
Utah lawmakers said gender-affirming care is harmful to kids. Their own study contradicts that claim
SALT LAKE CITY — When Utah Republicans passed a ban on gender-affirming health care for children and teens in 2023, they argued it was needed to protect vulnerable kids from treatments that could cause long-term harm.
Years later, the results of a study commissioned under the same law contradict that claim, and the Republican-led Legislature is facing pressure to reconsider the restrictions.
Utah's Department of Health and Human Services and experts from the state's leading health organizations concluded from a study of thousands of transgender people that gender-affirming care generated "positive mental health and psychosocial functioning outcomes."
Policies that prevent access to hormone therapy for minors cannot be justified based on scientific findings or concerns about potential regret in the future, the report states.
The agency is not taking a position on whether lawmakers should lift the statewide ban on hormone therapy and surgeries for minors. But it reminded lawmakers that they had intended for the prohibition to be temporary until the state could conduct its own research.
Utah is among 27 states that have adopted laws restricting or banning gender-affirming medical care for transgender minors, who Republican politicians have made a political lightning rod. Federal judges have struck down bans in Arkansas, Florida and Montana as unconstitutional, though a federal appeals court has stayed the Florida ruling. The law in Kansas is not yet being enforced.
Some Utah Republicans said they were open to considering the findings of the study, while others were quick to dismiss it.
In a joint statement, the House sponsor of the 2023 law banning gender-affirming care and the chair of the Legislature's interim health committee said they "intend to keep the moratorium in place."
"Young kids and teenagers should not be making life-altering medical decisions based on weak evidence," said Republican Reps. Katy Hall and Bridger Bolinder. "Simply put, the science isn't there, the risks are real, and the public is with us."
All major medical organizations in the U.S. consider gender-affirming care to be safe, effective and medically necessary for transgender youth. But polling shows that Republicans' restrictions on transgender kids' access to care resonate with voters, according to a recent survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
Senate President Stuart Adams said he is committed to reviewing the report. The Republican leader has suggested previously that children and teens are too young to consent to the treatments.
Children questioning their gender identity generally receive counseling and may be prescribed puberty-blocking drugs or hormones. Gender-affirming surgeries, such as operations to transform the chest or genitals, are rarely performed on minors.
"The future and safety of kids are paramount," Adams said. "That is why Utah enacted a law to safeguard the long-term health and well-being of minors while providing time to carefully examine the evolving medical landscape surrounding novel and irreversible procedures for minors. I appreciate the Utah Department of Health and Human Services for evaluating the available evidence."
Utah Democratic leaders Rep. Angela Romero and Sen. Luz Escamilla are urging their Republican colleagues to take more time to review the more than 1,000-page report before deciding the future of the ban.
Under the law, children who had already been diagnosed with gender dysphoria before January 2023 were allowed to continue receiving hormones. The University of Utah shut down its health clinic for LGBTQ+ youth earlier this month after the law significantly decreased its number of patients. Doctors who provide gender-affirming care to minors in violation of the ban could lose their licenses and face criminal charges.
The report prepared for lawmakers acknowledged certain risks associated with gender-affirming care, including an increase in some types of benign brain tumors. But experts highlighted the positive impact of such treatments in mitigating the risk of suicide among transgender youth.
"Patients that were seen at the gender clinic before the age of 18 had a lower risk of suicide compared to those referred as an adult," the report states. "When left untreated, individuals with gender dysphoria may experience psychological and social harms."
The report in Utah contrasts with one issued earlier this month by President Donald Trump's administration that questioned widely accepted treatment standards from the World Professional Association for Transgender Health. U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. did not release information about who authored the report, and major medical groups said they were not consulted.
