佛罗里达州可以禁止青春期阻滞剂和儿童性别手术:上诉法院
Florida Can Enforce Ban On Puberty Blockers, Gender Surgeries For Children: Appeals Court

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/florida-can-enforce-ban-puberty-blockers-gender-surgeries-children-appeals-court

佛罗里达州联邦上诉法院维持了该州对未成年人激素治疗的禁令,同时对该禁令提出质疑的诉讼仍在继续。 此前,下级法院最初拒绝停止执行该禁令。 法院认为,该州在有关治疗可能带来医疗风险的论点方面已经显示出成功的可能性,特别是由于误诊跨性别者的风险。 争议的焦点围绕 2023 年的一项法律,该法律禁止医疗保健提供者在未经父母同意的情况下向未成年人进行变性手术或提供跨性别激素或青春期阻滞剂等药物。 目前正在服用药物的未成年人仍然可以服用,但现在禁止手术。 希望接受性别转变治疗的成年人必须仅从医生那里接受治疗并亲自填写文件,而不能通过护士或在线平台。 六月,另一位法官做出了有利于那些对限制提出异议的人的裁决,称国家可以控制治疗,但不应剥夺跨性别者“安全有效”的护理。 然而,该裁决在国家上诉后被推翻。 批评者认为该法律对跨性别者存在歧视,而支持者则认为该法律保护儿童免受永久性的、可能有害的治疗。 查尔斯·威尔逊法官表示反对,并援引了针对跨性别者的令人不快的歧视的充分证据。 支持 LGBTQ+ 的倡导团体对这一决定表示遗憾,他们担心如果拒绝必要的医疗干预,会给跨性别青少年和成年人带来后果。 佛罗里达州卫生部没有对判决发表评论。

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原文

Authored by Bill Pan via The Epoch Times,

A federal appeals court has allowed Florida to enforce a ban on hormone replacement therapy for children while the legal challenge against the ban proceeds.

In the Aug. 26 decision, a three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sided with Florida, reversing a district judge’s order that put the ban on hold while the matter is appealed. The court also approved expedited proceedings in the appeal.

“The district court itself recognized that there were ‘legitimate concerns’ about some of the treatments’ effects, as well as a ’risk of misdiagnosis,‘ ’risks attendant to treatment,‘ and the potential for ’additional medical risks,'” the panel’s 2–1 majority, Judges Britt Grant and Robert Luck, wrote in the unsigned opinion.

The defendants, including Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo and the Florida Board of Medicine, have made “a strong showing that they are likely to succeed on the merits,” the judges concluded.

At the center of the legal battle is a 2023 law that prohibits doctors and nurses from performing sex-reassignment surgeries or prescribing medication such as cross-sex hormones and puberty blockers to anyone under the age of 18, regardless of parental consent. Children who were already taking those medications when the law was passed may continue, but surgeries are no longer permitted.

The law also places restrictions on adults seeking gender transition treatment, requiring that adult patients receive such treatment exclusively from a physician and sign the consent form in person, effectively preventing them from seeking the treatment from nurses or telehealth services.

In June, Judge Robert Hinkle of the Northern District of Florida ruled in favor of those challenging the restrictions, including the parents of a 10-year-old boy diagnosed with gender dysphoria. The judge stated that while Florida may regulate treatments, it should not deny “safe and effective medical treatment” to people identifying as transgender.

The state appealed Hinkle’s ruling and asked the judge to allow it to enforce the law while waiting for the appellate hearing. Without a stay, the state argued, it would not be able to ensure those treatments meet appropriate medical standards.

“That is simply not true. The state has in place abundant means of ensuring that health care professionals adhere to the prevailing standards of care,” Hinkle wrote in his denial of a stay.

“The state allowed and even paid for gender-affirming care for many years before enacting the statute and rules at issue in a wave of anti-transgender bias.”

Grant and Luck disagreed with Hinkle. They concluded that the harm the state would suffer from not being able to enforce the will of the Legislature and the need to “avoid irreversible health risks to its children” outweighs the potential harm to individual plaintiffs.

“As to harm to others, even with the law in effect, physicians may continue to prescribe and administer puberty blockers and hormones to adults. And minors who were already receiving them may continue to do so,” they wrote in the Aug. 26 opinion.

Judge Charles Wilson dissented, arguing that there is “sufficient record evidence” to back the claim that the 2023 law was based on “invidious discrimination against transgender minors and adults.”

“On balance, evidence in the record demonstrates that the plaintiffs and class-members would suffer if the stay were granted—withholding access to gender-affirming care would cause needless suffering,” he wrote.

“This matter is a medical issue, where patients are best left to make decisions alongside health professionals, with access to complete, unbiased information, as needed.”

The National Center for Lesbian Rights, one of the pro-LGBT advocacy groups litigating the case, said it was “deeply disappointed” by the decision.

“Allowing these discriminatory restrictions to go back into effect will deny transgender adults and adolescents lifesaving care, and prevent Florida parents from making medical decisions that are right for their children,” the group said in a statement.

Florida’s Department of Health didn’t respond to a request for comment by publication time.

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