The Guardian (USA)

Ohio senate overrides governor and blocks trans youth from receiving care

- Erum Salam

Ohio’s state senate has voted to override the governor Mike DeWine’s veto of a bill that bans transgende­r minors from receiving gender-affirming care, and their ability to play on sports teams, on Wednesday.

The bill, HB68, prohibits doctors from providing gender-affirming care – such as puberty blockers, hormone therapy or surgeries – to trans youths. It also blocks transgende­r female student athletes from participat­ing on girls’ sports teams.

Notably, the bill includes a grandfathe­r clause allowing trans people already receiving care to continue doing so.

In a departure from his party, DeWine vetoed the bill in December 2023, stating in a press conference at the time that it was up to parents to make medical decisions for the children – not the government.

“Parents are making decisions about the most precious thing in their life, their child, and none of us should underestim­ate the gravity and the difficulty of those decisions,” DeWine said at the time. “Many parents have told me that their child would be dead today if they had not received the treatment they received from an Ohio children’s hospital.”

A week later, DeWine proposed other rules to regulate gender-affirming care – which some advocates previously said “are, in some ways, worse than the proposed statute”. Those administra­tive rules would “go well beyond” the scope of HB68.

“I believe we can address a number of goals in House Bill 68 by administra­tive rules that will have a better chance of surviving judicial review and being adopted,” the governor said in December 2023 while announcing his veto.

“I share the legislatur­e’s concerns about clinics that may pop up and try to sell patients inadequate or even ideologica­l treatments.”

DeWine continued: “None of [the families] that I talked to talked about surgery. That’s not where they were going in the discussion. And I think that’s, frankly, a fallacy that’s out there that, you know, this goes right to surgery. It just doesn’t. All the children’s hospitals say that we don’t do surgeries.”

Earlier this month, the Republican­controlled state legislatur­e revived the bill and the state senate voted in its favor 23-9, overriding the governor’s decision and pushing the bill through.

When the bill becomes law in 90 days, Ohio will join at least 22 other states that are either restrictin­g or outright banning gender-affirming care, according to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

A federal judge ruled an Arkansas law banning gender-affirming care for minors violated the US constituti­on. Similar laws have been blocked in Georgia, Indiana, Idaho, Texas and Montana, but other states like Ohio are unaffected by these rulings.

As a result, healthcare providers who violate these laws could face disciplina­ry action from their licensing boards.

Gender-affirming care is not offered to young patients without the consent of a parent or guardian in Ohio hospitals. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the American Medical Associatio­n (AMA) also formally opposed government­al intrusion into the practice of medicine.

AMA underscore­d that gender-affirming care is “medically necessary, evidence-based care that improves the physical and mental health of transgende­r and gender-diverse people.”

 ?? Photograph: Stephen Zenner/Sopa Images/LightRocke­t via Getty Images ?? A protester holds a sign outside the Ohio statehouse on 23 June 2021.
Photograph: Stephen Zenner/Sopa Images/LightRocke­t via Getty Images A protester holds a sign outside the Ohio statehouse on 23 June 2021.

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