NC health plan discriminates against transgender workers, federal appeals court rules [The Charlotte Observer]
A divided federal appeals court ruled that North Carolina’s state health insurance plan discriminated against transgender patients by not covering gender-affirming care.
Transgender state workers sued the state in 2019 over a coverage exclusion in the State Health Plan for treatments for gender dysphoria, the medical term for distress occurring when someone’s physical sex doesn’t match their gender identity.
The case could be appealed to the
Defendants in the case, which included Republican state Treasurer
“In this case, discriminating on the basis of diagnosis is discriminating on the basis of gender identity and sex,” Judge
“Gender dysphoria is so intimately related to transgender status as to be virtually indistinguishable from it,” Gregory wrote. “The excluded treatments aim at addressing incongruity between sex assigned at birth and gender identity, the very heart of transgender status.”
A lower court agreed with the workers, but the case was appealed to the 4th Circuit, which heard the case in September.
The court heard the case en banc, meaning all 14 judges presided. Seven judges, all of whom were nominated by Democratic presidents, joined Gregory in his majority opinion, while the rest dissented.
In a dissenting opinion, Judge
“The exclusions do not deny someone coverage for medical services based on the person’s sex or transgender status,” Richardson wrote. “Rather, they deny everyone coverage for certain services based on the medical diagnosis for which the person is seeking those services.”
The State Health Plan covers over 740,000 public employees and their dependents.
The
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