The AAMC joined the American Academy of Pediatrics and more than 20 other health organizations in an appellate amicus brief (PDF) focused on ensuring that all adolescents, including those with gender dysphoria, receive the optimal medical and mental health care they need.
The AAMC joined an amicus brief filed in the Ohio Supreme Court on May 29, urging the court to affirm the lower court’s injunction in Moe v Yost. The case involves H.B. 68, a law that bans health care providers from providing patients under 18 with medically necessary treatments for gender dysphoria. The law makes the provision of such treatments “unprofessional conduct,” excludes coverage for such treatments under the Ohio Medicaid program, and subjects health care providers to professional discipline.
The brief provides background on gender identity and gender dysphoria. It details the professionally accepted medical guidelines for treating adolescents with gender dysphoria, the scientifically rigorous process by which the guidelines were developed, and the evidence that gender-affirming care is effective and saves lives. Because the brief focuses primarily on adolescents, it does not discuss surgeries that are typically available to transgender adults.
- Washington Highlights