In their quest to find any tool to facilitate their ongoing hate campaign against trans youth, right-wing media are uplifting a recent study by right-wing think tank The Heritage Foundation to claim — in direct opposition to peer-reviewed research — that access to gender-affirming care leads to an increase in suicide rates. In contrast to the studies it aims to refute, The Heritage Foundation study was not peer-reviewed.
The Heritage Foundation, an organization that promotes conversion therapy, anti-trans hate, and flawed research to push for anti-LGBTQ policies, released a study on June 13 titled “Puberty Blockers, Cross-Sex Hormones, and Youth Suicide.” The study provides “data” supposedly showing — in contrast to numerous scientific studies — that greater access to gender-affirming care increases rates of suicide among trans youth. In an attempt to prove this point, it compares statistics on youth suicide from states with and without policies allowing minors to see doctors without parental permission.
The study was written by Jay Greene, a senior research fellow at Heritage’s Center for Education Policy. Greene has no background in medical research and has spent his career attacking diversity initiatives and public school funding. He uses the study to push for states to adopt “parental bills of rights,” which GOP politicians like Texas Gov. Greg Abbott have used in pursuit of their bigoted agendas, such as the removal of books “about race and sexuality” from schools.
The political purpose of the study was further clarified during a press conference promoting its release. The Heritage Foundation’s Jay Richards claimed advocates for trans youth are concerned about the high rate of suicide attempts among trans youth only because it's the only argument that could make parents “overcome our natural opposition to putting children on a pathway to sterilization.” He added that the issue of suicide among trans youth “lands right in the middle of a policy debate we're having in the United States right now." And, he said, by attempting to refute the established research on the issue, they could push for more bans on gender-affirming care, like the ban recently enacted (but later blocked) in Alabama. This strategy of haphazardly shaping data in an attempt to diminish established medical consensus and appropriate the legitimacy of scientific research was also recently seen in a misinformation campaign launched by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration. Like Heritage, the target of DeSantis’ deception is gender-affirming care for trans youth, a proxy for his broad affront on the LGBTQ community.
Deeply flawed methodology behind study rebutted by experts
Immediately following the publication of the report, researchers pointed to clear and significant flaws in the study. Chief among the criticisms is that rather than divide states according to their policies specific to gender-affirming care, the study looks at whether a state allows minors to simply visit a doctor’s office for any type of general medical care without parental consent. By doing this, the study presupposes that states like Texas, Idaho, and Alabama, all states that this year sought to enact the most extreme policies against gender-affirming care in the nation, have ready access to gender-affirming care.
In reality, no state in the nation allows underaged individuals to access gender-affirming care without parental consent. As noted by Dr. Jack Turban, chief fellow in child and adolescent psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine, both the Endocrine Society and the World Professional Association for Transgender Health have guidelines requiring parental consent for gender-affirming care.
Turban also pointed out that the conclusions the study arrives at make no sense: The increase in suicides reflected in the data — which looked at the rate across all teens — cannot be attributed to trans youth who seek and acquire gender-affirming care, a group that makes up a markedly small share of the population.