Obama Judge Rules Medicaid Must Pay for Transgender Sex Reassignment Surgery
An Obama-appointed federal judge is forcing Wisconsin taxpayers to provide costly sex reassignment surgery and hormonal procedures for low-income transgender residents who get free medical care from the government. In a recently issued ruling U.S. District Judge William M. Conley writes that Medicaid, the publicly funded insurance that covers 65.7 million poor people, cannot deny the medical treatment needs of those suffering from âgender dysphoria.â Officials estimate it will cost up to $1.2 million annually to provide transgender Medicaid recipients in the Badger State with treatments such as âgender confirmationâ surgery, including elective mastectomies, hysterectomies, genital reconstruction and breast augmentation. The intricate operations are typically done by plastic surgeons.
The ruling culminates a lawsuit filed more than a year ago by two transgender Wisconsinites, who accuse the federal and state-funded insurance program of providing them with disparate and inferior health care on the basis of sex. Cody Flack of Green Bay and Sara Makenzie of Baraboo say they suffer from severe gender dysphoria that requires costly surgery. Flack, a woman, claims to be ashamed of her breasts and wants to have them surgically removed as she transitions into a manâs body. To make a case for the government to pay for her surgery, she claims that she engages in âbinding,â which flattens her breasts and causes sores, skin irritation and respiratory distress. Flack also has difficulty binding her breasts due to a disability, according to court documents. Makenzie, a man who legally changed his name to Sara and wears womenâs clothing, says his âmale-appearing genitaliaâ causes him âgreat distressâ and negatively affects his sexuality and social life. Showering and seeing his body in a mirror is âpainful,â court records state, and Makenzie fears someone will be able to see his âmale genitalsâ through his clothing.
Last summer Judge Conley issued a preliminary injunction ordering Wisconsin to cover sex reassignment surgery for Flack and Makenzie while state health officials appealed. The permanent ruling directing the state-federal insurance for the poor to pay for all gender confirmation operations in the state was issued last week. To lay the foundation, Conley writes in the injunction that gender dysphoria is a serious medical condition, which if left untreated can cause adverse symptoms. âAs a group, transgender individuals have been subjected to harassment and discrimination in virtually every aspect of their lives, including in housing, employment, education, and health care,â according to the document. âTheir own families, acquaintances and larger communities can be sources of harassment. For some transgender individuals, though certainly not all, the dissonance between their gender identity and their naturally assigned sex can manifest itself in the form of gender dysphoria, a serious medical condition recognized by both sidesâ experts and the larger medical community as a whole.â
Though Medicaid initially denied Flackâs chest reconstructive surgery, it was eventually completed at taxpayer expense after the judgeâs injunction. A plastic surgeon performed a double mastectomy and male chest construction last fall. âFollowing the surgery, Codyâs gender dysphoria was greatly diminished,â according to Conleyâs final ruling, because his âoutward appearance matched his male genderâ and he âwould no longer be misgendered because of his breasts.â Makenzie got a bilateral orchiectomy and vaginoplasty to create âfemale appearing external genitaliaâ after the judge determined that the surgeries are medically necessary. Because Medicaid refused to cover chest reconstruction surgery prior to the lawsuit, Makenzie obtained a personal loan to pay a plastic surgeon at the University of Wisconsin Hospital for the operation in 2016. Court documents say Makenzie contends that the surgery helped alleviate his gender dysphoria.
In his decision, Judge Conley cites guidelines issued by the World Professional Association of Transgender Health to treat transsexual, transgender and gender nonconforming people. Treatments include psychotherapy, hormone therapy and âa number of surgical proceduresâ to eliminate the development of unwanted secondary sex characteristics of the assigned sex, develop secondary sex characteristics of the sex associated with the patientâs gender identity and enhance the patientâs ability to âpassâ as the sex associated with the patientâs gender identity to decrease harassment, mistreatment and other forms of discrimination.