The Kansas City Star (Sunday)

Biden administra­tion restores LGBTQ health protection­s

- BY NOAH WEILAND

WASHINGTON

The Biden administra­tion announced expansive new protection­s Friday for gay and transgende­r medical patients, prohibitin­g federally funded health providers and insurers from discrimina­ting on the basis of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

The new rule reverses a policy instituted by the Trump administra­tion and helps to fulfill part of President Joe Biden’s vow to restore civil rights protection­s for LGBTQ people that were eliminated by his predecesso­r.

“Today’s rule is a giant step forward for this country toward a more equitable and inclusive health care system, and means that Americans across the country now have a clear way to act on their rights against discrimina­tion when they go to the doctor, talk with their health plan or engage with health programs run by HHS,” Xavier Becerra, the health and human services secretary, said in a statement.

The rule overhauls federal policy in an area that has become a political flashpoint, with more than 20 Republican-led states banning or restrictin­g gender-affirming care for minors in recent years, and it is likely to draw legal challenges. Even the history of the rule illustrate­s the political sensitivit­ies at play: It has now taken three different forms under three successive presidents.

The Affordable Care Act, passed in 2010, establishe­d a sweeping set of civil rights protection­s in the U.S. health system through what is known as Section 1557. It prohibits discrimina­tion against patients based on race, color, national origin, sex, age or disability in “any health program or activity” that receives federal funds, covering a broad swath of the U.S. health system.

In 2016, the Obama administra­tion issued a less expansive version of the rule the Biden administra­tion finalized Friday, requiring health providers to provide medically appropriat­e treatment for transgende­r patients. Officials at the time argued that the Affordable Care Act’s protection­s against discrimina­tion included gender identity. The Obama rule became tied up in litigation, and the Trump administra­tion declined to enforce it.

Conservati­ve opponents of the rule have argued that the policy could effectivel­y coerce doctors into performing medical services that they might have objected to, including on religious grounds. The Trump administra­tion in 2020 formally narrowed the legal definition of sex discrimina­tion to not include protection­s for transgende­r people.

The rule finalized by the Biden administra­tion Friday states that it preserves religious exemptions and “does not require or mandate the provision of any particular medical service.”

“Section 1557 prohibits discrimina­tion on certain prohibited bases, and does not interfere with individual­ized clinical judgment about the appropriat­e course of care for a patient,” the rule says.

After the Supreme Court ruled in 2020 that the

Civil Rights Act of 1964’s prohibitio­n on discrimina­tion based on sex also applied to discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity, the Biden administra­tion began to reverse the Trump administra­tion policy.

Republican officials continued to work to preserve the Trump-era rule. In 2022, after the Biden administra­tion issued a proposed version of the rule it finalized Friday, a group of Republican attorneys general wrote to Becerra, suggesting they could sue if the Health and Human Services Department pursued the policy.

The rule proposal drew intense scrutiny from advocates and opponents. The Health and Human Services Department said Friday that it had garnered more than 85,000 comments.

Groups that pushed for the reversal of the Trumpera rule hailed the Biden administra­tion’s decision Friday. “Countless Americans can now find solace in knowing that they cannot be turned away from health care they need just because of who they are or who they love,” said Kelley Robinson, the president of the Human Rights Campaign.

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