Florida medical board moves to block gender affirming treatments for minors

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Florida medical board moves to block gender affirming treatments for minors
The board also voted to require adults seeking such care to wait 24 hours before going forward with any medical procedures.

By AREK SARKISSIAN

08/05/2022 07:00 PM EDT

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida’s medical board on Friday voted to begin the process of banning gender-affirming medical treatment for youths, a move that comes as Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has become increasingly vocal in his opposition to such therapies.

After a public hearing that lasted more than three and a half hours in Fort Lauderdale, the 15-member Board of Medicine voted to prohibit minors from receiving hormone therapy and undergoing surgical procedures as a treatment for gender dysphoria, which refers to the feelings of discomfort or distress some transgender people experience when their bodies don’t align with their gender.

The board also voted to require adults seeking such care to wait 24 hours before going forward with any medical procedures.

University of Florida Professor and Chief of Pediatric Endocrinology Michael J. Haller, who testified during the hearing as an expert, called the proposal a political stunt.

“This has been pushed to the board as a political maneuver,” Haller told the board members. “Trans people have always existed, they will always exist, whether you choose to acknowledge that or not.”

The medical board was following guidance from the Florida Department of Health, which has claimed that there’s not enough research and evidence showing such care is safe.

The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Medical Association support gender-affirming care for adults and adolescents. But medical experts said gender-affirming care for children rarely, if ever, includes surgery. Instead, doctors are more likely to recommend counseling, social transitioning and hormone replacement therapy.

The proposed rule is the latest step taken by the DeSantis administration to tighten regulatory controls over gender-affirming care. Florida’s Medicaid regulator is also considering a rule that would block state-subsidized health care from paying for treatments of transgender people.

DeSantis has publicly voiced his opposition to transition-related medical care. During a press conference earlier this week on opioid addiction, he said doctors who perform gender-affirming surgical procedures should be sued and likened such treatment to castration. He also recently suspended Tampa’s top prosecutor, Andrew Warren, in part because the state attorney has expressed support for transition-related medical care.

The medical board’s vote on Friday begins a process to update the standard of care for gender-affirming treatments in Florida, the third most populous state in the country.

Some audience members at Friday’s hearing became unruly and shouted obscenities at the board members. Broward County Sheriff’s deputies ushered some audience members out, including one person who said the ban would lead some kids to homelessness.

Atlanta-based endocrinologist Quentin Van Meter, who also appeared before the board as an expert at the Fort Lauderdale meeting, was in favor of banning such treatments, claiming interest in gender-affirming care was spurred by the internet and blamed Covid-19 isolation for increased interest among young people in transition-related medical care.

“They live the Internet life,” said Van Meter. “This is a giant experiment on United States children. Anyone suggesting these things as a standard of care — it’s a mirage.”

Van Meter, an outspoken critic of gender-affirming care, had previously been disqualified as an expert by a Texas judge overseeing a divorce case where van Meter was set to testify on whether a transgender youth should receive puberty blockers.

Haller told the board that Van Meter’s assessment about the Internet and children cooped up at home because of the pandemic was not the scientific discussion the board had initially pledged to have.

“To say this is because of some social media contagion is absurd,” Heller said, later adding, “I suggest we stick to the topic of science.”

Haller was joined by University of Florida pediatric endocrinologist Kristin Dayton, who told the board that the standard of care she follows for treating gender dysphoria includes restrictions based on the age of a child. Treatments, she said, are generally limited to older teens around 17 years old.

The medical board also heard more than an hour and a half of public testimony, including from Pompano Beach resident Ernie Sauve, who compared a desire to be transgender to wishing to be another ethnicity.

“I may identify as Hispanic but that does not make me Hispanic,” he said.

Kaleb Hobson-Garcia, a 20-year-old Florida State University student, said he received gender affirming care when he was 12 and voiced support for such therapies. Hobson-Garcia said his experience provided a wealth of information on such treatment.

“I urge you to think of the kids like me, who were scared and found comfort in being able to receive necessary health care,” Hobson-Garcia said. “My identity is not an epidemic.”

Comments

Violence

I hate violence in general, and hate to see it used... but American politicians (both Republican and Corporate Democrats) are making me want violence delivered upon them. To the removal of body autonomy for women and the trans hate and reduction of care... My wife and I have been looking to move our family to another country at this point.

A Mixed Bag

I suspicion that very few of the members here are post op and living as a woman. And, TG folk endure so much shit. I feel that in Florida and Texas at least, the religious establishment is involved in making the suffering happen. The price we pay is far too high. I still maintain a belief in God and Jesus but am more Muslim than anything. I live for the day when people are left alone to find themselves.

Gwen

While I agree we must have

leeanna19's picture

While I agree we must have laws. If not there will be chaos. I have never understood the need or some people to force their ideals on others. Most often it is claimed for religious reasons. "God intended you to be .....blah....blah"

I personally don't like tattoos. I wouldn't make a law to ban them though. Some have huge tunnels in their ears. Some split their tounges. Some are covered with piercings. I think it looks horrible. Again their body, their choice.

The same for trans issues and abortion. You should have the right to decide what you do with your own body. It is not unknown for trans women to take a knife to their genitals without proper care. Women will seek dangerous backstreet abortions.

All this to satisfy politicians, so they can seem righteous to their voters

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Leeanna

Medical Credentials

I presume some of the members Florida’s medical board have certifications from national associations for their medical specialties.

Perhaps those associations need to review the certifications of these doctor's and perhaps rescind their specialty credentials for allowing politics to enter into what should be purely medical considerations.

Michelle B

The Bible Belt

While I study the Bible, in my opinion, perhaps they are being far too legalistic. And, there is not credible knowledge as to why people are TG. If they left these folk alone to seek their own path, it would be better.

I am glad I am not a US

I am glad I am not a US citizen. A country that claims to be the land of the free is fast becoming the oppressive nation they claim to stand against. I am an Australian. Where we have universal health care and use the Standards Of Care. Our last government tried to attack trans kids and was ousted overwhelmingly. I am also post op!
Im a Senior ER Nurse in one of the busiest ER's in the state and we always practice gender affiming care! Constantly trying to do better for our trans patients who are unfortunate enough to land in the ER! We encourage trans patients to tell us how they feel we can do better.
I may have been the first trans woman my hospital has employed 8 years ago but there are now several at our hospital.
These clowns should hand in their license to practise as they seem to have taken the "Hippocritic oath"!

Joseph Lapado

Is it possible to bring a malpractice suit against him for his actions as surgeon general? It seems to me he has done irreparable harm to many people.