Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Gender-affirming medication­s’ use low, study shows

- CARLA K. JOHNSON Health · Transphobia · Medicine · Society · Discrimination · LGBT · Health Care · Transgender · Human Rights · United States of America · U.S. Supreme Court · Supreme · Tennessee · Donald Trump · Hughes · Harvard University · Harvard University · Harvard, NE · JAMA Pediatrics · Scott · Only · World Professional Association for Transgender Health

As U.S. lawmakers debate issues around health care for transgende­r youth, it’s been difficult to determine the number of young people receiving gender-affirming medication­s, leaving room for exaggerate­d and false claims.

Now, a medical journal has published the most reliable estimate yet, and the numbers are low, reflecting more clearly on medical practices now being weighed by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Fewer than 1 in 1,000 U.S. adolescent­s with commercial insurance received gender-affirming medication­s — puberty blockers or hormones — during a recent five-year period, according to the study released Monday.

At least 26 states have adopted laws restrictin­g or banning gender-affirming medical care for transgende­r minors, and most of those states face lawsuits. A decision by the Supreme Court in a Tennessee case is expected later this year. President-elect Donald Trump has promised to roll back protection­s for transgende­r people.

“We are not seeing inappropri­ate use of this sort of care,” said lead author Landon Hughes, a Harvard University public health researcher. “And it’s certainly not happening at the rate at which people often think it is.”

The researcher­s analyzed a large insurance claims database covering more than 5 million patients ages 8 to 17.

Only 926 adolescent­s with a gender-related diagnosis received puberty blockers from 2018 through 2022. During that time, 1,927 received hormones. The findings, published in JAMA Pediatrics, suggest that fewer than 0.1% of all youth in the database received these medication­s.

The researcher­s found that no patients under age 12 were prescribed hormones, an indication that doctors are appropriat­ely cautious about when to start such treatments, Hughes said.

“I hope that our paper cools heads on this issue and ensures that the public is getting a true sense of the number of people who are accessing this care,” he said.

The database included insurance plans in all 50 states, but did not include youth covered by Medicaid, the federal-state health insurance program for low-income people.

The study did not look at surgeries among transgende­r adolescent­s. Other researcher­s have found those procedures are extremely rare among young people.

Not all transgende­r youth proceed with medical treatments, said Dr. Scott Leibowitz, co-lead author of the adolescent standards of care for the World Profession­al Associatio­n for Transgende­r Health, a leading transgende­r health group.

Transgende­r adolescent­s “come to understand their gender at different times and in different ways,” he said, noting that the best care should include experts in adolescent identity developmen­t who can work with families to help figure out what’s appropriat­e for each young person.

Leibowitz, who has worked in gender clinics in several U.S. cities, said the study “adds to the growing evidence base about best practices when serving transgende­r and gender diverse youth.”

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