(Credit: Sharon McCutcheon on Unsplash)

A bill that bans gender affirming healthcare for minors in Tennessee was signed into law on Thursday, March 2nd by Governor Bill Lee. The law will go into effect on July 1, 2023 but groups on all sides of the issue are speaking out.

Senate Bill 1 prohibits โ€œlicensed healthcare professionals, establishments, and facilities from performing or offering to perform on a person under 18 years of age, or administering or offering to administer to a minor, a medical procedure if the performance or administration of the procedure is for the purpose of enabling a minor to identify with, or live as, a purported identity inconsistent with the immutable characteristics of the reproductive system that define the minor as male or female, as determined by anatomy and genetics existing at the time of birth.โ€

The bill also prohibits healthcare providers from โ€œtreating purported discomfort or distress from a discordance between the minor’s sex and asserted identity.โ€

This legislation also allows civil litigation against a healthcare provider who performs such procedures. These lawsuits could be brought within 30 years from the date the minor reaches 18 years of age, or within 10 years from the date of the minorโ€™s death if the minor dies. It also allows relatives of a minor to bring a wrongful death action against a healthcare provider in such cases under certain conditions.

Up until recently, Tennessee law allowed for minors to access gender-affirming care.

Groups like Heritage Action For America, a conservative organization, have praised Leeโ€™s passage of the legislation. In a statement, vice president of field operations for the organization, Janae Stracke, said that โ€œthe last things girls and boys struggling with gender confusion need are dangerous cross-sex hormones and experimental, life-altering operations.โ€

Stracke also said that minors โ€œneed compassionate care that addresses the underlying mental health problems associated with gender confusion and dysphoria,โ€ and that โ€œSB 1 will protect Tennessee children from lifelong physical and psychological pain.โ€

While the signing of this bill into law has been praised by some groups, others have been vocal about their opposition, saying that this legislation is actually harmful for minors.

In February, Jace Wilder of the Tennessee Equality Project said that the legislation โ€œignores the actual wishes and desires of the trans youth.โ€

Molly Rose Quinn, executive director of OUTMemphis said that โ€œthese bills are aggressive attacks on best-practice medical care and free speech,โ€ and Leeโ€™s decision to sign them “amounts to state sponsored violence.โ€

โ€œThe government has no place inserting itself into the private medical decisions that should be made by doctors, patients, and their families alone,โ€ Quinn said.

Jenna Dunn, trans services specialist for OUTMemphis said, โ€œto the youth of Tennessee and to the parents that support them, I want you to always remember that no matter what happens in life you are amazing, you are beautiful, worthy of joy, happiness, and respect. Do not ever allow anyone to tear you down mentally or physically, always demand respect and donโ€™t accept anything less.โ€

Ivy Hill, director of gender justice for the Campaign for Southern Equality said, โ€œthe passage of this law cutting off trans young peopleโ€™s access to life-saving care is devastating โ€” but it wonโ€™t stop our community from holding and supporting each other.โ€

โ€œLegal partners are preparing to challenge the law, community groups are supporting trans folks with strategies for healing and resilience, and weโ€™re honored to be connecting families with funding, information, and provider referrals to preserve continuity of care for as many people as we can. No law can stop the transgender community from charting our paths to thriving and living authentically,โ€ said Hill.