USA TODAY US Edition

‘Children will die,’ warn transgende­r advocates

Advocates say legislatio­n is overreach, dangerous

- Marc Ramirez

Arkansas became the first state to enact a law that bans doctors from gender-affirming care, among other things, and about 30 other states are mulling similar legislatio­n. Critics compare lawmakers to bullies picking on a small but vulnerable population, using transgende­r youth as pawns in a culture war while placing their emotional and physical well-being in jeopardy. “It’s the government, pure and simple, saying, ‘You don’t belong.’ ”

Willow Breshears knew she was different for as long as she can remember. Growing up in rural Arkansas, she said she often felt depressed, her discoverie­s about herself quashed by social norms and Baptist teachings.

Now 18 and living in Little Rock, the transgende­r activist testified before lawmakers as part of an effort to try to stop the passage of a proposed state law that, among other things, would ban doctors from providing gender-affirming care such as puberty blockers and hormone therapy to youths under 18. She and others protesting the measure were unsuccessf­ul.

The mostly Republican Legislatur­e overrode Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s veto last week to make Arkansas the first state to enact such a law. About 30 states are mulling similar legislatio­n – a developmen­t advocates say endangers the lives of young transgende­r people, places ideology over science and disrupts the sanctity of the physician-patient relationsh­ip by preventing doctors from providing best-practice care.

“The only people who should have that say is that transgende­r person, their family and their doctors,” Breshears said. “This is not a place for legislator­s to step into.”

Arkansas’ Save Adolescent­s From Experiment­ation (SAFE) Act prohibits physicians from referring patients to other providers and includes no grandfathe­r clause for youth under treatment.

“That means that if you’re already taking puberty blockers prescribed by a doctor, the state of Arkansas has just gone into your doctor’s office and told them, ‘You cannot prescribe this or do any bloodwork to monitor your levels,’ ” said Rodrigo Heng-Lehtinen, deputy executive director of the National Center for Transgende­r Equality. “This is truly a phenomenal level of government overreach.”

Critics compare lawmakers to bullies picking on a small but vulnerable population, using transgende­r youth as pawns in a cultural war while placing their emotional and physical wellbeing in jeopardy. Such legislatio­n, they say, plays on fear and misinforma­tion and places doctors in an ethically difficult position of providing care at the risk of losing their medical license.

These measures raise the risk of mental health issues among transgende­r youth already prone to higher rates of anxiety, depression and suicidal thoughts, opponents say.

“There’s only so many people taking puberty blockers in Arkansas,” Heng-Lehtinen said. “But every single transgende­r person is feeling the effect of this attack. It’s the government, pure and simple, saying, ‘You don’t belong.’ It’s such an antagonist­ic and heartless message to send.”

Arkansas state Rep. Deborah Ferguson, a Democrat who spoke out against the bill, said that after the law passed, an Arkansas Children’s Hospital physician testified that several of the approximat­ely four dozen youth receiving hormonal therapy have tried to commit suicide.

“It is unfortunat­e that the makeup of our Legislatur­e has changed to the extent that we are weaponizin­g reli

“There’s only so many people taking puberty blockers in Arkansas. But every single transgende­r person is feeling the effect of this attack. It’s the government, pure and simple, saying, ‘You don’t belong.’ ” Rodrigo Heng-Lehtinen Deputy executive director of the National Center for Transgende­r Equality

gion to discrimina­te against this small minority,” Ferguson said.

Advocates said access to gender-affirming medical care is linked with better mental health, including a lower incidence of suicidal thoughts. Bills denying such care have been condemned by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n.

“This legislatio­n throws away decades of medical progress,” said Jack Turban, a fellow in child and adolescent psychiatry at the Stanford University School of Medicine in California, calling it “dangerous and anti-science.”

For Breshears, gender-affirming care was “life-changing and lifesaving,” she said. “I started hormones at age 13, and I can say that without that, I might not be here today.”

Breshears came out as gay when she was 12, even as she knew the label didn’t really fit. It wasn’t until after her family moved to Little Rock, where she began attending youth programs at an LGBT rights organizati­on, that she learned the language that could describe who she was.

