Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
FTC Sues Leading Transgender Care Group, Alleging 'Deceptive Claims'
The Federal Trade Commission is suing the leading transgender health care group in federal court. The agency argued on Wednesday that the World Professional Association for Transgender Health made 鈥渄eceptive claims鈥 in its health care guidelines for transgender children. The group鈥檚 members include psychiatrists, surgeons, pediatricians, endocrinologists and primary care doctors who work with transgender patients. The FTC, like the Health Department, has been on a monthslong legal tear to clamp down on providers and hospitals that offer gender-affirming care. Gender-affirming care refers to medical interventions for minors experiencing distress that their bodies do not align with their gender identity. (Levien, 6/17)
A federal judge ordered the Bureau of Prisons on Wednesday to continue providing hormone medications to transgender inmates, rejecting, at least for now, the Trump administration鈥檚 decision to no longer provide such medical treatment for prisoners. Judge Royce C. Lamberth, of the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia, issued a preliminary injunction, finding that doubts the government has raised about hormone therapy were unlikely to satisfy a legal requirement that federal agencies offer a reasoned explanation for reversing existing policies. (Harmon, 6/17)
In mental health news 鈥
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: Arrests Of Immigrant Parents Create Mental Health Crisis For Children
Damian Zerme帽o, 15, sensed something was wrong the moment he got home from school. His aunt sat at the dining table, sobbing. His father, who鈥檇 walked him to the bus stop that morning and promised to take him to dinner when he got back, wasn鈥檛 there. Sa煤l Zerme帽o, a 45-year-old single dad, had gone to a routine check-in appointment at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement office that morning, a requirement he鈥檇 complied with for years. (Boyd-Barrett, 6/18)
Deciding whether to have a child is one of the most consequential choices that someone will make. In many ways, it鈥檚 a leap of faith: Nobody can know ahead of time exactly what parenthood will look or feel like. Prospective parents often worry about problems like economic uncertainty, global crises or the difficulty of balancing parenting responsibilities with career. And for those with mental illness, there are additional considerations that can make the choice feel especially fraught. (Caron, 6/17)
鈥 Luigi Mangione plans to assert a psychiatric defense at his state murder trial, claiming he was suffering from extreme emotional disturbance when he gunned down UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, a judge said Wednesday. It wouldn鈥檛 absolve him of the Dec. 4, 2024, killing, but could free him from prison sooner. If a jury accepts that defense, the panel would convict Mangione of manslaughter and he would face up to 25 years in prison. Alternatively, the jury could reject the extreme emotional disturbance defense and convict him of murder, which carries a potential life sentence. That defense isn鈥檛 available in his federal case. (Sisak, 6/17)
Tech's effects on health 鈥
Sam was 15 when a friend he鈥檇 met playing Call of Duty invited him to join a private Discord forum where girls his age were sharing nude selfies and teens were trading violent images better than any horror movie. To get in, Sam needed to prove he could find someone to carve his username on their body. His friend said he had a girl who could help. Once inside, Sam says, he discovered hundreds of girls, many of them being manipulated into posting graphic clips. (Murphy, 6/17)
Too many Americans are 鈥渦nder-babied,鈥 Dr. Mehmet Oz has said. He and other Trump administration officials frame the falling fertility rate as a crisis, fueling debates about what鈥檚 causing the decline. One argument gaining traction recently is that smartphones have made people less social and therefore less likely to have sex. (Bendix, 6/18)