The Biden government successfully pushed an international pro-transgender nonprofit to eliminate age limits from its recommended guidelines for gender transition surgeries. Staff members for Rachel Levine, Joe Biden’s assistant secretary for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), actively lobbied the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) to discard age restrictions, according to documents obtained through a court filing.
One of the emails in the tranche of documents reveals a conversation between a WPATH member and Levine’s chief of staff, Sarah Boateng. She reportedly was concerned that having any ages listed in the guidelines could result in “devastating legislation for trans care” in the U.S.
“Apparently the situation in the U.S.A. is terrible and she and the Biden administration worried that having ages in the document will make matters worse,” the WPATH member wrote, adding: “She asked us to remove them.” In another email, it is revealed Levine himself was “concerned that having ages (mainly for surgery) will affect access to care for trans youth and maybe adults, too.”
Prior to Levine and his staff’s intervention, the nonprofit group had recommended in 2021 a minimum age of 14 for hormone treatments. The group only recommended surgeries that would alter an individual’s genitalia after the age of 17. However, by 2022, all age restrictions had been removed from the guidelines.
Alabama, along with several other states, including Idaho, North Dakota, Florida, and Oklahoma, has enacted laws banning transgender surgeries for minors, classifying such procedures as felonies for doctors who perform them. Additional states have also attempted similar legislation, such as Ohio, where a bill to prohibit surgeries on minors was vetoed by Governor Mike DeWine (R-OH) at the end of last year.