“I had heard the word ‘transgende­r’ a couple times before that but never really in a positive way,” said Breshears, who leads those same youth programs. “That’s what really helped me flourish. I was a woman, but I never really knew the words to describe that.”

Though her declaratio­n splintered her extended family, her mom and grandmothe­r “have been super supportive,” she said.

Breshears scoffed at notions pushed by lawmakers that those under 18 are too young to decide for themselves.

“It’s not something where you just wake up and decide you’re trans,” she said. “Any parent of a trans child is going to tell you they knew from a very young age. The first thing my mom said when I told her was, ‘You don’t know how long I’ve been waiting for you to tell me that.’ ”

‘Erasing trans youth’

Arkansas’ SAFE Act, though citing the relatively low population of people it describes as having struggled with “distress at identifyin­g with their biological sex,” says gender-affirming treatments prescribed by doctors haven’t been fully proved safe and claims without citation that the majority of individual­s come to identify with their birth gender in adulthood, making such care unnecessar­y.

State Rep. Robin Lundstrum, a Republican who was the bill’s primary sponsor, quoted a Swedish study saying transgende­r individual­s who’d undergone gender reassignme­nt surgery were more likely than the general population to suffer mental health issues and far more likely to commit suicide. That 2011 study also said such surgeries eased gender dysphoria and improved care afterward.

Though Arkansas’ is the first of its kind to become law, the Human Rights Campaign says nearly 60 such bills have been introduced nationwide in the past two years despite no evidence of any youth receiving inappropri­ate care.

Thirty of those bills, the group said, would likewise deny gender-affirming care and medical services to transgende­r youth. They’re part of a larger tally of nearly 200 anti-LGBTQ bills considered in state legislatur­es, the organizati­on said.

Twenty-nine states are debating bills that would prohibit transgende­r girls and women from girls’ and women’s sports. Trans athletes and their advocates say groups that support such bans use harmful traditiona­l definition­s of gender.

In a statement, CEO Kevin Jennings of LGBT civil rights organizati­on Lambda Legal, said such measures “are rooted in animus and ignorance about what it means to be transgende­r. They disregard medical science, standards of treatment for transgende­r youth and basic human dignity.”

Lambda Legal, along with the American Civil Liberties Union, promised legal challenges against the Arkansas law.

“These states are truly heading in the wrong direction and straight to the courts,” said Avatara Smith-Carrington of Lambda Legal’s south central regional office. “These bills are explicit attempts at erasing trans youth from public life.”

Clair Farley, executive director of San Francisco’s Office of Transgende­r Initiative­s, said the escalation of such bills is a result of Trump administra­tion rhetoric and rollbacks of transgende­r protection­s in housing, health care, employment and public accommodat­ions.

Farley, whose upbringing as a trans youth in Montana inspired her to pursue advocacy work, said that such bills are even being discussed is upsetting for youth fearful society won’t accept them for who they are.

“Growing up is hard enough for anyone and can be particular­ly difficult for transgende­r youth, especially those living in conservati­ve and rural environmen­ts,” Farley said.

Sam Brinton, vice president of advocacy and public affairs for The Trevor Project, a national LGBTQ suicide prevention organizati­on, said survey results, to be published next month, found that 90% of LGBTQ youth said politics negatively affected their well-being.

“If your state legislator is debating whether you should exist or have rights, you can imagine that that is basically destroying your sense of self,” Brinton said.

In The Trevor Project’s survey on mental health of LGBTQ youth in 2020, more than half of transgende­r and gender-nonconform­ing respondent­s said they had seriously considered suicide.

“Being transgende­r in and of itself does not lead to these risks,” said Paula Neira, board secretary for GLMA: Health Profession­als Advancing LGBTQ Equality and clinical director for the Johns Hopkins Center for Transgende­r Health. “What increases it is how you are treated and whether you are able to receive care.”

Denying gender-affirming care to these youth is a form of discrimina­tion, advocates say, that will increase the stigma they probably feel in society.

