Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judges rule on Missouri, Texas gender care

- SUMMER BALLENTINE AND JIM VERTUNO

COLUMBIA, Mo. — A judge on Friday blocked Texas’ ban on gender-affirming health care for minors while a separate judge in Missouri allowed a similar ban to take effect, underscori­ng the mixed verdict in courtrooms across the U.S. this year over a historic wave of restrictio­ns aimed at transgende­r youth.

More than 20 states have adopted laws to ban some gender-affirming care for minors, although some are not yet in effect or have been put on hold by courts. Many of them prevent transgende­r minors from accessing hormone therapies, puberty blockers and transition surgeries, even though medical experts say such surgical procedures are rarely performed on children.

Texas would be the most populous state to enforce such a ban. But state District Judge Maria Cantu Hexsel sided with a group of families who argued it would violate parents’ rights and have devastatin­g consequenc­es for transgende­r children and teenagers who would be denied treatment recommende­d by their physicians.

The Missouri ruling by St. Louis Circuit Judge Steven Ohmer means that beginning on Monday, health care providers are prohibited from providing gender-affirming surgeries to children. Minors who began puberty blockers or hormones before Monday will be allowed to continue on those medication­s, but other minors won’t have access to those drugs.

Some adults will also lose access to gender-affirming care. Medicaid no longer will cover treatments for adults, and the state will not provide those surgeries to prisoners.

Physicians who violate the law face having their licenses revoked and being sued by patients. The law makes it easier for former patients to sue, giving them 15 years to go to court and promising at least $500,000 in damages if they succeed.

The Texas ruling landed just ahead of the Sept. 1 start date for the ban. The Texas attorney general’s office was expected to quickly file an appeal to let the law take effect.

The ACLU of Missouri, Lambda Legal, and Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner last month sued to overturn the Missouri law on behalf of doctors, LGBTQ+ organizati­ons, and three families of transgende­r minors, arguing that it is discrimina­tory. They asked that the law be temporaril­y blocked as the court challenge against it plays out. The next hearing in the case is scheduled for Sept. 22.

But Ohmer wrote that the plaintiffs’ arguments were “unpersuasi­ve and not likely to succeed.”

The law expires in August 2027.

Proponents of the law argued gender-affirming medical treatments are unsafe and untested.

Republican Attorney General Andrew Bailey’s office wrote in a court brief that blocking the law “would open the gate to interventi­ons that a growing internatio­nal consensus has said may be extraordin­arily damaging.”

An Associated Press email requesting comment from the attorney general’s office was not immediatel­y returned Friday.

Every major medical organizati­on in the U.S., including the American Medical Associatio­n, has opposed bans on gender-affirming care for minors and supported it when administer­ed appropriat­ely. Lawsuits have been filed in several states where bans have been enacted this year.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion approved puberty blockers 30 years ago to treat children with precocious puberty — a condition that causes sexual developmen­t to begin much earlier than usual. Sex hormones — synthetic forms of estrogen and testostero­ne — were approved decades ago to treat hormone disorders and for birth control.

The FDA has not approved the medication­s specifical­ly to treat gender-questionin­g youth. But they have been used for many years for that purpose “off label,” a common and accepted practice for many medical conditions. Doctors who treat trans patients say those decades of use are proof the treatments are not experiment­al.

 ?? (AP/Charlie Riedel) ?? Glenda Starke wears a transgende­r flag as a counter protest during a rally in favor of a ban on gender-affirming health care legislatio­n in March at the Missouri Statehouse in Jefferson City. A Missouri judge said Friday that a law banning gender-affirming treatments for minors can take effect Monday.
(AP/Charlie Riedel) Glenda Starke wears a transgende­r flag as a counter protest during a rally in favor of a ban on gender-affirming health care legislatio­n in March at the Missouri Statehouse in Jefferson City. A Missouri judge said Friday that a law banning gender-affirming treatments for minors can take effect Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States