The Island Packet (Sunday)

SC lawmakers pass teen’s trans restrictio­ns regardless of answers

- BY ANNA WILDER awilder@thestate.com

Despite conflictin­g evidence on whether puberty blockers for gender transition­s are dangerous or if gender transition surgeries even occur in South Carolina, a bill prohibitin­g both is headed toward the governor’s desk.

A number of statistics and statements such as “mutilation of children” and “transgende­rism ideologies being pushed” have been thrown around during the the “Help not Harm” bill (H. 4624) debate. But are these statements true?

Lawmakers from both sides of the aisle have cited evidence for and against gender transition procedures. Much of it conflictin­g with the other side, creating confusion. While some arguments have been rooted in difference­s of opinion, other reference facts that may misconstru­e the truth.

From the first week of session to the second-tolast, representa­tives and senators have been working to pass a bill that would prohibit anyone under 18 from receiving gender transition surgery or using puberty blockers for transition­ing.

The bill passed 27-8 Thursday in the Senate.

The latest version includes an amendment requiring public school administra­tors to let parents or legal guardians know if a minor goes by a pronoun not aligning with their sex or confirms their gender is inconsiste­nt with their sex.

Here’s five points that both sides disagree on, including some misleading informatio­n.

REGRET AFTER TRANSITION­ING

Republican­s in the House and Senate made multiple statements regarding those who decide to transition later regretting the decision, or even detransiti­oning.

The argument stems from the concern that children and teens are too developmen­tally naive to understand the complexity of transition­ing and what it will do to the body.

“I’m known as the Senator for the children,” state Sen. Katrina Shealy, RLexington, said to state Sen. Mia McLeod, I-Richland during debate. “I’m troubled in a lot of ways here because I’m torn. I’m torn because I know that we know we don’t need to have surgeries on children before they’re 18 years old, we know that. Children can make crazy decisions when they’re young.”

While some listed concerns, others cited statistics. State Sen. Josh Kimbrell, R-Spartanbur­g, cited an April 2021 survey, of 237 individual­s surveyed, 46 percent had undergone surgeries, two-thirds of the 237 people had undergone either a surgery or a hormone replacemen­t therapy. And 50 percent said afterward that their concerns before the procedure were not alleviated, but exacerbate­d or made worse.

Chase Glenn, Alliance for Full Acceptance Executive Director, said multiple studies contradict the high regret rate quoted by legislator­s.

“There are some trans adults who regret having gender confirmati­on surgery, but there are people who have regrets for all types of surgeries. If you look at regrets for knee replacemen­t, it’s actually higher than regret rates for gender confirmati­on surgery,” Glenn wrote over text.

According to the National Institute of Health, a 2021 study found an extremely low prevalence of regret in transgende­r patients after gender surgery. Out of 27 studies, pooling 7,928 transgende­r patients who underwent any type of gender surgery, the pooled prevalence of regret was 1%.

Regret for knee surgery in a 2020 study was 18%, according to the NIH.

65 “GENDER TRANSITION­ING” CLINICS IN SOUTH CAROLINA?

On the House floor Jan. 17, Rep. Josiah Magnuson. R-Spartanbur­g, said South Carolina has 65 gender transition­ing clinics.

“That has actually more than doubled since 2022 when there was only 31. This is big business, a lot of places are opening new clinics, and many have opened in this past year alone,” Magnuson said.

Magnuson told The State he was referencin­g the Campaign for Southern Equality website. It cited 65 different medical facilities, some hospitals, some OBGYN offices, some general doctors and a plethora of others.

Magnuson said not all of these places are necessaril­y providing drugs or surgeries, Some of them offer counseling, he said, but all were pushing for and friendly towards transgende­r issues, he said.

“This is a big business for certain medical profession­als who have a different world view,” Magnuson said.

However, that doesn’t mean these are “gender clinics,” advocates say.

“The list Rep. Magnuson provided you is a list transaffir­ming providers in the state,” Glenn said. “This is simply a list of providers who are affirming of trans folks — not necessaril­y those who provide trans what is called “gender affirming care” in this legislatio­n. As a trans man, I can tell you that I have had providers turn me away once they found out I was trans and there are others I’ve had to educate about my individual needs as a trans person.”

Glenn added that organizati­ons like Campaign for Southern Equality and AFFA publish lists of providers that they know are safe and knowledgea­ble to provide for all types of care regarding the trans community, including gender affirming care.

MEDICAL PROFESSION­ALS PUSHING DRUG

Along with other legislator­s, Magnuson and Rep. Jordan Pace, R-Berkeley, both members of the House Freedom Caucus, said on the House floor that this is a business people profit from.

In addition, representa­tives stated that doctors will give the drugs to patients immediatel­y after being asked. Patients go into a doctors office, want to transition, and doctors just hand them over.

“This particular wing of the medical industry is incredibly profitable,” Pace said on the House floor Jan. 17. “If someone is making their living by sterilizin­g children and chopping off their body parts and the worst they get is a five-year suspension and a $5,000 fine, then they have been shown a great amount of mercy from the state, when it should have been much, much worse.”