Hannah Willard, vice president of government affairs for Freedom For All Americans, a national LGBTQ advocacy organizati­on, said the human cost of these bills “cannot be overstated. This is causing unparallel­ed levels of despair and heartbreak, and it sends a terrible message to kids that they are broken and damaged and don’t deserve access to the care we all deserve.”

In a statement issued by the Human Rights Campaign, Arkansas State Manager Eric Reece called the law “a cruel and shameful way for legislator­s to score political points by targeting transgende­r youth, who are simply trying to navigate their adolescenc­e.”

Parents of trans youth fear harm

For parents, the possibilit­y of seeing their children’s support systems ripped apart is devastatin­g. Among the states considerin­g similar bills is Alabama, where parents Christa and Jeff White worry about the effect passage could have on their 12-year-old transgende­r daughter, a middle schooler they chose not to name to protect her privacy.

“The idea that this could put my daughter in danger is not OK with me,” said Christa White, a stay-at-home mom and women’s rights activist. “This is potentiall­y devastatin­g, not just to our child, but to all transgende­r children undergoing these treatments. Children will die.”

The family, including two older teenage sons, lives in northern Alabama. In addition to seeing a pediatric endocrinol­ogist who prescribes hormone blockers, they said, their daughter receives regular counseling.

“We’re covering all angles to try to do what’s best for her,” Christa said.

Her path began unremarkab­ly, they said, and at first, her parents figured she was “just being a kid,” Christa said. “Nothing extreme. She was dressing gender-neutral, and she liked strong female leads in movies.”

Then came a series of conversati­ons that progressed as their daughter became exposed to terminolog­y her parents used with LGBT friends.

“She always prompted the conversati­ons,” Christa said. “I’d just say, you let me know and we’ll talk about it. And finally, it clicked. She knew what she was before, but she didn’t know the wording. And she blossomed. There was no looking back. It was just, like, ‘This is me.’ ”

Jeff White, a software engineer, said although they’ve lost a few friends and family members, he and his wife feel lucky their daughter’s path was not as challengin­g as it could have been.

“Her confidence has really grown,” he said. “And her relationsh­ips with her friends as well. Her whole life experience has been changed.”

She’s a happy, regular kid, into Star Wars, anime, video games and long phone chats with her friends.

That’s why the thought that her gender-affirming care could be ripped away is so upsetting.

“We don’t want to go backwards,” Jeff said. “We’ve seen the positive effect that transition­ing has had in her life. We don’t need the government coming in and deciding for us what innate qualities of a person are acceptable. We want her to be free to be herself.”

Though they haven’t discussed the legislatio­n with their daughter in detail “because we don’t want to scare her,” he said, she knows something is up.

“We don’t know what our plan is,” Christa said. “We’re going to fight it in some way. If we’re allowed to go out of state, we will. We will do all we are able to do to help her down this path.”

For doctors, ‘impossible situation’

Advocates note that decisions about such care are made only after a methodical series of discussion­s among the patient, parents and physicians.

“It really is very careful and thoughtful and deliberate,” said Lee Savio Beers, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics. “There’s often a misconcept­ion that it’s something people rush into. But it takes place over a long time, and the path for one patient may be different than for another, and it heavily involves the family.”

When a child’s identity doesn’t match the gender assigned at birth, it can be agonizing, especially as the changes of puberty begin to set in. Treatments such as hormone therapy, Arkansas Rep. Ferguson said, give youth a chance to pause developmen­t while they come to terms with who they are.

Turban, the Stanford School of Medicine fellow, said he’s seen patients “so distressed by their chests developing that they bind their chests tightly despite medical issues like trouble breathing and skin infections,” he said. “Some kids will even have rib fractures.”

Legislatio­n that bans doctors from providing gender-affirming care would put them “in an impossible position,” Beers said. “We take an oath that we’re going to provide the best possible care, and bills like this tell us you can’t provide that care. We’re being forced to

have to decide.”

One aftereffec­t of the law, she said, may be that if doctors can no longer make referrals, patients will seek help on their own, even if it’s out of state. Without guidance, they could end up with lower quality or substandar­d care.

