The Supreme Court hears argument in a case involving gender-affirming care for minors in Tennessee.
Kent Nishimura/Getty Images
hide caption
toggle caption
Kent Nishimura/Getty Images
Front and center at the Supreme Court on Wednesday is the battle over the rights of transgender children. At issue is a state law in Tennessee that blocks minors from accessing gender-affirming care in the state.
In the last three years, more than two dozen states have enacted laws that ban puberty blockers, hormones and other treatments for minors seeking gender-affirming care. The issue has become highly politicized, as anyone who watched election ads this fall can attest.
Challenging Tennesseeโs law in the Supreme Court are three trans kids and their parents.
LW, as she is known in legal documents, is one of them.
โPeople make assumptions. They say itโs just a phase, because they donโt know what itโs like,โ LW says of her experience. โIt can certainly feel pretty hopeless,โ especially given โhow slowโ the process is.
Her mother, Samantha Williams, partially disagrees, stressing the need for caution.
โWe kept saying we wouldnโt be good parents if we werenโt taking our time,โ she says.
It took nearly a year for LW to get the go ahead, but LWโs mom says that at 15, her once troubled child is an easy and happy teenager, now that she is getting access to treatments for gender dysphoria. The medications, however, are now illegal for minors in Tennessee where the family lives, so they have to drive out of state 10 hours round trip for LW to get the drugs for her transition.
The Tennessee law
Tennessee State Sen. Jack Johnson introduced the challenged bill, which bans access to hormones, puberty blockers, and other treatments for trans kids in Tennessee. For Sen. Johnson, the law is just another example of the state exercising its regulatory power.
โYou canโt get a tattoo in Tennessee unless youโre 18. You canโt smoke. You canโt drink,โ he observes. Tennessee regulates โa number of different types of medical procedures,โ Johnson says, adding that โit felt like this was the best public policy to prevent kids form suffering from irreversible consequences, things that cannot be undone.โ
Those challenging the Tennessee law counter that the ban violates the Constitutionโs guarantee to equal protection of the law. The law bars access to treatment for kids who want to transition from their sex assigned at birth, but permits those same medications to be used when treating minors suffering from other conditions, like endometriosis or early-onset puberty.
ACLU lawyer Chase Strangio, the first openly trans lawyer to argue in front of the Supreme Court, represents the kids and their parents. He argues that โthese are very commonly used medications,โ and Tennessee โbans them for one and only one purpose.โ
Strangio says that the language of the statute telegraphs the real purpose of the ban. Specifically, the statute encourages minors to โappreciate their sexโ and bans treatments that โmight encourage minors to be disdainful of their sex.โ
โThe government of Tennessee is displacing the decision-making of loving parents,โ who follow the โrecommendations of doctors,โ Strangio says. โAt the end of the day, the law is tailored to one and only one interest, which is to enforce Tennesseeโs preference that adolescents conform to their birth sex.โ
Although the Tennessee legislature did hear testimony from individual doctors in support of the ban, all the major medical associations that deal with gender dysphoria have filed briefs supporting these treatments for trans kids, including the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Psychological Association.
Long-term impact
But critics of the treatments say the science is very unsettled in terms of long-term implications.
โYouโve got countries in Western Europe that were far ahead of us in terms of these types of medications,โ says Sen. Johnson. โThey are pulling back because theyโve had a longer runway, and theyโre seeing that the adverse effects of some of these medications far outweigh any benefit that they have.โ
John Bursch of the conservative Christian legal advocacy group Alliance Defending Freedom echoes that sentiment, noting that some Western European and Scandinavian countries have not only been at this longer, they have national health care systems that cover everyone.
โThey can track a patient from birth until death. And so if someone gets cross-sex hormones for the purpose of a gender change at age 15, they can look at how theyโre doing at age 20,25, 45 65 and see what the outcomes were,โ Bursch notes.
These characterizations of European studies are highly controversial, but the drugs are still accessible in a research setting, and access has not been terminated for any minor already using the medications.
There is much about this issue that remains in dispute. To take just one example, parents Samantha and Brian Williams maintain that the law not only bans treatments, it bars parents and children from even consulting doctors about these treatments. The lawโs supporters deny that claim to varying degrees. Sen. Johnson says that the โlegislative intent does not prohibit or prevent any type of conversation.โ Bursch, on the other hand, says that a family could generally have a conversation about the pros and cons of puberty blockers and hormone treatment, โas long as the doctor was not encouraging someone to engage in an illegal procedure.โ
NPR put the question to Vanderbilt University Medical Center, which until the law was passed was the major center in Tennessee for providing gender-affirming care for minors. The center took three days to ponder the question, ultimately declining to comment.
Vanderbilt does still provide gender-affirming care for adult patients. But lawyers for the trans kids argue that if states can ban gender dysphoria treatments for minors, the next step will be to ban such treatments for adults, too.
Sen. Johnson, the sponsor of the Tennessee bill, sees things very differently.
โWe want to love these kids,โ he says. โBut letโs see if we can get them to their 18th birthday, which is when we recognize people as an adult.โ
The court is expected to make a decision in the case by the summer.