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In January in many states, the start of a new year also means the start of a new legislative session. For LGBTQ youth and their families, these sessions can create a significant amount of anxiety, as legislators in several states introduce legislation to curtail the rights of this population. In some cases, legislators have attempted to criminalize the provision of gender-affirming medical care to the trans and gender-diverse adolescents that many of us provide care to on a daily basis. As pediatricians, we have an important role in advocating for legislation at the local, state, and federal level that improves the lives of the LGBTQ patients we serve.

2020 started on a positive note for LGBTQ children and adolescents, with Virginia becoming the 20th state to ban conversion therapy for minors. Legislation was introduced in several other states to prohibit this practice, including Kentucky, Missouri, and Ohio, and but they ultimately died in committee or were never referred. While there is not yet a nationwide ban on conversion therapy, legislation was introduced in the last three U.S. Congress sessions to ban this harmful practice. In June 2020, the Supreme Court decision in Bostock vs. Clayton County stated that employers could not fire an employee solely because of that person’s sexual orientation and/or gender identity.

However, 19 separate bills were introduced in 2020 alone in states across the United States that would prohibit gender-affirming care for adolescents under age 18.1 Many of these bills also would make the provision of gender-affirming medical care codified as felony child abuse, with loss of licensure, fines and/or jail time a possibility for physicians who prescribe hormones or puberty blockers for gender-affirming care to minors. Fortunately, these bills either died in committee or never had a hearing. However, legislation has been prefiled in several states for their 2021 session to again attempt to prohibit minors from obtaining gender-affirming medical care and/or criminalizing the provision of this care by physicians. Other bills were filed or have been prefiled again to allow various medical and mental health providers to refuse to treat LGBTQ patients because of their personal religious beliefs and/or forcing these same providers to tell a parent if a minor reveals to that provider that they are LGBTQ.

Even if this legislation does not pass or get a hearing, the fact that the bills were introduced can have a profound impact on LGBTQ patients and their families. After a bill was introduced in Texas in their 2017 legislative session that would require trans and gender-diverse (TGD) people to use the bathroom based on their sex assigned at birth, the Trevor Project reported that it had an increase of 34% in crisis calls from trans youth who were in distress.2 This was similar, but slightly less, than was reported by the Trevor Project in September 2015 when in the run-up to a vote on Houston’s Equal Rights Ordinance, advertising was run equating trans women as predators who could be lying in wait in bathrooms. On the converse, when LGBTQ youth feel supported in the media, courts, and legislatures, this can have a positive impact on their mental health. A 2017 study found that, in states who enacted same-sex marriage laws prior to the 2015 Supreme Court decision in Obergefell, compared with those who did not, there was a 7% relative reduction in the proportion of high school students who attempted suicide.3

The American Academy of Pediatrics published its policy statement in September 2018 outlining suggestions for pediatricians to provide support to TGD youth.4 In this position statement, recommendation No. 7 states “that pediatricians have a role in advocating for policies and laws that protect youth who identify as TGD from discrimination and violence.” Therefore, it is incumbent upon us to use our voices to support our LGBTQ youth. In 2020, several pediatricians from the South Dakota chapter of the AAP provided testimony – and organized public rallies – against legislation in that state which would have made gender-affirming care to minors under age 16 punishable by a fine and/or up to 10 years in prison.5

Dr. M. Brett Cooper

So what can you do? First, get to know your local and state legislators. While it was difficult to meet them in person for much of 2020, you can always call their district and/or Capitol offices, email them, or fill out their constituent contact form typically found on their website. Let them know that you oppose bills which introduce discrimination against your LGBTQ patients or threaten to criminalize the care that you provide to these patients.

Second, work with your state medical association or state AAP chapter to encourage them to oppose these harmful laws and support laws that improve the lives of LGBTQ patients. Third, you can write op-eds to your local newspaper, expressing your support for your patients and outlining the detrimental effects that anti-LGBTQ laws have on your patients. Lastly, you can be active on Twitter, Facebook, or other social media platforms sharing stories of how harmful or helpful certain pieces of legislation can be for your patients.

Dr. Cooper is assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Texas, Dallas, and an adolescent medicine specialist at Children’s Medical Center Dallas. He has no relevant financial disclosures. Email Dr. Cooper at [email protected].

References

1. “Leglislation affecting LGBT rights across country.” www.aclu.org.

2. “Bathroom Bills Fuel Spike In Calls From Trans Youth To Suicide Hotline.” www.outsmartmagazine.com. 2017 Aug.

