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To protect children from medical malpractice in the form of gender transition procedures.
2/4/2025, 4:28 PM
Summary of Bill HR 653
The bill outlines that any medical professional who provides gender transition procedures to minors could face legal consequences, including losing their medical license. It also emphasizes the importance of ensuring that children are not subjected to irreversible procedures that could have long-term negative effects on their physical and mental health.
Supporters of the bill argue that children should not be making life-altering decisions about their gender identity at a young age, and that medical professionals should be held accountable for potentially harmful practices. Critics, however, argue that the bill infringes on the rights of transgender individuals to access necessary medical care. Overall, Bill 119 HR 653 raises important questions about the ethics and legality of gender transition procedures for minors, and highlights the ongoing debate surrounding the rights and well-being of transgender youth.
Congressional Summary of HR 653
Protect Minors from Medical Malpractice Act of 2025
This bill makes a medical practitioner who performs a gender-transition procedure on an individual who is less than 18 years of age liable for any physical, psychological, emotional, or physiological harms from the procedure for 30 years after the individual turns 18.
Additionally, if a state requires medical practitioners to perform gender-transition procedures, that state shall be ineligible for federal funding from the Department of Health and Human Services.
Under the bill, gender-transition procedures generally include certain surgeries or hormone therapies that change the body of an individual to correspond to a sex that is discordant with the individual's biological sex. They exclude, however, interventions to treat (1) individuals who either have ambiguous external biological sex characteristics or lack a normal sex chromosome structure, sex steroid hormone production, or sex steroid hormone action; (2) infections, injuries, diseases, or disorders caused by a gender-transition procedure; or (3) a physical disorder, injury, or illness that places an individual in imminent danger of death or impairment of a major bodily function.

