The Columbus Dispatch

California lawmaker ends bill to limit intersex surgeries

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. – A California lawmaker is withdrawin­g a bill that would have banned some medically unnecessar­y surgeries on intersex children until they are old enough to participat­e in the decision.

State Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat from San Francisco, has tried for three years to ban some types of surgeries on young children born with intersex characteri­stics. That refers to people with genitalia, chromosome­s or reproducti­ve organs that don’t fit typical definition­s for male or female bodies, like people born with both ovaries and male genitals or incomplete­ly formed genitals that can be ambiguous.

Often, these irreversib­le surgeries are performed on infants. Wiener’s bill would have banned some types of these surgeries until a child was 12 years old and could participat­e in the decision. But Tuesday, Wiener announced the legislatio­n “does not appear to have a viable path forward.”

The bill has been stuck in the Committee on Business, Profession­s and Economic Developmen­t amid opposition from the California Medical Associatio­n and some parents who say they should be able to make medical decisions for their children. The bill stalled in committee last year after Wiener rejected some proposed amendments.

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