Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Veterans Told To Look Outside The VA For Gender Dysphoria Treatment
The Department of Veteran Affairs said that, effective immediately, it will no longer offer medical treatment for gender dysphoria to veterans who are not already receiving the treatment from the VA or the Department of Defense. "If Veterans want to attempt to change their sex, they can do so on their own dime," VA Secretary Doug Collins said in a press release Monday announcing the new policy. (Jingnan, 3/17)
Two transgender service members are suing the Trump administration over a pair of executive orders targeting transgender Americans and their implementation by the U.S. military.聽The lawsuit filed Monday in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey by two transgender men ... argues that President Trump鈥檚 executive orders proclaiming the government recognizes only two sexes, male and female, and barring trans people from serving openly in the military subject transgender service members 鈥渢o unequal, harmful, and demeaning treatment.鈥澛(Migdon, 3/17)
麻豆女优 Health News: Her Case Changed Trans Care In Prison. Now Trump Aims To Reverse Course
In 2019, Cristina Iglesias filed a lawsuit that changed the course of treatment for herself and other transgender inmates in federal custody. Iglesias, a trans woman who had been incarcerated for more than 25 years, was transferred from a men鈥檚 prison to a women鈥檚 one in 2021. And in 2022, she reached a landmark settlement with the Federal Bureau of Prisons to receive gender-affirming surgery, which the agency said it had never provided for anyone in its custody. (Sable-Smith, 3/18)
Transgender adults who received gender-affirming hormone therapy had a significantly lower risk of moderate-to-severe depression over four years compared to those who did not receive such care, according to a new study published in the journal JAMA Network Open. ... The findings "support the mental health-promoting role of hormones" and their status as "a medically necessary treatment,鈥 said Sari Reisner, an associate professor of epidemiology at University of Michigan School of Public Health and one of the study鈥檚 authors. (Gao, 3/17)
Since the first day of his presidency, Donald Trump has targeted transgender communities with executive orders that attempt to limit access to medical care, restrict how people identify on government documents, curb gender-inclusive research, and more. Two months later, Trump鈥檚 directive to eliminate 鈥済ender ideology鈥 in particular is still reverberating through federal health agencies.聽(Gaffney, 3/18)