Thursday, September 29, 2016

What you need to know and do about the new HHS transgender mandate

If you receive federal health funds,
read on...
What do doctors and health institutions need to know about and how can they defend themselves from the Obama administration’s newly enacted transgender mandate?

Action:

If you are a health professional or institution impacted by the HHS transgender mandate, you may use this web page to present your views confidentially (or publicly if you prefer).

What happened when?

The transgender mandate, promulgated by the US Department of Health and Human Services under the assumed authority of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare), went into effect July 18, 2016.
A new website, www.transgendemandate.org, explains what the mandate requires, why it violates the law and what conscientious objectors can do to protect their rights.

Whom does the rule target?

HHS recently mandated that doctors must perform gender transition procedures on any child referred by a mental health professional, even if the doctor believes the treatment or hormone therapy could harm the child
Doctors who follow their Hippocratic Oath to act in the best interest of their patient instead of this new mandate can face severe consequences, including losing their job.

The Transgender Mandate also requires virtually all private insurance companies and many employers to cover gender transition procedures or face stiff penalties and legal action.

What do they have to do?

No religious exemption
The new rule includes no religious exemption; it will have significant impacts on religious healthcare professionals:

  • It will require healthcare professionals to perform certain gender transition services, including elective hysterectomies or cross-hormone therapy;
  • It will require healthcare professionals to refer individuals for gender transition services;
  • It will require healthcare professionals to provide insurance coverage for gender transition services, some of which include sterilization procedures;
  • It may require healthcare professionals to provide coverage for abortion;
  • It will require healthcare professionals to open facilities, such as showers, bathrooms, or locker rooms, to employees based on gender preference;
  • It will expose healthcare professionals to hostile work environment lawsuits unless healthcare professionals refer to individuals by their preferred name or gender pronoun.

What happens to those who do not comply?

A healthcare professional not in compliance risks:
Liable for lawsuits

  • losing HHS funding
  • being subjected to federal enforcement proceedings
  • being subjected to false claims liability
  • being sued for damages and attorneys’ fees by patients, employees, or their dependents.


What does the evidence show regarding gender transition procedures?

Research shows that there are significant risks with gender transition procedures in childhood.  Again, that is why HHS’s own medical board advised against requiring coverage of gender transition surgical procedures under Medicare and Medicaid. 
Putting children at risk

Along with physical impacts like heart conditions, increased cancer risk, and loss of bone density, the peer-reviewed longitudinal studies of children with gender dysphoria (that HHS accepted as valid) found that fewer than 1-in-4 children referred for gender dysphoria continued to experience that condition into adulthood. Some grew out of it, but many of the children ended up realizing that they were not transgender but instead gay or lesbian. 
The Transgender Mandate virtually guarantees that doctors will be forced—against their medical judgment—to perform procedures aimed at altering the gender of children who are not actually transgender.
Medical science is on the side of any doctor who feels that in a specific case it would be a mistake to begin gender transition procedures on a child.

What about medical judgment?

No medical judgment
The Mandate does not allow space for the doctor’s medical judgment and does not even allow the doctor to refer the child to another doctor, even one more qualified, or for a hospital to find a doctor willing to perform the procedure. Any refusal by a qualified and practicing doctor to perform such a procedure is a violation of the Mandate.
To be clear, this is not a question of access to care but of forcing a political ideology on doctors against their medical judgment.

Is anyone moving to stop this?

In August 2016, the Christian Medical Association; the states of Texas, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Kentucky, and Kansas; North Texas State Hospital; Franciscan Alliance, Inc.; and Specialty Physicians of Illinois, LLC filed a lawsuit against HHS in the US District Court for the Northern District of Texas.
The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, which boasts an undefeated record in Supreme Court cases, represents the plaintiffs. The lawsuit asks the court to do the following:


  1. Declare that the challenged Regulation is invalid under the Administrative Procedure Act;
  2. Declare that the challenged Regulations is invalid under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act;
  3. Declare that the challenged Regulation is invalid under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution;
  4. Declare that the challenged Regulation is invalid under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution;
  5. Declare that the challenged Regulation is invalid under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution;
  6. Issue a permanent injunction enjoining Defendants from enforcing the challenged Regulations against Plaintiffs, those acting in concert with Plaintiffs, and all States;
  7. Award actual damages;
  8. Award nominal damages;
  9. Award Plaintiffs the costs of this action and reasonable attorney’s fees; and
  10. Award such other and further relief as it deems equitable and just.

Action:

If you are a health professional or institution impacted by the HHS transgender mandate, you may use this web page to present your views confidentially (or publicly if you prefer).

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