El Paso Times

Ban on puberty blockers and hormone therapy goes into effect next week

- William Melhado

A Texas law banning transgende­r youth from accessing puberty blockers and hormone therapy will go into effect next week after the state attorney general’s office filed to block a judge’s temporary injunction against Senate Bill 14.

In her decision Friday, state district court Judge Maria Cantú Hexsel wrote that SB 14 “interferes with Texas families’ private decisions and strips Texas parents … of the right to seek, direct, and provide medical care for their children.”

In response, the attorney general’s office filed an appeal with the Texas Supreme Court, a move that automatica­lly pauses Cantú Hexsel’s injunction and will allow the law to go into effect Sept. 1. The attorney general’s office said such medical treatments are “unproven” and “pushed by some activists in the medical and psychiatri­c profession­s” in a statement announcing the appeal Friday evening.

Texas lawmakers passed SB 14 during this year’s regular legislativ­e session, in addition to several other pieces of legislatio­n affecting the lives of LGBTQ+ people.

Texas families and doctors sued the state in July with the hope of blocking the law. They argued SB 14 violates the Texas Constituti­on because it strips parents’ rights to make decisions about their child’s health care and discrimina­tes against transgende­r youth by prohibitin­g access to this population specifical­ly.

Cantú Hexsel’s injunction would have blocked the state attorney general’s office, the Texas Medical Board and the Texas Health and Human Services Commission from enforcing the law. She wrote that transgende­r youth and their families would “suffer probable, imminent, and irreparabl­e injury” if SB 14 went into effect while the legal battle ensues. A trial is set to begin May 6.

The judge indicated the lawsuit would likely succeed. Agreeing with the plaintiffs, she said that SB 14 was unconstitu­tional because it violated parents’ rights to make decisions about their children, infringed on doctor’s freedom to practice medicine and discrimina­ted against transgende­r youth by withholdin­g access to health care.

“This Act was passed because of, and not in spite of, its impact on transgende­r adolescent­s, depriving them of necessary, safe, and effective medical treatment,” the judge wrote.

In a hearing last week, medical experts testified to the efficacy of transition-related care in alleviatin­g mental health issues associated with gender dysphoria — a medical term for the distress someone experience­s when their gender identity doesn’t match their body.

Defense attorneys called doctors and other experts to discredit the existing evidence that supports the use of puberty blockers and hormone treatments on transgende­r youth diagnosed with gender dysphoria. They argued the risks of these drugs — and transition-related surgeries, which are rarely performed on children — outweigh the benefits.

In the larger medical community, there is less debate over the use of these treatments. Leading medical associatio­ns like the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Medical Associatio­n support the use of transition­related care for people under 18.

Alex Sheldon, executive director of GLMA, an associatio­n of LGBTQ+ health profession­als that is one of the plaintiffs, hailed Cantú Hexsel’s ruling before the attorney general’s office appealed it.

“This ruling stands as a testament to the unwavering dedication of Texas families and the medical expertise of GLMA’s health profession­al members, who with each testimony have clearly demonstrat­ed that gender-affirming care is evidence-based, life-saving care,” Sheldon said in a statement Friday. “Although this was just one battle of many, we remain steadfast in our commitment to fight for the rights of trans youth and health care providers offering gender-affirming care in Texas and throughout the nation.”

Texas lawmakers joined 19 other states attempting to ban the use of transition-related care. The prohibitio­n is popular among Republican voters in Texas — over 85% of whom support some restrictio­ns on this health care, according to an April poll by the Texas Politics Project.

Similar to Texas’ law, restrictio­ns to transition-related care in other states have faced legal challenges in recent months.

In June, a federal judge ruled that Arkansas’ ban on gender-affirming care for minors is unconstitu­tional because it violates the due-process and equalprote­ction rights of transgende­r children and their families. Federal judges in Florida, Kentucky and Tennessee have also blocked those states’ laws from going into effect. An appeals court intervened to allow Tennessee to implement its ban, and the Kentucky federal judge lifted the injunction he issued, allowing the law to go into effect.

 ?? EVAN L'ROY/THE TEXAS TRIBUNE ?? A transgende­r pride flag sits on the desk of a lawmaker during debate on Senate Bill 14, which bans puberty blockers and hormone therapy for trans kids.
EVAN L'ROY/THE TEXAS TRIBUNE A transgende­r pride flag sits on the desk of a lawmaker during debate on Senate Bill 14, which bans puberty blockers and hormone therapy for trans kids.

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