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US justices throughout the nation reject healthcare bans for transgender children

 US justices throughout the nation reject healthcare bans for transgender children


This year, conservative politicians have outlawed medical care intended for transgender children who are experiencing changes in their gender identification in state after state. Now, an increasing number of federal courts are preventing the implementation of such statutes.


Judges in US district courts have so far struck down similar laws in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee, concluding that they violate the 14th amendment's provision of equal protection.


In Oklahoma, the opposing sides agreed in May to suspend the legislation until the outcome of the court action, and two lawsuits contesting statutes in Montana and Georgia have not yet been resolved.


The recent wave of measures prohibiting transgender youth from accessing treatments like hormone therapy and puberty blockers are temporarily eased by the court verdicts. Such restrictions have been adopted by 20 states, with the majority becoming law this year.


Tobias Wolff, a professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania who specialises in constitutional law and LGBTQ rights, said that the fact that the outcomes in these cases have been so similar up to this point is "quite noteworthy." It's not because the law in this area was so clear-cut, says the speaker. It's because the evidence blatantly violates these laws.


In an effort to protect traditional conservative values and paint progressives as out-of-touch on religious matters, many conservative lawmakers have supported the measures.


Democrats, LGBTQ advocacy organisations, and medical professionals claim that the bans unfairly target a community that is already under attack and for which gender-affirming care can be life-saving.


"The courts are starting to find constantly that these laws are ridiculous," said Kevin Jennings, CEO of Lambda Legal, a civil rights organisation specialising in LGBTQ matters.


Judges, including three that Republican former US President Donald Trump appointed, have determined that transgender youth experiencing gender dysphoria—the stress brought on by the discrepancy between one's gender identity and the given at birth—need medically essential gender-affirming care.


The judges have also ruled that rules prohibiting such care violate a parent's freedom to choose their child's medical care.


The Human Rights Campaign, the largest LGBTQ advocacy group in the US, has a litigation director named Cynthia Cheng-Wun Weaver.


Law advocates are unfazed, claiming that the judges erred and that the current medical consensus will change.



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