Opinion: The pandemic forced my wife to fight our insurer over hormones
That was until she lost her job in
"I'm absolutely stressed. I don't know what to do," Ky said in August as we tried to find a solution.
Because of Ky's physical transition as a transgender woman, her body doesn't make the testosterone it once did. So, without the medication, she would essentially go through menopause. A decline in estrogen levels can also cause transgender women to lose the physical transitions they've achieved, resulting in gender dysphoria, which is psychological distress from the mismatch between their biological sex and their gender identity.
Unfortunately, Ky's experience is shared by many other transgender Americans. The COVID-19 pandemic has caused millions of people to lose their jobs and private health insurance, particularly LGBTQ adults, who reported at higher rates than non-LGBTQ adults that they lost their jobs during the crisis. Consequently, enrollment surged in ACA plans and Medicaid, the state-federal health program for low-income people. Yet many of those plans don't fully cover gender-affirming care, partly because of conservative policies and lack of scientific research on how crucial this care is for transgender patients.
According to a survey by Out2Enroll, a national initiative to connect LGBTQ people with ACA coverage, 46% of the 1,386 silver marketplace plans polled cover all or some medically necessary treatment for gender dysphoria. However, 7% have trans-specific exclusions, 14% have some exclusions, and 33% don't specify.
"It's this whack-a-mole situation where plans, for the most part, do not have blanket exclusions, but where people are still having difficulty getting specific procedures, medications, etc., covered," said
Twenty-three states and
Yet even in states such as
Such "prior authorizations" are an issue across Medicaid and ACA plans for medications including injectable estrogen and testosterone, which is used by transgender men, Baker said.
The lack of easy coverage may reflect the fact that injectable estrogen, which provides the high doses of the hormone needed for transgender women to physically transition, isn't commonly used by non-trans women undergoing hormone therapy to treat menopause or other issues, Weimer said.
It also may be because cheaper options, including daily estrogen pills, exist, but these increase the risk of blood clots. Estrogen patches release the hormone through the skin but can cause skin reactions, and many people struggle to absorb enough estrogen, Weimer said.
Consequently, many of Weimer's patients wear up to four patches at a time, but
While such insurance gaps have existed for long before the pandemic, the current crisis seems to have amplified the matter, according to Weimer. The ACA prohibits discrimination based on race, color, national origin, age, disability and sex in health programs and activities that receive federal financial assistance. The Trump administration significantly narrowed the power of that provision, including eliminating health
insurance protections for transgender people.
However, in
The Biden administration announced in May that the
But for now, the pressure is still on patients like Ky to fight for their health benefits.
"The reality is that trans people are more likely to be in poverty and don't have the time or knowledge to spend four months fighting to get their estradiol like I did," Ky said.



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