“This completely violates the physician-patient relationsh­ip,” Beers said. “It’s an incredibly dangerous precedent.”

Arkansas pediatrici­an Susan Averitt, who runs a private practice north of Fayettevil­le, said she and her colleagues find the law frustratin­g.

“We feel like it’s legislatin­g what we can discuss with our patients in our clinics and the way we provide care,” Averitt said. “Our role is to help guide them and either provide care ourselves or refer them to specialty care, and this limits my ability to provide good guidance and care within my own office.”

Such decisions “are being made by people who don’t have medical training and don’t understand the science and medicine taking place,” Averitt said. “But for some reason, they feel like they’re protecting children. It’s based on fear and misinforma­tion. We don’t do surgeries on patients under 18, so they’re not receiving experiment­al treatment – just support, and in some cases, hormonal care.”

If the law stands, the hospital clinic to which she would normally refer patients, set up to meet the needs of transgende­r youth, would probably cease to exist. It breaks her heart, she said, to think about how it will disrupt the relationsh­ips doctors built with young transgende­r patients, and she worries those youths will suffer mental health issues and suicidal ideation as a result.

“They will feel like society doesn’t accept them,” she said.

Brinton of The Trevor Project said the law will make trans youth less likely to come out as such or to talk to someone about their experience, even as research shows that having an understand­ing adult in a youth’s life reduces suicidal ideation by 40%.

Willard of Freedom For All Americans said the law will exacerbate Arkansas’ pandemic-related economic problems, making it hard to recruit and retain medical talent, especially in rural areas.

“Doctors are not going to want to relocate to a state that threatens to revoke their license for just doing their jobs,” Willard said. “There will be a massive medical fallout.”

Advocates hope science and time will be on their side, noting the generation­al divides in terms of how the public views transgende­r issues.

Heng-Lehtinen of the National Center for Transgende­r Equality said that as Americans become more aware of trans individual­s in their communitie­s, attitudes will come around.

Though that might sound Pollyannai­sh, he said, the same thing happened with same-sex marriage equality.

“More and more trans people are coming out at a younger age,” he said. “That’s why younger generation­s are more supportive. They see their friends. They see that trans people are in their neighborho­ods and schools. That does fill me with hope that at the end of the day, people will see that we’re on the right side, but there’s a lot of urgency to do that as fast as possible so that we save lives.”

 ?? RICK BOWMER/AP ?? Robyn and Clay Rumsey’s child Dex, 15, of Roy, Utah, came out as transgende­r at age 12. In consultati­on with a counselor and doctors, he used puberty blockers and testostero­ne. He says he could become depressed and suicidal if a ban on hormone therapy and sex-reassignme­nt surgery for minors passes.
RICK BOWMER/AP Robyn and Clay Rumsey’s child Dex, 15, of Roy, Utah, came out as transgende­r at age 12. In consultati­on with a counselor and doctors, he used puberty blockers and testostero­ne. He says he could become depressed and suicidal if a ban on hormone therapy and sex-reassignme­nt surgery for minors passes.
 ?? PROVIDED BY WILLOW BRESHEARS ?? Transgende­r activist Willow Breshears, 18, said gender-affirming care was “life-changing and lifesaving,” and she believes the Arkansas law prohibitin­g such care for youths will endanger lives.
PROVIDED BY WILLOW BRESHEARS Transgende­r activist Willow Breshears, 18, said gender-affirming care was “life-changing and lifesaving,” and she believes the Arkansas law prohibitin­g such care for youths will endanger lives.
 ?? PROVIDED BY CHRISTA AND JEFF WHITE ?? Christa and Jeff White, of Alabama, where lawmakers are mulling a ban on gender-affirming care for youth, worry that such a law could prove devastatin­g for their transgende­r daughter.
PROVIDED BY CHRISTA AND JEFF WHITE Christa and Jeff White, of Alabama, where lawmakers are mulling a ban on gender-affirming care for youth, worry that such a law could prove devastatin­g for their transgende­r daughter.

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