The Columbus Dispatch

Treatment ban stuns trans youths

Arkansas families panic; clinic sees suicide tries

- Andrew Demillo and David Crary

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – Before he began receiving hormone therapy eight months ago, Dylan Brandt felt insecure and out of place. Then the 15-year-old transgende­r boy started taking testostero­ne in August.

His mood improved, and his mother said he became more outgoing.

But in the coming months, Dylan and his family face a difficult choice. His home state, Arkansas, passed a law prohibitin­g gender confirming treatments for minors, the first state to do so.

“The thought of having to go back to how I was before this is just devastatin­g because that would set me back on everything,” said Dylan, who lives in Greenwood, near the Oklahoma border. “I don’t want to go back.”

Unless opponents are successful in blocking it with a lawsuit, Arkansas’ ban will take effect late this summer. The measure prohibits doctors from providing gender confirming hormone therapy, puberty blockers or surgery to people under 18 or referring them to other doctors who provide that care.

It’s already created confusion, sadness and pain for hundreds of transgende­r youths, as well as their families and health care providers. With other states considerin­g similar bans, it’s a preview of the difficult choices that other families could face around the country.

“My families are in a state of panic, asking what state should they move to, saying their child is threatenin­g to kill themselves,” said Dr. Michele Hutchison, who runs a clinic at Arkansas Children’s Hospital that has served about 200 families and has a waiting list of several dozen more.

Since the bill was approved, four young people in Hutchison’s program have attempted suicide, she said. Other patients have called the clinic to ask if they’ll be able to get their medication­s on the black market if the ban takes effect.

Those concerns were what prompted

Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a social conservati­ve who has signed other measures restrictin­g transgende­r people’s rights, to veto the treatment ban. Hutchinson said the bill went too far, especially since it wouldn’t exempt youths already receiving care.

“If this bill is passed, what happens to those young people that are currently under treatment?” Hutchinson told reporters when he vetoed the measure. “That makes my heart hurt to think about it.”

The majority-republican Legislatur­e easily overrode Hutchinson’s veto, and supporters of the ban have said transgende­r youths should wait until they’re 18 to make such decisions. Some compared the prohibitio­n to other ones minors face, such as for smoking or drinking.

“We’ve all done some things when we’re under 18 that we probably shouldn’t have done, and the children of Arkansas deserve to be protected,” Republican Rep. Robin Lundstrum, who introduced the ban, said during a House debate on it last month.

But comments like those, families of trans youths and health profession­als say, are leaving a false impression that these treatments are available on short

notice and with little thought.

Before they can even begin treatment, transgende­r youths must go through months if not years of counseling and therapy to ensure they’re making the right decision. They also undergo lab work beforehand and are regularly monitored by doctors.

“This is not done lightly on the patient or the parent side,” said Dr. Stephanie Ho, a Fayettevil­le physician who provides hormone therapy to about 10 to 15 trans youths. “This is not done lightly on the provider side.”

Multiple medical groups, including the American Medical Associatio­n and the American Academy of Pediatrics, oppose the bans and experts say the treatments are safe if properly administer­ed.

Puberty blockers, which delay the physical changes caused by puberty, are considered reversible. Hormone therapy, which can help transgende­r people match their bodies with their gender identity, can have outcomes that are more permanent, such as enabling transgende­r men to have facial hair and a deeper voice.

For Andrew Bostad, it took two years after he came out as transgende­r before he began hormone therapy. The 15-yearold, who lives in Bauxite in central Arkansas, described his life before the treatments as if living in a cloud that was choking him.

“I used to be very shut off, angry at the world in general. I was just shut off from everyone,” Andrew said. “Once I started testostero­ne, I was able to live my life and just move on with who I was supposed to be my entire young adult life.”

The uncertaint­y transgende­r youths face right now is compounded by Arkansas’ other restrictio­ns on trans youths enacted this year, and the bills that are still advancing in the Legislatur­e.

One law Hutchinson has signed bans transgende­r girls and women from sports teams consistent with their gender identity. Another allows doctors to refuse to treat someone because of moral and religious objections.

Arkansas lawmakers are considerin­g a “bathroom bill” aimed at preventing transgende­r people from using public restrooms consistent with their gender identity.

Another bill would allow teachers to use the former names and genders of transgende­r students, which opponents say takes away their identity and could increase an already high risk of bullying of transgende­r youths. Legislator­s are also looking at expanding the treatment ban to include criminal penalties for doctors who violate it.

Treatment bans similar to Arkansas’ have been proposed in at least 20 states.

Dylan’s mother, Joanna, said ending his treatments isn’t a viable option. Though she’s hopeful the law won’t take effect, she’s already looking at the possibilit­y of moving.

Andrew and his mother say they’re looking at other sources for the treatments outside Arkansas, saying they can’t afford to leave. But, even if they could, they’re adamant about staying in Arkansas despite the ban and other restrictio­ns.

“We can’t let them get what they want out of this,” said Brandi Evans, Andrew’s mother. “I’ve always been the person to stand up to the bullies, and this is a big one, so I refuse to go down without a fight.”

 ?? ANDREW DEMILLO/AP ?? Andrew Bostad at home in Bauxite, Ark., with mom Brandi Evans and stepdad Jimmy Evans. Andrew’s hormone therapy could get cut off.
ANDREW DEMILLO/AP Andrew Bostad at home in Bauxite, Ark., with mom Brandi Evans and stepdad Jimmy Evans. Andrew’s hormone therapy could get cut off.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States