San Diego Union-Tribune

FLA. BAN ON GENDER-AFFIRMING CARE FOR KIDS TIGHTENED

Doctors boards remove exemption for clinical trials

- BY MIKE SCHNEIDER

A prohibitio­n against puberty-blocking hormones and gender-affirming surgeries for minors in Florida was tightened further after a board overseeing doctors eliminated an exception for clinical trials Friday at the request of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administra­tion.

Some members of the public attending the meeting in Tallahasse­e shouted expletives, and law enforcemen­t officers positioned themselves in the front of the room after the vote by the Florida Board of Osteopathi­c Medicine.

The decision came after one member of the public after another testified at the packed meeting of the osteopathi­c medicine board and the Florida Board of Medicine that gender-affirming treatment had been “magical” and like “opening a prison door” for them or their children. One transgende­r adult man during his testimony gave himself an injection of hormones in front of the doctors’ boards. Others said treatment had stopped them from “fighting with themselves” and contemplat­ing suicide.

Judy Schmidt told board members that she worried that her trans son, who was 6 when he told her he was a boy, will have been transition­ing socially for four to five years before he reaches puberty and won’t be able to get the gender-affirming care he needs.

“You as doctors are supposed to do no harm,” Schmidt to the boards made up primarily by doctors. “If you make this blanket rule, you are doing harm.”

The Florida Board of Medicine and the Florida Board of Osteopathi­c Medicine approved rules last fall that prohibited gender-affirming surgery and puberty blocking hormones for minors, though minors receiving puberty blockers prior to the rules taking effect could continue to take them. The osteopathi­c medicine board made an exception for clinical research trials that examined the longterm impact of the treatments.

During Friday’s meeting, the Florida Department of Health asked the boards to tweak the rules to eliminate the osteopathi­c medicine board’s exception for research. The DeSantis administra­tion’s health department got the ball rolling on curbing gender-affirming treatment for minors in Florida last year by petitionin­g the boards to pass the prohibitio­n.

In 2021, DeSantis, who is widely considered to be weighing a run for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, signed a bill barring transgende­r girls and women from playing on public school teams intended for student athletes assigned female at birth.

John Wilson, general counsel for the Department of Health, told the boards that the exception would create confusion since one board allowed it, but the other didn’t.

“The department is concerned the exception undermines the purpose of this rule,” Wilson said.

State Rep. Anna Eskamani, a Democrat from Orlando, called the prohibitio­n against gender-affirming care “politicall­y motivated.”

“We should not be making policy based on who can make a fundraisin­g letter off it,” Eskamani said.

Florida Board of Medicine member Hector Vila disputed that interpreta­tion of the boards’ actions.

“This isn’t about trans- or homophobia,” said Vila, a doctor in Tampa. “This isn’t about politics.

 ?? MARTA LAVANDIER AP ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administra­tion urged state doctor groups to ban gender-affirming treatment for minors.
MARTA LAVANDIER AP Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administra­tion urged state doctor groups to ban gender-affirming treatment for minors.

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