AN ACT RELATING TO TAXATION -- PROPERTY SUBJECT TO TAXATION
The bill would ban certain medical treatments for minors with gender dysphoria and prioritize psychotherapy as the primary or preferred care approach.
The bill would ban certain medical treatments for minors with gender dysphoria and prioritize psychotherapy as the primary or preferred care approach.
Title: AN ACT PROHIBITING CERTAIN TREATMENT PRACTICES AND PROMOTING PSYCHOTHERAPY FOR MINORS EXPERIENCING GENDER DYSPHORIA OR INCONGRUENCE
Subject: Gender identity or expression; Health care providers
Introduced: March 14, 2025 (filed); Legislative actions through May 15, 2025
Based on the bill title, HB 5370 seeks to (1) prohibit specified medical interventions for minors who are diagnosed with or present as having gender dysphoria or gender incongruence and (2) encourage or require psychotherapy or counseling approaches as the primary or preferred treatment for these minors. The stated aim would be to limit certain medical or surgical gender‑affirming interventions for youth and to promote mental‑health‑focused care.
The bill text is not provided here. The title and legislative history indicate the bill would likely include:
- A prohibition on one or more categories of medical treatments for minors with gender dysphoria/incongruence (commonly these bills target puberty‑suppressing medications, cross‑sex hormones, and certain surgical interventions).
- Requirements or incentives to provide psychotherapy, counseling, or other mental‑health services for minors experiencing gender dysphoria/incongruence as an alternative or prerequisite to medical interventions.
- Provisions that affect how health care providers counsel, refer, or deliver care to these minors (possible record‑keeping, informed‑consent, or parental‑notification components).
- Possible interaction with insurance coverage, minor‑consent laws, and professional licensing/discipline for providers who violate prohibitions.
Because the bill text is not attached, specific definitions, prohibited procedures, exceptions (e.g., medical necessity), enforcement mechanisms, and penalties are not available here.
Note: Legislative records show the bill was amended and passed on May 15, 2025. Confirm whether “passed” means passage in one chamber only, final enactment, or sent to the other chamber for concurrence and review the official legislative site for final disposition.
This summary is based on the bill title and the available legislative actions; the full bill text, committee reports, amendments, and fiscal analyses are necessary to state precise prohibitions, definitions, exceptions, enforcement, and implementation details. For authoritative information, consult the official bill text and legislative journal entries for HB 5370 and any related committee reports.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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