Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Survey Shines Light On Health Care Discrimination Against LGBTQ+ People
A new survey found that LGBTQ Americans are twice as likely to experience discrimination in their health care. The survey, conducted by 麻豆女优, noted that members of the LGBTQ community have historically faced disparities while receiving health care, including challenges to accessing mental and physical health care. (Irwin, 4/2)
The Department of Justice (DOJ) sued the state of Utah and its corrections department on Tuesday over alleged violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) for discriminating against an incarcerated transgender woman. The Utah Department of Corrections failed to grant the woman, who is not named in court documents, equal access to health care services and imposed 鈥渦nnecessary barriers鈥 to treatment for gender dysphoria, according to聽a complaint聽filed Tuesday in Utah district court. (Migdon, 4/2)
transgender man鈥檚 medical providers repeatedly used his birth name, even though he changed it during his transition. A doctor insulted a Latina woman while she was receiving mental health care, telling her she 鈥渘eeds to change her beliefs now鈥 that she鈥檚 living in America. In parts of rural Colorado, there are so few health care providers, and so much turnover, people of color and LGBTQ people struggle to find providers from a similar background who can understand their needs. (Flowers, 4/3)
New Hampshire鈥檚 independent child advocate is opposing a set of Republican-backed bills that she says would harm LGBTQ+ youth. State lawmakers have put forward a series of bills this year targeting transgender students鈥 access to school sports, bathrooms and gender-affirming medical care, and requiring schools to disclose information about sexual orientation or gender identity to parents who ask. (Cuno-Booth, 4/2)