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AG Rokita sends letter to gender health clinics, includes vague threats to providers and parents

Attorney General Todd Rokita  sent a letter to gender-affirming care providers Tuesday requesting information about procedures offered to transgender youth. The letter – largely based on misinformation – issued vague threats against medical providers and families.

Gender-affirming care is a holistic approach to treating gender dysphoria – including social, mental, medicinal and surgical health care. It’s supported by  all major medical organizations including the American Medical Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Rokita’s letter to providers included several questions about gender-affirming surgeries. During testimony on  SB 480 – which would ban medicinal and surgical gender-affirming care for Hoosier youth – providers in Indiana explained that they did not offer that care, but did offer referrals for after the patient turned 18.

It’s also against  national and international guidelines to provide gender-affirming surgeries for minors. Rokita said in a news release, surgical care could “legitimately be considered child abuse.”

Rokita also called medicinal treatments – like puberty blockers and hormone therapies – the “sterilization of Hoosier children.”  Puberty blockers are largely reversible and have similar side effects to most medications. And hormone therapies can affect fertility, but  aren’t guaranteed to.

READ MORE: What is gender-affirming care?

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The letter also included a question that intimated medical professionals used  suicide statistics for unsupported trans youth to convince parents to give consent for treatment. Providers both in testimony and through  interviews with Indiana Public Broadcasting explained that medicinal and surgical treatments are only pursued after social and mental health care are provided.

The question mirrors testimony heard in favor of the bill to limit gender-affirming care for transgender youth, including from the Alliance Defending Freedom, which has advocated for  the forced sterilization of transgender Europeans; and Parents of ROGD Kids, which is named after  a thoroughly debunked study.

In a statement, the ACLU of Indiana’s Ken Falk said the letter sought to “validate … unjustified discriminatory legislation” currently moving through the Statehouse. He also said providers were under “no greater obligation to answer these inquiries” than if they were asked by anyone else.

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.