I quit my full-time job as a bank teller to become a full-time freelance journalist on April 20, 2017. I had never done anything so rash before. I was always the person who made reasonable decisions, going from safe job to safe job, trying to slowly build a better life for myself. But after successfully publishing a few scattered bylines in online outlets like Vice, I decided to jump off the career cliff into the great unknown of working for myself.
My access to that essential care is now being quietly threatened by the Trump administration.
And I couldn’t have done it without the Affordable Care Act and its coverage of gender-affirming care.
But my access to that essential care is now being quietly threatened by the Trump administration. Last week, the Department of Health and Human Services put out a proposed rule that would change a wide range of policies under the ACA — including shortening the open enrollment period by a full month, ending eligibility for ACA plans for DACA recipients and no longer requiring gender-affirming care coverage as an essential health benefit on all ACA individual and small group plans.
“This means that insurance plans would no longer be required to cover treatments related to gender transition, such as hormone therapy, puberty blockers, and surgeries,” Matthew Rose, senior public policy advocate at the Human Rights Campaign, told me in a statement. “As a result, many insurers may drop coverage for these services or shift the costs to individuals and states. If a state mandates coverage for gender-affirming care outside of the federal EHB requirements, it would have to pay for the coverage itself. This could make gender-affirming care more expensive or inaccessible for transgender individuals, particularly those with lower incomes.”
If this rule, which is open for public comment, gets implemented, I could lose coverage for vital hormone prescriptions and doctor’s appointments.
I’m not alone in worrying about this. According to available data, trans people are more likely to be uninsured than the average cisgender person, and though numbers are hard to come by, trans people appear much more likely to get insurance from a government-subsidized program like the ACA or Medicaid.
HHS estimates that more than 45 million people have ACA plan insurance. If you use the conservative estimate that 0.6% of the population is trans, rough math says that as many as 270,000 people could lose access to the gender-affirming care coverage that they’re currently paying for. The rule, if put into place, would go into effect starting next year, depending on the outcome of likely inevitable lawsuits.
The proposed rule change has gotten surprisingly little media attention so far, with few outlets reporting on it. The administration’s quiet rollout has seemingly worked, as the rule had received only about 5,400 public comments as of Tuesday morning.
Nevertheless, a ban of this nature on gender-affirming care would be unprecedented. This type of care has been consistently covered since 2016, including through the entirety of President Donald Trump’s first term.
And this proposed rule, more so than the passport nonsense outlined in the administration’s early executive orders, represents the most alarming government attack on my personal life since Trump took back the White House.
Conservatives have a track record of trying to cut funding for things they don’t like by claiming “my tax dollars shouldn’t fund that” — think, “my tax dollars shouldn’t fund abortions.” Now they’re doing the same thing here, claiming they should have personal veto power over tax dollars spent on trans people they have increasingly villainized in recent years.








