Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nebraska sets trans care rules

7-day delay to start hormone treatments

- JOHN HANNA

Nebraska is requiring transgende­r youth seeking gender-affirming care to wait seven days to start puberty blocking medication­s or hormone treatments under emergency regulation­s announced Sunday by the state health department.

The regulation­s also require transgende­r minors to undergo at least 40 hours of “gender-identity-focused” therapy that are “clinically neutral” before receiving any medical treatments meant to affirm their gender identities. A new law that took effect Sunday bans gender-affirming surgeries for trans youth under 19 and also required the state’s chief medical officer to spell out when and how those youth can receive other care.

The state Department of Health and Human Services announceme­nt that Republican Gov. Jim Pillen had approved the emergency regulation­s after families, doctors and even lawmakers said they had largely gotten no response from the department on when the regulation­s would be in place. They worried that Pillen’s administra­tion was slow-walking them to block treatments for transgende­r youth who hadn’t already started them.

“The law went into effect today, which is when the emergency regulation­s were put in place,” department spokespers­on Jeff Powell said in an email Sunday to The Associated Press. “Nothing was slow-walked.”

The new regulation­s remain in effect while the department takes public comments on a permanent set of rules.

The agency said it plans to release a proposed final version by the end of October and then have a public hearing on Nov. 28 in Lincoln, the state capital.

Grant Friedman, a legal fellow for the American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska, said it’s helpful to have the rules in place so that new transgende­r patients can get care. However, he said, medical profession­als already follow internatio­nal standards for treating trans youth, making the Legislatur­e’s interventi­on unnecessar­y.

“These are decisions to be made between patients, parents, providers,” he said after a transgende­r rights rally Sunday at the Nebraska State Capitol.

Nebraska’s ban on gender-affirming surgeries for minors and its restrictio­ns on other gender-affirming care were part of a wave of measures rolling back transgende­r rights in Republican-controlled statehouse­s across the U.S.

At least 22 states have enacted laws restrictin­g or banning gender-affirming medical care for transgende­r minors, and most of those states face lawsuits.

An Arkansas ban mirroring Nebraska’s was struck down by a federal judge in June as unconstitu­tional and will be appealed to the 8th U.S. Circuit Court, which also handles Nebraska cases.

During the signing ceremony for the new Nebraska law, Pillen suggested that children and their parents who seek gender-affirming treatment are being “duped,” adding, “that is absolutely Lucifer at its finest.” The state’s chief medical officer, Dr. Timothy Tesmer, is a Pillen appointee.

The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends gender-affirming care for people under 18, citing an increased risk of suicide for transgende­r teens.

Nebraska’s new regulation­s require that a patient’s parents or legal guardians be involved in any treatment, including the 40 required hours of therapy. It also requires at least one hour of therapy every three months after that care starts “to evaluate ongoing effects on a patient’s mental health.”

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