Trump's guidance urges greater reliance on behavioral therapy rather than medical interventions for children who experience a disconnect between their gender identity and their sex assigned at birth. It follows an executive order Trump issued days into his second term that says the federal government must not support gender transitions for anyone under age 19.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Trump reveals identity of Joe Biden 'deep state' official he believes wielded the autopen to sign orders
Donald Trump has suggested which former 'deep state' official he believes may behind Joe Biden 's infamous autopen. Speaking to the press from the Oval Office on Tuesday, the Republican claimed that a former high-ranking Department of Justice official may have been part of the scandal. An autopen enables its operator to produce signatures, in this case Biden's, potentially giving whoever controlled it power over the president's official business. Trump has slammed the use of the autopen under Biden's administration and how the Democrat allegedly used it to sign pardons and executive orders. But Biden pushed back in a statement this month, denying anyone else made presidential decisions under his tenure and claiming he was in charge. 'I made the decisions about the pardons, executive orders, legislation, and proclamations,' his statement read. 'Any suggestion that I didn't is ridiculous and false.' Trump opened an investigation last week to determine 'who ran the United States while President Biden was in office' with a major focus on 'examining policy documents signed with an autopen, who authorized its use, and the validity of the resulting Presidential policy decisions.' Responding to a question about the LA riots on Tuesday, Trump pivoted and teed off on a rant about the autopen. 'You know, we're moving murderers out of our country that were put here by Biden or the autopen,' he told reporters. 'The autopen really did it,' 'The people, whether it's Lisa Monaco or whoever operated the autopen, these are criminals, people are criminals and allowed these criminals into our country,' Trump continued. Monaco was a longtime Barack Obama and Biden aide who held powerful roles for both administrations. From 2013-2017, Monaco was the Homeland Security and Counterterrorism Advisor to President Obama. She then left government before rejoining again to serve four years as Biden's deputy attorney general. While serving under Biden Monaco oversaw the Justice Department's massive effort to track down and charge those who participated in the January 6th Capitol protest. The investigation - one of the largest in DOJ history - yielded criminal charges against over 1,500 defendants. Reports indicate that Monaco was in frequent contact with the D.C. U.S. Attorney's Office coordinating how the office would use a specific statute to charge defendants with obstruction of an official proceeding. Microsoft recently hired Monaco to serve as their head of global affairs where she will oversee cybersecurity policy and work with foreign governments. Monaco did not immediately respond to the Daily Mail's request for comment. Some online reacted to Trump's suggestion with outrage, saying the former Justice Department worker has ties to the 'deep state.' 'That's quite the deep state resume,' one X user wrote of her long government experience. Under Trump's order to probe the autopen, all of the pardons, clemency grants, executive orders, presidential memoranda, and other presidential policy decisions issued by Biden will be investigated. Actions under review would include Biden's pardons for son Hunter and Dr. Anthony Fauci and orders related to a variety of areas including education, immigration, health care, climate change and more. Trump has argued the use of the autopen invalidates Biden's orders. If his administration can get the courts to agree, it could undo thousands of actions taken by the former president.


NBC News
an hour ago
- NBC News
White House proposes axing 988 suicide hotline services for LGBTQ youth
The Department of Health and Human Services' proposed budget for 2026 eliminates specialized suicide hotline services for LGBTQ youth and young adults. The budget proposal, which the department published Friday, designates $520 million for 988, the suicide prevention line, and behavioral health crisis services, which is the same amount the Biden administration provided for 988. However, the 2026 budget proposal would end government funding for LGBTQ-specific counseling to 988 callers upon request. When asked for comment, a spokesperson for HHS directed NBC News to the White House's Office of Management and Budget. Rachel Cauley, a spokesperson for OMB, noted that the proposed budget would provide the same amount for 988 services as was provided in previous years. 'It does not, however, grant taxpayer money to a chat service where children are encouraged to embrace radical gender ideology by 'counselors' without consent or knowledge of their parents,' Cauley said. 'Radical gender ideology' is a political term adopted by conservatives and President Donald Trump's administration to describe the existence of transgender people and the trans rights movement, which it considers harmful to children. The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline has existed since 2005, and, in 2020, during his first term, Trump signed legislation designating 988 as the new lifeline number by 2022. That legislation required 988 to provide LGBTQ youth and young adults who call the line with access to 'specially trained staff and partner organizations,' noting that queer and trans youth 'are more than 4 times more likely to contemplate suicide than their peers, with 1 in 5 LGBTQ youth and more than 1 in 3 transgender youth reporting attempting suicide.' A senior administration official said the money for services for LGBTQ young people has not been cut, but rather reallocated to the general 988 services so that it doesn't go to 'radical grooming contractors,' using another term adopted by conservatives decades ago to falsely equate being LGBTQ or promoting LGBTQ inclusivity with sexually abusing children. The contractors who provide LGBTQ-specific services through 988 are mental health organizations based across the U.S. Most of them provide mental health care to the general population in addition to LGBTQ people. The official said only the contract with 'radical gender' counselors is being terminated, and not the resources. However, under the proposed budget, when LGBTQ youth and young adults under age 25 call 988, there will not be an option for them to be connected to a counselor who is trained to provide support to LGBTQ youth. Currently, LGBTQ young people can also text 'PRIDE' to 988 to reach a counselor with such training. The official did not respond to additional questions regarding what organization(s) 'radical grooming contractors' was referring to specifically. The Trevor Project, a national suicide prevention and crisis intervention organization for LGBTQ youths, is among the contractors that make up a subnetwork of specialists who provide 988 services to LGBTQ young people. 