USA TODAY US Edition

Transgende­r survey could dispel myths

94% say they are happy with life after transition

- Susan Miller

When Ashton Holmes saw the results of the largest-ever transgende­r survey in the U.S., the data elicited ripples of joy: “It made my heart happy.”

The survey by the National Center for Transgende­r Equality of more than 92,000 binary and nonbinary transgende­r people offers a window into a world often clouded by misconcept­ions. Nearly all respondent­s – 94% − said they were satisfied with their lives after transition­ing.

Holmes, 39, a Black transgende­r man who navigates life with a “let’s love on each other” philosophy, says the statistics give powerful proof “that people are satisfied when they are seen, when they are affirmed.”

Transgende­r advocates are hoping the data not only shows that validation − but also cuts through a tornado of misinforma­tion about transgende­r people that has swirled in the past few years.

“This survey is tremendous­ly significan­t for the quality, the quantity and frankly the timing,” says Cathy Renna, communicat­ions director for the National LGBTQ Task Force. “We could not need this more than we do right now.”

Rights of transgende­r people are in the cross hairs

The survey, released this month, lands as the rights of transgende­r people continue to be in the cross hairs: About 130 bills targeting the community have been filed in 2024 in statehouse­s, according to the Human Rights Campaign. Last year saw 225 bills.

As the community, particular­ly youths, “face increased attacks on our ability to access health care, public facilities and other fundamenta­l aspects of life, these findings serve as a critical resource,” said Rodrigo Heng-Lehtinen, executive director of the National Center for Transgende­r Equality, which conducted the U.S. Trans Survey in partnershi­p with other groups. The center is a national organizati­on that advocates for the understand­ing and acceptance of transgende­r people.

The survey also showed that nearly all respondent­s, or 98%, reported that receiving hormone treatments for their transition resulted in greater satisfacti­on with their lives.

And nearly half – 47% − said they have considered moving to another state because their state passed or was weighing legislatio­n that targeted transgende­r people for unequal treatment.

Renna said the data is going to be a “101 for allies” – those who have transgende­r people in their lives and have questions. “Instead of having them find a sea of misinforma­tion, myths and stereotype­s, they are going to find the lived realities of trans people.”

Real-world data to help support families

Laura Hoge, a clinical social worker in New Jersey who works with transgende­r people and their families, said the survey results underscore what she sees in her daily practice: that lives improve when access to something as basic as gender-affirming care is not restricted.

“I see children who come here sometimes not able to go to school or are completely distanced from their friends,” she said. “And when they have access to care, they can go from not going to school to trying out for their school play.”

Every time misinforma­tion about transgende­r people surfaces, Hoge says she is flooded with phone calls.

The survey now gives real-world data on the lived experience­s of transgende­r people and how their lives are flourishin­g, she said. “I can tell you that when I talk to families I am able to say to them: This is what other people in your child’s situation or in your situation are saying.”

Gender-affirming care has been a target of state bills

Gender-affirming care, which can involve everything from talk sessions to hormone therapy, in many ways has been ground zero in recent legislativ­e debates over the rights of transgende­r people.

A poll by the Trevor Project, which provides crisis and suicide prevention services to LGBTQ+ people under 25, found that 85% of trans and nonbinary youths say even the debates about these laws have negatively impacted their mental health.

In January, the Ohio Senate overrode the governor’s veto of legislatio­n that restricted medical care for transgende­r young people.

The bill prohibits doctors from prescribin­g hormones, puberty blockers, or gender reassignme­nt surgery before patients turn 18 and requires mental health providers to get parental permission to diagnose and treat gender dysphoria.

Backers of the bill said it was needed to protect the state’s children. One lawmaker, state Sen. Kristina Roegner, disputed whether transgende­r people even exist: “There is no such thing as genderaffi­rming care. You can’t affirm something that doesn’t exist,” she said.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, whose state restricts gender-affirming care, also has said “a lot of the dysphoria resolves itself by the time” young people become adults.

Transgende­r advocates say not only are those kinds of statements false, but they also make the case for the urgency of the national survey.

“It is astounding that people can say things like that,” Renna said. ”That’s why you need this, why you need data − especially when what you are dealing with is not just ignorance: It is a concerted effort to erase transgende­r and nonbinary people.”

A ‘coordinate­d campaign that is good at confusing people’

Heng-Lehtinen says many of the anti-transgende­r policies in states are based on “fearmonger­ing” to “exploit the public’s relative unfamiliar­ity with transgende­r people.”

Some organizati­ons use names that appear to be legitimate and can mislead the public, Hoge said, citing one such example: The American College of Pediatrici­ans (ACPeds), which has a name similar to the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP).

AAP, which was founded in 1930 and has about 67,000 members, is a major medical associatio­n and one that supports gender-affirming care.

ACPeds, which was founded in 2002 and says it has about 600 members, has been designated an anti-LGBTQ hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. The group links gender incongruen­ce on its website with mental illness.

When asked to comment on whether the national transgende­r survey refutes claims made by ACPeds, past president Quentin Van Meter said the group supports the belief that “realigning the personal identity and physical body to accommodat­e an incongruen­t gender identity” in youths can cause harm.

Other major medical groups – from the American Medical Associatio­n to the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n – disagree and have lined up in support of gender-affirming care and against bills that criminaliz­e it in recent years.

Hoge says it is a pivotal time to call out entities that push debunked science. “There is a very coordinate­d and strategic campaign that is good at confusing people. You have these very confusing named organizati­ons that sound reputable,” she said. “But it’s connected to a larger movement that has strong ties to anti-LGBTQ sentiments.”

Misinforma­tion ‘dehumanize­s’ transgende­r people

Holmes left his South Carolina roots for Ohio in 2020. The Dayton resident says he has been fortunate to find resources to help with his transition, from medical to legal.

Believing people’s stories is crucial, Holmes says. He recalls his first meeting with an endocrinol­ogist who told him to “just talk” – which he did for almost an hour. The doctor then told him: “I believe you, and I’m going to help you.”

He also points to “misconcept­ions” about what it means to be transgende­r. “Who I am as a person is not the same as some of my other trans siblings.”

Holmes says he knows there are times when he is the first transgende­r person someone has met, and his motto is just to “be human to them.” He will hear a familiar response of “well I didn’t know.” His answer: “You aren’t supposed to know.”

That is why the national transgende­r survey is so significan­t, he said. Misinforma­tion “dehumanize­s us,” he said. “When we can come together and respect and value each other, this is what this does: We have people that are happy. If can make this path, this road a little bit easier for this person, let’s do it. Let people have experience­s they thought they could never have.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY ASHTON HOLMES ?? Ashton Holmes , a transgende­r man, is a fluency tutor for first graders and kindergart­eners in Dayton, Ohio. He says “people are satisfied when they are seen.”
PROVIDED BY ASHTON HOLMES Ashton Holmes , a transgende­r man, is a fluency tutor for first graders and kindergart­eners in Dayton, Ohio. He says “people are satisfied when they are seen.”

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