3. JAMA Pediatr. 2017 Apr 1. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2016.4529.

4. Pediatrics. 2018 Oct. doi: 10.1542/peds.2018-2162.

5. Wyckoff AS. “State bills seek to place limits on transgender care, ‘punish’ physicians.” AAP News. 2020 Feb 18.

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In January in many states, the start of a new year also means the start of a new legislative session. For LGBTQ youth and their families, these sessions can create a significant amount of anxiety, as legislators in several states introduce legislation to curtail the rights of this population. In some cases, legislators have attempted to criminalize the provision of gender-affirming medical care to the trans and gender-diverse adolescents that many of us provide care to on a daily basis. As pediatricians, we have an important role in advocating for legislation at the local, state, and federal level that improves the lives of the LGBTQ patients we serve.

2020 started on a positive note for LGBTQ children and adolescents, with Virginia becoming the 20th state to ban conversion therapy for minors. Legislation was introduced in several other states to prohibit this practice, including Kentucky, Missouri, and Ohio, and but they ultimately died in committee or were never referred. While there is not yet a nationwide ban on conversion therapy, legislation was introduced in the last three U.S. Congress sessions to ban this harmful practice. In June 2020, the Supreme Court decision in Bostock vs. Clayton County stated that employers could not fire an employee solely because of that person’s sexual orientation and/or gender identity.

However, 19 separate bills were introduced in 2020 alone in states across the United States that would prohibit gender-affirming care for adolescents under age 18.1 Many of these bills also would make the provision of gender-affirming medical care codified as felony child abuse, with loss of licensure, fines and/or jail time a possibility for physicians who prescribe hormones or puberty blockers for gender-affirming care to minors. Fortunately, these bills either died in committee or never had a hearing. However, legislation has been prefiled in several states for their 2021 session to again attempt to prohibit minors from obtaining gender-affirming medical care and/or criminalizing the provision of this care by physicians. Other bills were filed or have been prefiled again to allow various medical and mental health providers to refuse to treat LGBTQ patients because of their personal religious beliefs and/or forcing these same providers to tell a parent if a minor reveals to that provider that they are LGBTQ.

Even if this legislation does not pass or get a hearing, the fact that the bills were introduced can have a profound impact on LGBTQ patients and their families. After a bill was introduced in Texas in their 2017 legislative session that would require trans and gender-diverse (TGD) people to use the bathroom based on their sex assigned at birth, the Trevor Project reported that it had an increase of 34% in crisis calls from trans youth who were in distress.2 This was similar, but slightly less, than was reported by the Trevor Project in September 2015 when in the run-up to a vote on Houston’s Equal Rights Ordinance, advertising was run equating trans women as predators who could be lying in wait in bathrooms. On the converse, when LGBTQ youth feel supported in the media, courts, and legislatures, this can have a positive impact on their mental health. A 2017 study found that, in states who enacted same-sex marriage laws prior to the 2015 Supreme Court decision in Obergefell, compared with those who did not, there was a 7% relative reduction in the proportion of high school students who attempted suicide.3

The American Academy of Pediatrics published its policy statement in September 2018 outlining suggestions for pediatricians to provide support to TGD youth.4 In this position statement, recommendation No. 7 states “that pediatricians have a role in advocating for policies and laws that protect youth who identify as TGD from discrimination and violence.” Therefore, it is incumbent upon us to use our voices to support our LGBTQ youth. In 2020, several pediatricians from the South Dakota chapter of the AAP provided testimony – and organized public rallies – against legislation in that state which would have made gender-affirming care to minors under age 16 punishable by a fine and/or up to 10 years in prison.5

Dr. M. Brett Cooper

So what can you do? First, get to know your local and state legislators. While it was difficult to meet them in person for much of 2020, you can always call their district and/or Capitol offices, email them, or fill out their constituent contact form typically found on their website. Let them know that you oppose bills which introduce discrimination against your LGBTQ patients or threaten to criminalize the care that you provide to these patients.

Second, work with your state medical association or state AAP chapter to encourage them to oppose these harmful laws and support laws that improve the lives of LGBTQ patients. Third, you can write op-eds to your local newspaper, expressing your support for your patients and outlining the detrimental effects that anti-LGBTQ laws have on your patients. Lastly, you can be active on Twitter, Facebook, or other social media platforms sharing stories of how harmful or helpful certain pieces of legislation can be for your patients.

Dr. Cooper is assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Texas, Dallas, and an adolescent medicine specialist at Children’s Medical Center Dallas. He has no relevant financial disclosures. Email Dr. Cooper at [email protected].

References

1. “Leglislation affecting LGBT rights across country.” www.aclu.org.

2. “Bathroom Bills Fuel Spike In Calls From Trans Youth To Suicide Hotline.” www.outsmartmagazine.com. 2017 Aug.

