SB479,,20204. A marriage and family therapist licensed under ch. 457. SB479,,21215. A social worker certified or licensed under ch. 457. SB479,,2222(d) “Minor” means an individual who is under 18 years of age. SB479,,2323(2) Civil causes of action. A health care provider who performs a gender transition procedure on a minor is liable to the minor if the minor is injured, including any physical, psychological, emotional, or physiological injury, by the gender transition procedure or related treatment or the aftereffects of the gender transition procedure or related treatment. The minor, or the minor’s parent, legal guardian, or legal representative, may bring a civil action against the health care provider for any of the following damages: SB479,,2424(a) Declaratory or injunctive relief. SB479,,2525(b) Compensatory damages. SB479,,2626(c) Punitive damages. SB479,,2727(d) If the prevailing party, reasonable attorney fees and costs. SB479,,2828(3) Limitation of actions. An action under this section shall be commenced before the minor has attained the age of 33 years or, if the minor dies before attaining the age of 33 years, the date on which the minor would have attained the age of 33 years. SB479,,2929(4) Safe harbor. (a) It is a defense to an action brought under this section if, before a health care provider performs a gender transition procedure on a minor, all of the following occur: SB479,,30301. The health care provider documents the minor’s perceived gender or perceived sex for at least 2 continuous years, and the minor’s perceived gender or perceived sex is invariably inconsistent with the minor’s biological sex throughout the 2-year period. SB479,,31312. To the extent that the minor suffers from a mental health concern, at least 2 health care providers, including at least one mental health professional, certifies in writing that the gender transition procedure is the only way to treat the mental health concern. SB479,,32323. At least 2 health care providers, including at least one mental health professional, certifies in writing that the minor suffers from no mental health concerns other than the concern described under subd. 2., including depression, an eating disorder, autism, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, intellectual disability, or a psychotic disorder. SB479,,33334. The health care provider receives the voluntary and informed consent of the minor and the minor’s parent or legal guardian as provided in par. (b). SB479,,3434(b) Consent to a gender transition procedure is voluntary and informed under par. (a) 4. only if, at least 30 days before the first treatment of the gender transition procedure and during every subsequent medical visit for treatment during the following 6 months, the minor and the minor’s parent or legal guardian is provided with the following notice, both orally and in writing in at least 14-point type in a proportional font: SB479,,3636If your child begins one of these treatments, it may actually worsen the discordance and thus increase the likelihood that your child will need additional and more serious interventions to address the worsening condition. For example, if your child begins socially transitioning or taking puberty blockers, that treatment may significantly increase the likelihood that your child’s discordance will worsen and lead to your child eventually seeking cross-sex hormones or even surgery to remove some of your child’s body parts. SB479,,3737Sweden, Finland, and the United Kingdom have conducted systematic reviews of evidence and concluded that there is no evidence that the potential benefits of puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones for this purpose outweigh the known or assumed risks. SB479,,3838Medical authorities in Sweden, Finland, and the United Kingdom have since recommended psychotherapy as the first line of treatment for youth gender dysphoria, with drugs and surgeries reserved as a measure of last resort. Medical authorities in France have advised “great caution” when prescribing hormones for gender dysphoria. SB479,,3939There are people who underwent gender transition treatments as minors and later regretted that decision and the physical harm that these treatments caused, and the total percentage of people who experience this regret is unknown. Some estimate that the rate is below 2 percent, but that estimate is based on studies done on adults who transitioned as adults or on minors who transitioned under highly restrictive and controlled conditions. SB479,,4040Sometimes gender transition treatments have been proposed as a way to reduce the chances of a minor committing suicide due to discordance between the minor’s sex and his or her perception, but the rates of actual suicide from this discordance remain extremely low. Furthermore, as recognized by health authorities in Europe, there is no evidence that suicidality is caused by “unaffirmed” gender or that gender transition treatments are causally linked to a reduction in serious suicidal attempts or ideations. SB479,,4141For puberty blockers: SB479,,4242Puberty blockers are not approved for this purpose by the U.S. food and drug administration, which is the federal agency that determines which drugs are safe and effective for humans to use. Claims about puberty blockers’ safety and efficacy are based on their use for precocious puberty, a different condition in which normal puberty is allowed to resume once the patient reaches the appropriate age. Studies on the benefits of using puberty blockers for gender dysphoria are notoriously weak. Puberty blockers are not fully reversible because, among other risks, puberty blockers may intensify a minor’s discordance and cause it to persist. Puberty blockers increase the risk of your child being sterilized, meaning that he or she will never be able to have children. Puberty blockers may also cause diminished bone density for your child, increasing the risk of fracture and early osteoporosis. Puberty blockers may also prevent your child from ever being able to engage in sexual activity or achieve orgasm for the rest of your child’s life. There is no research on the long-term risks to minors of persistent exposure to puberty blockers. The full effects of puberty blockers on brain development and cognition are unknown. SB479,,4343For cross-sex hormones: SB479,,4444The use of cross-sex hormones in males is associated with numerous health risks, such as thromboembolic disease, including blood clots; cholelithiasis, including gallstones; coronary artery disease, including heart attacks; macroprolactinoma, which is a tumor of the pituitary gland; cerebrovascular disease, including stroke; hypertriglyceridemia, which is an elevated level of triglycerides in the blood; breast cancer; and irreversible infertility. The use of cross-sex hormones in females is associated with risks of erythrocytosis, which is an increase in red blood cells; severe liver dysfunction; coronary artery disease, including heart attack; hypertension; and increased risk of breast and uterine cancer. Once a minor begins cross-sex hormones, the minor may need to continue taking those hormones for many years and possibly for the remainder of the minor’s life. The cost of these hormones may be tens of thousands of dollars. If the use of cross-sex hormones leads to surgery, the total cost of transitioning may exceed $100,000. SB479,,4545For surgical procedures: SB479,,4646The dangers, risks, complications, and long-term concerns associated with these types of procedures are almost entirely unknown. There are no long-term studies on either the effectiveness or safety of these surgical procedures. SB479,247Section 2. Initial applicability. SB479,,4848(1) This act first applies to a gender transition procedure performed on the effective date of this subsection.
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