'Attempts to discredit these life-saving services will not change the reality of what this administration is proposing: the elimination of a national suicide prevention program, run by seven leading crisis contact centers, that has supported over 1.3 million LGBTQ+ youth across the U.S. with best-practice crisis care,' Jaymes Black, the project's CEO, said in a statement to NBC News, referring to the number of contacts who have reached out to 988 for LGBTQ-specific support since the program's start in 2022. 'Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle — and our President — came together during the first Trump administration to create this specialized resource,' Black added. 'It's a shared acknowledgement that every young life is worth saving, and that risk, not identity, drives evidence-based and effective crisis intervention. We strongly urge the administration and Congress to rethink this proposal, and do what is best for ending the public health crisis of suicide among our nation's youth. The other six contractors who provide 988 services to LGBTQ young people are Centerstone, Volunteers of America Western Washington State, Solari Crisis & Human Services, CommUnity Crisis Services, HopeLink Behavioral Health and La Frontera EMPACT. Centerstone did not answer NBC News' question about the proposed elimination to 988's LGBTQ-specific service, and the other organizations did not immediately respond to requests for comment. In April, The Washington Post reported a leaked HHS budget draft that proposed cutting funding for 988 services for LGBTQ youth. At the time, the White House wouldn't confirm the veracity of that draft or the information about the funding. The budget proposal is the latest effort from the Trump administration to rollback services and protections for LGBTQ people, specifically transgender people. In the first few weeks of his second administration, Trump issued several executive orders targeting trans people, including declaring that there are only two unchangeable sexes; prohibiting trans people from enlisting and serving in the military; barring trans girls and women from competing on female sports teams in federally-funded K-12 schools and colleges; and barring federal funding from going to hospitals that provide transition-related care to minors. Federal officials have also scrubbed agency websites of any mention of transgender or intersex people, including from the website for the Stonewall National Monument commemorating the site of the 1969 Stonewall Uprising, in which historians say trans people were crucial and became a turning point in the modern gay rights movement. At the start of June, which is LGBTQ Pride month, the Navy confirmed to NBC News that it would rename the USNS Harvey Milk, a fleet replenishment oiler named for the LGBTQ rights activist, Navy veteran and first openly gay man elected to public office in California.


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
GOP senators break ranks on Trump's military parade - one compares it to North Korea
Rand Paul has become the first Republican senator to break ranks on President Donald Trump's military parade, comparing it to North Korea. The parade, which officials estimate will cost a maximum of $45 million, will be held on June 14 to celebrate the Army's 250th birthday, which also happens to fall on Trump's 79th birthday. The Kentucky fiscal hawk told reporters in Washington, D.C. Tuesday that he's 'never been a big fan of goose-stepping soldiers in big tanks and missiles rolling down the street. So if you asked me, I wouldn't have done it,' Fox News Chief National Security Correspondent Jennifer Griffin reported on X. Paul said he's not sure what the actual cost of the parade will be, and then took his criticism a step further by comparing it to the military parades of strongman states. 'We were always different than the images you saw of the Soviet Union and North Korea. We were proud not to be that. And I don't, I'm not proposing that that's the image people want to project, but I'm worried about the image that it isn't necessarily the best image to show,' Paul said. Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana, another Republican who advocates for spending cuts, told reporters on Capitol Hill Tuesday in reaction to Trump's military parade: ' I wouldn't spend the money if it were me,' according to Griffin. 'The United States of America is the most powerful country in all of human history. We're a lion, and a lion doesn't have to tell you it's a lion. Everybody else in the jungle knows, and we're a lion. I would save the money, but if the president wants to have a parade, he's the President, and I'm not,' he said. Other GOP senators have also questioned the cost of the parade, including Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Roger Wicker of Mississippi and Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins of Maine. Still, their comments haven't gone as far as Paul and Kennedy's. Republican Senator Ron Johnson, a Wisconsin fiscal hawk, told Politico in an article published last Thursday, 'If it costs money, I won't go.' The parade will feature around 6,600 Army troops and military equipment such as a WWII-vintage B-25 bomber, a P-1 fighter and Huey helicopters used in the Vietnam War, according to Politico. Reuters reported that there will also be 25 M1 Abrams tanks, 28 Stryker armored vehicles, and four Paladin self-propelled artillery vehicles. There will also be 18 miles of fencing and 175 metal detectors installed, The Associated Press reported. According to NBC News, it may cost as much as $16 million to repair the streets of Washington, D.C. after the parade. But Trump said the cost of the event is 'peanuts compared to the value of doing it,' in a May 4 interview on NBC News' Meet the Press. 'We have the greatest missiles in the world. We have the greatest submarines in the world. We have the greatest army tanks in the world. We have the greatest weapons in the world. And we're going to celebrate it,' he said.