3. JAMA Pediatr. 2017 Apr 1. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2016.4529.

4. Pediatrics. 2018 Oct. doi: 10.1542/peds.2018-2162.

5. Wyckoff AS. “State bills seek to place limits on transgender care, ‘punish’ physicians.” AAP News. 2020 Feb 18.

In January in many states, the start of a new year also means the start of a new legislative session. For LGBTQ youth and their families, these sessions can create a significant amount of anxiety, as legislators in several states introduce legislation to curtail the rights of this population. In some cases, legislators have attempted to criminalize the provision of gender-affirming medical care to the trans and gender-diverse adolescents that many of us provide care to on a daily basis. As pediatricians, we have an important role in advocating for legislation at the local, state, and federal level that improves the lives of the LGBTQ patients we serve.

2020 started on a positive note for LGBTQ children and adolescents, with Virginia becoming the 20th state to ban conversion therapy for minors. Legislation was introduced in several other states to prohibit this practice, including Kentucky, Missouri, and Ohio, and but they ultimately died in committee or were never referred. While there is not yet a nationwide ban on conversion therapy, legislation was introduced in the last three U.S. Congress sessions to ban this harmful practice. In June 2020, the Supreme Court decision in Bostock vs. Clayton County stated that employers could not fire an employee solely because of that person’s sexual orientation and/or gender identity.

However, 19 separate bills were introduced in 2020 alone in states across the United States that would prohibit gender-affirming care for adolescents under age 18.1 Many of these bills also would make the provision of gender-affirming medical care codified as felony child abuse, with loss of licensure, fines and/or jail time a possibility for physicians who prescribe hormones or puberty blockers for gender-affirming care to minors. Fortunately, these bills either died in committee or never had a hearing. However, legislation has been prefiled in several states for their 2021 session to again attempt to prohibit minors from obtaining gender-affirming medical care and/or criminalizing the provision of this care by physicians. Other bills were filed or have been prefiled again to allow various medical and mental health providers to refuse to treat LGBTQ patients because of their personal religious beliefs and/or forcing these same providers to tell a parent if a minor reveals to that provider that they are LGBTQ.

Even if this legislation does not pass or get a hearing, the fact that the bills were introduced can have a profound impact on LGBTQ patients and their families. After a bill was introduced in Texas in their 2017 legislative session that would require trans and gender-diverse (TGD) people to use the bathroom based on their sex assigned at birth, the Trevor Project reported that it had an increase of 34% in crisis calls from trans youth who were in distress.2 This was similar, but slightly less, than was reported by the Trevor Project in September 2015 when in the run-up to a vote on Houston’s Equal Rights Ordinance, advertising was run equating trans women as predators who could be lying in wait in bathrooms. On the converse, when LGBTQ youth feel supported in the media, courts, and legislatures, this can have a positive impact on their mental health. A 2017 study found that, in states who enacted same-sex marriage laws prior to the 2015 Supreme Court decision in Obergefell, compared with those who did not, there was a 7% relative reduction in the proportion of high school students who attempted suicide.3

The American Academy of Pediatrics published its policy statement in September 2018 outlining suggestions for pediatricians to provide support to TGD youth.4 In this position statement, recommendation No. 7 states “that pediatricians have a role in advocating for policies and laws that protect youth who identify as TGD from discrimination and violence.” Therefore, it is incumbent upon us to use our voices to support our LGBTQ youth. In 2020, several pediatricians from the South Dakota chapter of the AAP provided testimony – and organized public rallies – against legislation in that state which would have made gender-affirming care to minors under age 16 punishable by a fine and/or up to 10 years in prison.5

Dr. M. Brett Cooper

So what can you do? First, get to know your local and state legislators. While it was difficult to meet them in person for much of 2020, you can always call their district and/or Capitol offices, email them, or fill out their constituent contact form typically found on their website. Let them know that you oppose bills which introduce discrimination against your LGBTQ patients or threaten to criminalize the care that you provide to these patients.

Second, work with your state medical association or state AAP chapter to encourage them to oppose these harmful laws and support laws that improve the lives of LGBTQ patients. Third, you can write op-eds to your local newspaper, expressing your support for your patients and outlining the detrimental effects that anti-LGBTQ laws have on your patients. Lastly, you can be active on Twitter, Facebook, or other social media platforms sharing stories of how harmful or helpful certain pieces of legislation can be for your patients.

Dr. Cooper is assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Texas, Dallas, and an adolescent medicine specialist at Children’s Medical Center Dallas. He has no relevant financial disclosures. Email Dr. Cooper at [email protected].

References

1. “Leglislation affecting LGBT rights across country.” www.aclu.org.

2. “Bathroom Bills Fuel Spike In Calls From Trans Youth To Suicide Hotline.” www.outsmartmagazine.com. 2017 Aug.

3. JAMA Pediatr. 2017 Apr 1. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2016.4529.

4. Pediatrics. 2018 Oct. doi: 10.1542/peds.2018-2162.

5. Wyckoff AS. “State bills seek to place limits on transgender care, ‘punish’ physicians.” AAP News. 2020 Feb 18.

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