to present as the gender assigned to them at birth. They start by making clear that trans and non-conforming identities are not a mental disorder, and that the mental health challenges many trans kids face are often a result of facing stigma and discrimination. A Centers for Disease Control survey in 2019 found that 35% of high school trans students had attempted suicide in the previous year, compared with roughly 7% of cisgender students.
 
“‘Children are supported in their expressions of their identity,’ said Dr Lauren Wilson, a pediatric hospitalist who works with trans children in Montana, where lawmakers have proposed a healthcare ban. She is also the vice-president of the Montana chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics. For young children, she said, ‘Sometimes that means choosing different clothes, different haircuts, changing pronouns or presenting as a different gender at school and socially.’
 
“When youth are ‘consistent, insistent and persistent’ about their gender identity, families and doctors can consider further treatments. At the onset of puberty, some youth can be prescribed ‘blockers,’ which suppress or pause puberty and allow kids more time before their bodies undergo changes.
 
“Blockers are reversible but they have sparked contentious political debates, particularly in the UK, where a court has restricted their use, arguing that youth under 16 cannot give informed consent. Critics have called for more research on their long-term impacts, but clinicians working with trans children say the treatment is safe and note that they have been used since the 90s to treat cisgender children who experience early puberty. Research has shown that blockers have huge benefits for teens who have accessed them. One study found that when youth receive the medication, the odds of suicide decrease by 70%.
 
“Older trans teens can be prescribed affirming hormones that initiate puberty to match their gender. These treatments, which are also linked to mental health improvements, are much more serious, with some irreversible impacts. Research has shown that only a small fraction of people who take them later ‘de-transition,’ with a comprehensive Dutch study finding that only 0.3 to 0.6% of trans people expressed ‘regret’ about their treatment. Doctors say they generally work closely with families and youth before treatments are prescribed.
 
“‘These are not decisions that patients or families or providers take lightly,’ said Dr Patty Pinanong, a clinical professor of medicine at University of Southern California, who works with trans youth. ‘It is a very thoughtful and intentional process.’

“…The GOP proposals seek to outlaw various components of affirming care, including blockers and hormones, in some cases with bills that misstate how treatments work or seek to ban practices that don’t actually occur. Several bills would also punish parents and providers who allow kids to access gender-affirming care, with some proposals threatening hefty fines, revoked medical licenses and jail time.
 
“‘Most outlaw gender-affirming surgeries for minors, even though the standards of care that doctors follow establish that genital surgeries are not offered until adulthood,’ said Turban, the child psychiatry fellow at Stanford: ‘The bills themselves contain misinformation.’ Turban, who researches care for trans youth, warned that there would be mental health repercussions if treatment were outlawed: ‘There’s no question in my mind that all those kids would have worsening anxiety and depression. If bans were enacted, some youth might seek access to hormones without doctors’ supervision,’  he added…” (Sam Levin, The Guardian).



1 comment:

  1. Epitaph for a Transsexual
    (for John-David)

    He liked feminine things
    as far back as I can remember:
    high-heel shoes, scarves, purses,

    dancing before mirrors.
    School was a horror.
    He preferred hopscotch to relay races,

    jump rope to baseball.
    I imagine a woman in search of her body,
    a hijacked plane touched down

    in a strange place,
    or a photograph of someone else
    in unfamiliar clothes.

    He played out his life in a foreign film
    with no subtitles, with no critics
    to rave in reviews, no one

    to laud his impersonation.
    He was less reality than dream,
    more imagination than possibility,

    and he lived a life without a plot
    and point of view,
    like a poorly written story

    filled with questions and no answers.
    I think of a woman I did not know,
    of a sister I wish I had.


    (John-David died from complications caused by AIDS on June 3, 1987. He was 26 years old).

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