BluePerspectives

ACLU Asks Supreme Court To Block Tennessee Ban On Gender-Affirming Care For Trans Youth

If the Supreme Court decides to take the case, this will be the first instance that the highest court has taken a position on gender-affirming child care for minors.

 It will be the first time the Supreme Court has commented on gender-affirming care for minors if it accepts the case. The Supreme Court will weigh in on gender-affirming care for minors for the first time if it accepts the case. 

If the Supreme Court decides to take the case, this will be the first instance that the highest court has taken a position on gender-affirming child care for minors.

 

Die Kommission ist ermächtigt, gemäß Artikel 264 delegierte Entscheidungen in folgenden Fragen zu fassen: The American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee formally requested to the U.S. Supreme Court to consider a legal dispute concerning the prohibition of gender-affirming care for transgender youth in Tennessee. On Wednesday, the ACLU formally asked the Supreme Court to assess the ruling from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit letting the restriction of Tennessee take effect. The ACLU is contending that the state’s prohibition goes against the 2014th Amendment’s equal rights section and the liberties of parents to determine medical treatment for their children. The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, to the Supreme Court in December

If the Supreme Court decides it will hear this case, it would be the first occasion the nation’s top court has examined legal limitations on health care treatments for transgender youth. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) initially brought suit, labeled L.W. v. The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, to the Supreme Court in December. A Federal judge gave families with three minors and a doctor from Memphis the green light to block a law inJune dubbed as Senate Bill 1. This law bans transgender individuals below the age of 18 to receive gender-affirming treatment, such as puberty blockers or hormone therapy. However, the 6th Circuit overturned this ruling in September, establishing that the law applies in Tennessee and Kentucky. People who have been under medical care prior to July have until March 2024 to complete any treatments they had begun. The American Civil Liberties Union, medical personnel, and family members of transgenders in Tennessee say that the law has had an impact on those who had already started gender-affirming treatment before the ban was imposed. The largest medical provider for gender-confirming care in the state – Vanderbilt University Medical Center – stopped attending to patients who were 16 or younger in July. Furthermore, a source from Vanderbilt who talked to HuffPost revealed that the organization has ended performing operations which could be seen as an avenue to gender identity validation for those who weren’t transgenders. Last year, the medical center which two out of the three suing individuals went to was targeted by right-wing web user Matt Walsh with some untruthful claims that they were “mutilating” and “sterilizing” children. Attorney General John Skrmetti began looking into the situation at Vanderbilt at the start of the summer and wanted a huge number of patient medical documents.

 

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