Albuquerque Journal

Supreme Court allows gender-affirming care ban in Idaho

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WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court is allowing Idaho to enforce its ban on gender-affirming care for transgende­r youth while lawsuits over the law proceed, reversing lower courts.

The justices’ order Monday allows the state to put in a place a 2023 law that subjects physicians to up to 10 years in prison if they provide hormones, puberty blockers or other gender-affirming care to people under age 18. Under the court’s order, the two transgende­r teens who sued to challenge the law still will be able to obtain care.

The court’s three liberal justices would have kept the law on hold. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote that it would have been better to let the case proceed “unfettered by our interventi­on.”

Justice Neil Gorsuch of the conservati­ve majority wrote that it is “a welcome developmen­t” that the court is reining in an overly broad lower court order.

A federal judge in Idaho had blocked the law in its entirety after determinin­g that it was necessary to do so to protect the teens, who are identified under pseudonyms in court papers.

Lawyers for the teens wrote in court papers that the teens’ “gender dysphoria has been dramatical­ly alleviated as a result of puberty blockers and estrogen therapy.”

Opponents of the law have said it will likely increase suicide rates among teens. The law’s backers have said it is necessary to “protect children” from medical or surgical treatments for gender dysphoria, though there’s little indication that gender-affirming surgeries are being performed on transgende­r youth in Idaho.

Gender-affirming care for youth is supported by every major medical organizati­on, including the American Medical Associatio­n, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n.

Medical profession­als define gender dysphoria as severe psychologi­cal distress experience­d by those whose gender identity differs from their sex assigned at birth.

The states that have enacted laws restrictin­g or banning gender-affirming medical care for transgende­r minors are Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and West Virginia.

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