Effects of discrimination on TGD persons
Many of these proposed state bills have not advanced through state legislatures, but a few – such as the proposed laws in Alabama, Missouri, and Texas – are still currently under consideration.
“In the United States, most recent efforts to single out transgender and gender-diverse people for discrimination in health care have failed. However, the demonization of trans people and attempts to disrupt care have been the source of much stress among our patients,” Dr. Safer said.
Restricting access to health care has “multiple implications” for TGD patients. “In the era when we did not provide care to transgender youth, we had a situation where approximately 40% of transgender people had considered suicide in their lives,” Dr. Safer said. In contrast, having access to these treatments has been shown to improve mental health outcomes in these patients, according to an Endocrine Society position statement.
The purpose of earlier interventions such as puberty blockers is to allow an adolescent to “explore options and live in the experienced gender before making a decision to proceed with gender-affirming hormone therapy,” the authors of the Endocrine Society and Pediatric Endocrine Society joint statement said.
Blocking access to puberty blockers, on the other hand, forces transgender youth to experience a puberty that doesn’t match their gender identity, Dr. Safer noted. “The puberty will include permanent changes which will then have to be reversed with surgery. Why would we intentionally allow that to happen?”
Dr. Safer reported that his spouse is an employee of Parexel. Dr. Tangpricha is the current president of the World Association for Transgender Health and a board member of the American Association of Clinical Endocrinology. The other authors reported no relevant conflicts of interests.
SOURCE: Safer JD et al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2020. doi: 10.1210/clinem/dgaa816.