Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

W.Va. gender-care ban tweaked

Exemption added for youths deemed to be at risk of suicide

- LEAH WILLINGHAM

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — West Virginia’s Republican supermajor­ity House of Delegates swiftly OK’d a proposal to add mental health exemptions to a bill that would ban certain health care for transgende­r youth during the last day of its 60-day legislativ­e session Saturday.

The chamber approved changes made by the state Senate late Friday that would allow some transgende­r youth to continue receiving medical interventi­ons, including hormone therapy, if they are at risk of self-harm or suicide.

The bill now heads back to the Senate for final approval. Republican Gov. Jim Justice has not taken a public stance on the measure.

Lawmakers in West Virginia and other states advancing bans on transgende­r health care for youth and young adults often characteri­ze gender-affirming treatments as potentiall­y dangerous in the long term.

But every major medical organizati­on, including the American Medical Associatio­n, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n, supports gender-affirming care for youths.

House members — who passed a much more restrictiv­e version of the proposal last month that included no mental health exemptions — voted to approve the amendment in a unanimous voice vote with little discussion. The amended bill then passed 88-10, with all ‘no’ votes coming from the body’s shrinking delegation of Democrats.

The only lawmaker who spoke on the floor prior to the vote was Democratic Del. Ric Griffith, who cited data from peer-reviewed medical journals arguing that hormone therapy and other interventi­ons can drasticall­y reduce psychologi­cal distress and suicidal ideation for transgende­r adolescent­s.

“We talk a lot about, ‘Parents know what’s best for their children,’” he said. “This is a fairly narrow allowance when a child could potentiall­y be suicidal.”

The rate of suicide ideation, or having suicidal thoughts or ideas, for transgende­r youth in Virginia is three times higher than the rate for all youth in the state, according to research complied by WVU Medicine physicians using West Virginia Youth Risk Behavior Survey data.

West Virginia’s bill would outlaw those under 18 from being prescribed hormone therapy and fully reversible medication for suspending the physical changes of puberty.

But the change approved by House lawmakers Saturday — proposed by Senate Majority Leader Tom Takubo, a trained physician — would allow young people to access puberty blockers and hormone therapy if they are experienci­ng severe gender dysphoria, under certain circumstan­ces.

Gender dysphoria is defined by medical profession­als as severe psychologi­cal distress experience­d by those whose gender identity differs from their sex assigned at birth.

Sen. Mike Maroney, a trained physician and chair of the Senate Health and Human Resources Committee, said lawmakers would set “a dangerous precedent” by disregardi­ng medical research in favor of political gain.

The legislatio­n includes a ban on gender-affirming surgery for minors and hormonal therapy could not be provided to minors before the age of puberty, things medical profession­als emphasize do not happen in West Virginia.

With Takubo’s change, a person under 18 would have to be diagnosed with severe gender dysphoria by at least two medical or mental health providers to gain access to medication therapy. One would have to be a mental health provider or adolescent medicine specialist.

The dosage must be the lowest possible necessary to “treat the psychiatri­c condition and not for purposes of gender alteration,” according to the bill.

Providers must be specifical­ly trained to diagnose and treat severe gender dysphoria in adolescent­s and would have to provide written testimony that medical interventi­ons are necessary to prevent or limit self-harm or the possibilit­y of self-harm. The minor’s parents or guardians would be required to give written consent to the treatments.

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