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Thursday, Jan 25 2024

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Ohio Senate Overrides Governor's Veto, Restricts Trans Care And Trans Athletes

Republican Gov. Mike DeWine had vetoed the bill, which bars doctors from prescribing gender care to people under 18, forces parental consent before diagnoses of gender dysphoria, and blocks trans girls from female sports. Also, in Missouri, a parents' bill of "rights" would limit bathroom choices.

The Ohio Senate voted Wednesday to override Gov. Mike DeWine's veto of legislation that restricts medical care for transgender minors and blocks transgender girls from female sports. The bill prohibits doctors from prescribing hormones, puberty blockers or gender reassignment surgery before patients turn 18 and requires mental health providers to get parental permission to diagnose and treat gender dysphoria. It also bans transgender girls and women from playing on female sports teams in high school and college. (BeMiller, 1/24)

Legislation seeking to create a 鈥減arents bill of rights鈥 in Missouri was amended in committee Tuesday morning to add prohibitions on transgender students accessing restrooms and locker rooms that align with their gender identity. A House hearing on standalone bills that sought to regulate school bathrooms took up the majority of a nearly nine-hour meeting last week.聽Missourians haven鈥檛 had a chance to testify on bathroom restrictions in the Senate this year, a fact that irked Democrats as the committee鈥檚 chairman 鈥 Republican Sen. Andrew Koenig of Manchester 鈥 briefly introduced the amendment. (Hanshaw, 1/24)

Expecting lawsuits over legislation to exclude transgender people from gender-specific spaces in Utah, the proposal鈥檚 sponsor in the Utah Senate substituted the House-approved bill on Wednesday to reduce where those restrictions would apply. After changing the legal definitions of 鈥渇emale鈥 and 鈥渕ale鈥 to exclude transgender people, the bill introduced by Morgan Republican Rep. Kera Birkeland would have barred them from entering sex-specific spaces, like restrooms and locker rooms, that affirm their gender identity. (Stern, 1/24)

Also 鈥

You鈥檒l often hear lawmakers, activists and pundits argue that many transgender people regret their decision to have gender-affirming surgeries 鈥 a belief that鈥檚 been fueling a wave of legislation that restricts access to gender-affirming health care. Gender-affirming care can include surgical procedures such as facial reconstruction, chest or 鈥渢op鈥 surgery, and genital or 鈥渂ottom鈥 surgery. But in an article we recently published in JAMA Surgery, we challenge the notion that transgender people often regret gender-affirming surgeries. Evidence suggests that less than 1% of transgender people who undergo gender-affirming surgery report regret. That proportion is even more striking when compared to the fact that 14.4% of the broader population reports regret after similar surgeries. (Barbee, Hassan and Liang, 1/22)

Transgender women, in particular those belonging to marginalized racial and ethnic groups, have disproportionately high rates of HIV. Yet so far, no standardized surveillance system has collected data that could provide insight into the factors that put people at higher risk for contracting the virus. (Gaffney and Merelli, 1/25)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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