South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Lawmakers target puberty blockers in bill that would strip doctors of licenses

- News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E — Two House Republican­s filed a proposal Friday that would make it illegal for doctors to provide treatments such as puberty blockers and hormone therapy to transgende­r minors.

Also, a Senate Republican filed a bill that similarly seeks to prevent such treatments.

The bills (HB 1421 and SB 254), filed by House Health & Human Services Chairman Randy Fine, R-Brevard County, Rep. Ralph Massullo, R-Lecanto, and Sen. Clay Yarborough, R-Jacksonvil­le, are the latest in a series of moves by lawmakers and Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administra­tion aimed at transgende­r people.

The Florida Board of Medicine and the Florida Board of Osteopathi­c Medicine last month moved forward with rules that would prevent doctors from providing such treatments to minors.

But the bills would go further by placing a prohibitio­n in state law. The House version would require that doctors lose their licenses if they commit violations, while the Senate bill could lead to criminal charges for a person who “willfully or actively participat­es in a violation.”

The House bill also would make changes including preventing health insurers and HMOs from providing coverage for treatments such as puberty blockers, hormone therapy and gender-affirming surgery and would largely block people from changing the sex listed on their birth certificat­es. Both bills would bar state agencies and local government­s from spending money on such treatments.

The bills, which were filed as lawmakers prepare to start the annual legislativ­e session Tuesday, will add fuel to debates that have repeatedly flared in Florida and numerous other Republican-controlled states about treatment for gender dysphoria. The federal government defines gender dysphoria clinically as “significan­t distress that a person may feel when sex or gender assigned at birth is not the same as their identity.”

“Parents have the right to raise their children as they see fit, and government interventi­on should be a last resort,” Senate President Kathleen Passidomo, R-Naples, said in a prepared statement Friday. “Unfortunat­ely, all too often we are hearing about treatments for gender dysphoria being administer­ed to children, often very young children. That’s just wrong, and we need to step in and make sure it isn’t happening in our state.”

But the LGBTQ-advocacy group Equality Florida issued a news release about the House bill that said it would “strip families of their medical freedom, put government in control of insurance coverage decisions, and codify a ban on transgende­r people being legally recognized as themselves.”

“Transgende­r people are neighbors, friends, family members,” Nikole Parker, Equality Florida director of transgende­r equality, said in a prepared statement. “We exist and we matter. This bill to rip away lifesaving health care, shred i nsurance coverage and bar birth certificat­e access will cost lives.”

F i n e ’s committee last month held a panel discussion that included doctors, researcher­s and other people opposed to gender-affirming care for transgende­r minors. At the time, Fine indicated he would file legislatio­n on the issue. Massullo, meanwhile, is a dermatolog­ist.

“I will tell you this. I say these panels are often a predicate for what’s to come. That’s exactly what today was. And I promise you, you will like the bill,” Fine said at the end of the Feb. 21 meeting.

Equality Florida described the speakers at the committee as a “sham panel.” It also accused DeSantis of using the issue “in his quest to build a right wing presidenti­al resume.”

“This one-sided discussion, which relied on fringe speakers from social media and from outside of Florida and the U.S., does not change the broad scientific consensus from our nation’s lead

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