Pace then went on to say the procedures can be millions of dollars per patient.

Dr. Elizabeth Mack, a pediatrici­an in Charleston, said no one is walking in and getting medicine immediatel­y, and this notion is considered medical malpractic­e.

Mack said the care as dictated by the guidelines involves mental health evaluation and care, and in many cases, this is the case for years before medication is prescribed. Some transgende­r individual­s decide to not use hormones or get the surgery.

“There is not profit in this,” Mack wrote over text. “This state has chased off several physicians who provided gender affirming care. Similarly this is not fun for any family or patient to walk this walk. The bullying these families experience such as what is happening at the state house is dangerous. These decisions must be left to families and physicians in the exam room.”

HOW MANY TRANSGENDE­R YOUTH ARE IN THE STATE?

Few studies have shown how many transgende­r youth are in South Carolina. As of 2020, according to the Williams Institute out of UCLA, there is an estimated 2,150 trans youth, ages 13-17.

Lawmakers said there has been an increasing number of transgende­r individual­s.

While many lawmakers didn’t cite specific research, the New York Times reported in 2022 that the number of young people who identify as transgende­r had nearly doubled in recent years. According to a report by Williams Institute, it was estimated that 1.4 percent of 13- to 17-year-olds and 1.3 percent of 18- to 24year-olds were transgende­r, which was a rise from the 0.7 percent in 2017.

Experts told the New York Times that “young people increasing­ly have the language and social acceptance to explore their gender identities, whereas older adults may feel more constraine­d.”

IS THE PROCESS IRREVERSIB­LE?

“No studies have attempted to determine whether the effects of puberty blockers as currently prescribed for gender dysphoria are fully reversible,” Sen. Richard Cash, R-Anderson, said on the Senate floor Thursday.

Puberty blockers are used to put puberty on pause. They are used in a variety of medical circumstan­ces, including for children who have precocious puberty — puberty that starts before it’s supposed to. They are also used to treat cancer, endometrio­sis and other health issues.

The drugs are only given to transgende­r or gender non-nonconform­ing kids after they start puberty, never before, said Michael O’Brien, a pediatrici­an in the Lowcountry.

Also, the drugs are reversible, O’Brien said. The only major long-term side effect of these drug is having a short stature. “You might not be as tall as you would otherwise,” O’Brien said. “It’s not super significan­t because puberty resumes either the moment you stop taking that drug, or once you start taking the hormones of the opposite sex.”

Mack also confirmed the drugs are reversible. When someone stops taking them, puberty resumes where it left off, she said.

“Suicide is not reversible and gender affirming care is lifesaving. I see this in my practice in the pediatric ICU,” Mack wrote over text.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion approved puberty blockers in 1993, but hasn’t approved them for gender transition uses.

Multiple Republican­s, including Magnuson, said there comes to a point in the process where the child is sterile, and can no longer bear children.

“The physical body of that child is changed in such a way that they are no longer the way that god created them, they are something that is not the same,” Magnuson said, adding it’s about protecting children.

“The body still changes. The body keeps on growing, moving, developing. I am not convinced these hormones don’t effect the body somehow. I don’t think they effect everyone the same way. But I’m not going to risk it. ” Penry Gustafson, R-Kershaw said. “I just don’t think there is a medical consensus saying there are not going to be long term consequenc­es to taking these specific hormonal drugs. I know there is no procedures going on in South Carolina. Our hospitals have told us. We have some smart doctors here.”

WERE TRANSITION SURGERIES HAPPENING FOR YOUTH IN SC?

Lawmakers and bill opponents brought up numerous times that gender transition surgeries were not happening in South Carolina.

In 2023, pediatrici­ans testified to lawmakers that no doctors in South Carolina perform gendertran­sition surgeries on minors. And recent reporting by ProPublica found that due to political pressures surroundin­g transgende­r health care, the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) stopped performing gender affirming care for minors.

But Republican­s continued to emphasize they needed to protect children, and if it wasn’t a problem currently, it was a preventati­ve measure to ensure it never would be one.

“I believe the question of surgical procedures may not be a point of immediate considerat­ion today,” said Sen. Daniel Verdin, R-Laurens, and head of the Senate Medical Affairs Committee. “We respond to our constituen­cies. For this matter, if you put it out there in a polling question ... if you put it alongside taxes, if you put it alongside restructur­ing, if you put it alongside paying our school teachers and our law enforcemen­t officers, it’s up there, it’s above them all.”

 ?? JOSEPH BUSTOS jbustos@thestate.com ?? Demonstrat­ors speaking against the proposed “Help not Harm” bill, which would prevent a minor’s gender transition, wait outside the South Carolina Senate chambers at the State House on Wednesday, May 1, 2024. The bill passed Thursday 27-8
JOSEPH BUSTOS jbustos@thestate.com Demonstrat­ors speaking against the proposed “Help not Harm” bill, which would prevent a minor’s gender transition, wait outside the South Carolina Senate chambers at the State House on Wednesday, May 1, 2024. The bill passed Thursday 27-8

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