Maryland has officially become the third state in the nation to provide insurance coverage for transition-related care,The Baltimore Sun reported Tuesday.
The policy shift, which went into effect July 1 but was only announced publicly this week, means that any state employee, retiree, or dependent will be able to access mental health services, hormone therapy, and a range of surgeries associated with gender reassignment without having to pay entirely out of pocket. California and Oregon are the only other states that provide similar insurance coverage for their transgender employees.
The change was made as a result of a discrimination complaint brought by 31-year-old Sailor Holobaugh, a clinical research assistant in at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, who was denied reimbursement for a transition-related mastectomy in 2012. Holobaugh appealed the decision with the Maryland Insurance Administration and the Maryland Attorney General’s Office, and was eventually awarded nearly $4,500 from his state-provided insurance plan to cover $6,000 in surgery costs.
Rather than agreeing to only reimburse Holobaugh, however, state officials decided to shift Maryland’s entire health care policy for its transgender employees.
“It’s a pretty sweeping change,” Jer Welter, managing attorney at Free State Legal, told The Baltimore Sun. “It is going from care for gender transition being completely, categorically excluded in all of the plans, to being fully covered under all of the plans.”









