Breaking News: Federal Rule Could Effectively Ban Gender-Affirming Care for Transgender Youth Nationwide
A proposed federal rule, obtained by NPR, threatens to severely restrict access to gender-affirming care for transgender youth across the United States, possibly impacting services even in states where such care remains legal. The rule, stemming from interpretations of Title IX – the federal civil rights law prohibiting sex-based discrimination - redefines “sex” to include gender identity, but then broadly defines any medical procedure related to gender transition as discrimination.
The Biden administration’s move reverses previous guidance and has sparked concern among advocates who say it represents a important escalation in efforts to limit care for transgender youth. According to Sasha Eyer,a lawyer working with families affected by these policies,the administration’s actions have already had a “significant chilling effect,” with “many clinics and hospitals” ending their gender-affirming care programs,even in states where it is still legal,as reported by NBC News.
Gender-affirming care encompasses a range of treatments, including puberty-blocking medications, hormone therapy, and, rarely, surgery. Despite recent political pressure, major U.S. medical organizations continue to support these treatments as safe and appropriate. Approximately 3% of youth in the U.S. identify as transgender or nonbinary, according to data from the Williams Institute at UCLA Law, though not all seek medical intervention.
The proposed rule does not cite guidance from the American Academy of pediatrics, which also supports access to gender-affirming care, or a recent state-commissioned analysis in Utah. That analysis, conducted by University of Utah researchers, found “ample evidence of benefits and safety” for these treatments and concluded that policy restrictions “cannot be justified based on the quantity or quality of medical science findings.”
Eyer believes the public release of the rule will allow for legal challenges, stating it will be subject to “arbitrary and capricious review” by the courts, forcing a closer examination of its factual basis. she argues this is preferable to the current situation of “coercion without law.”
The potential impact extends beyond healthcare, with some linking even unrelated funding, such as SNAP benefits, to states’ positions on gender-affirming care, according to a banner on the Department of Agriculture website.