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Senate votes to ban gender-affirming care for transgender youth

Lawmakers relied on Johnson's medical expertise during committee and floor debate on several health bills, including the gender-affirming care ban for transgender youth, which he authored.
Lawmakers relied on Johnson's medical expertise during committee and floor debate on several health bills, including the gender-affirming care ban for transgender youth, which he authored.

Senate lawmakers voted Tuesday to ban medicinal and surgical  gender-affirming care for transgender youth. Lawmakers opposing the bill call it  an unfair attack on transgender kids.

SB 480 bans a number of hormonal treatments and surgeries for minors – including prescribing testosterone, progesterone and estrogen, and surgeries like penectomies, vaginoplasties and phalloplasties. But it provides exemptions as long as those treatments aren’t  for gender dysphoria.

Democratic Leader Greg Taylor (D-Indianapolis) said if the procedures were truly harmful, then the ban would target those procedures – regardless of diagnosis.

“Are you really trying to protect children? Or are you trying to demonize children?” Taylor said.

READ MORE: What is gender-affirming care?

Join the conversation and sign up for the Indiana Two-Way. Text "Indiana" to 73224. Your comments and questions in response to our weekly text help us find the answers you need on statewide issues throughout the legislative session. And follow along  with our bill tracker.

The bill’s author, Sen. Tyler Johnson (R-Leo) said the bill protects kids from what he calls “unproven and irreversible” treatments. Most  major medical organizations and  international guidance disagree with that claim.

“I’ll repeat that we have the medical, moral and legal obligation to protect Hoosier children,” Johnson said.

Sen. Shelli Yoder (D-Bloomington) said the legislature is “bullying children.”

“We are targeting a very extraordinarily small and extraordinarily vulnerable–vulnerable population making them targets of further harassment and restriction,” Yoder said.

The bill now goes to the House for consideration.

CORRECTION: A previous version of this story misidentified Sen. Shelli Yoder's district as Yorktown. That was incorrect. It is Bloomington.

Lauren is our digital editor. Contact her at  lchapman@wfyi.org or follow her on Twitter at  @laurenechapman_.

Lauren Chapman is the digital producer for our statewide collaboration, and is based at WFYI in Indianapolis. She previous has worked at a basketball magazine, a top 30 newspaper, and a commercial television station. Lauren is new to public media, but in addition to her job "making stuff on the internet," she is also a radio and television reporter. She's a proud Ball State University alumna and grew up on the west side of Indianapolis.