Current:Home > ScamsWest Virginia is asking the US Supreme Court to consider transgender surgery Medicaid coverage case -WealthEngine
West Virginia is asking the US Supreme Court to consider transgender surgery Medicaid coverage case
View
Date:2025-04-16 18:39:43
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review rulings that found the state’s refusal to cover certain health care for transgender people with government-sponsored insurance is discriminatory, Republican Attorney General Patrick Morrisey said Thursday.
In April, the Richmond-based 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 8-6 in the case involving coverage of gender-affirming surgery by West Virginia Medicaid, finding that the “coverage exclusions facially discriminate based on sex and gender identity,” according to a majority opinion penned by Judge Roger Gregory.
The state of West Virginia had argued that officials in states with limited resources should have discretion to utilize those resources as they see fit to meet the needs of the population. West Virginia is one of the U.S. states with the most people living under the poverty line and the worst health outcomes.
“We’re not a rich state — we can’t afford to do everything,” Morrisey said Thursday during a live-streamed briefing with press. “And that’s one of the challenges that we have with this mandate. There’s only so much money to go around, and spending money on some treatments necessarily takes it away from others.”
West Virginia is “a state that’s trying to help ensure that we’re covering people with heart disease, with diabetes, and all sorts of medical conditions,” Morrisey said, adding that long-term research on gender affirming surgery is still limited.
In the majority 4th Circuit opinion, judges said the cost of treatment is not a sufficient argument to support upholding a policy found to be discriminatory: “Especially where government budgets are involved, there will frequently be a ‘rational’ basis for discrimination,” Judge Gregory wrote.
During Thursday’s briefing, Morrisey said he didn’t have the data in front of him to answer a question from a reporter about how many West Virginia Medicaid recipients had pursued obtaining gender-affirming surgery, and what the actual cost to the state was.
“We can look at it and we can evaluate it, but that’s not the question in this case,” he said.
The 4th Circuit case also involved gender-affirming care coverage by North Carolina’s state employee health plan. Specifically, North Carolina’s policy bars treatment or studies “leading to or in connection with sex changes or modifications and related care,” while West Virginia’s bars coverage of “transsexual surgery.”
A spokesperson for Morrisey’s office said Thursday that North Carolina is also asking the U.S. Supreme Court to take up its case.
Similar cases are under consideration in courts across the country, but April’s was the first U.S. Court of Appeals decision to consider government-sponsored coverage exclusions of gender affirming medical care — and whether those exclusions are lawful.
Both states appealed separate lower court rulings that found the denial of gender-affirming care to be discriminatory and unconstitutional. Two panels of three Fourth Circuit judges heard arguments in both cases last year before deciding to intertwine the two cases and see them presented before the full court.
In August 2022, a federal judge ruled West Virginia’s Medicaid program must provide coverage for gender-affirming care for transgender residents.
An original lawsuit filed in 2020 also named state employee health plans. A settlement with The Health Plan of West Virginia Inc. in 2022 led to the removal of the exclusion on gender-affirming care in that company’s Public Employees Insurance Agency plans.
Unlike North Carolina, West Virginia has covered hormone therapy and other pharmaceutical treatments for transgender people since 2017. Gregory noted in April that West Virginia’s program partially or fully covers surgeries to remove and reconstruct sexual organs for non-gender dysphoria-related diagnoses, such as cancer.
How many people use this
“We can look at it and evaluate it, but that’s not the question we’re looking at here/// 19:30
veryGood! (71893)
Related
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Fulcrum Bioenergy, Aiming to Produce ‘Net-Zero’ Jet Fuel From Plastic Waste, Hits Heavy Turbulence
- Taylor Swift postpones Saturday Rio show due to high temperatures
- Univision cozies up to Trump, proving the Latino vote is very much in play in 2024
- Trump's 'stop
- 'Saltburn' basks in excess and bleak comedy
- Blocked from a horizontal route, rescuers will dig vertically to reach 41 trapped in India tunnel
- Shakira to appear in Barcelona court on the first day of her tax fraud trial in Spain
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Who pulled the trigger? Questions raised after Georgia police officer says his wife fatally shot herself
Ranking
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Suspect arrested over ecstasy-spiked champagne that killed restaurant patron, hospitalized 7 others
- Donna Kelce Proves Jason and Travis Kelce's Bond Extends Far Beyond Football
- Man fatally shot by New Hampshire police following disturbance and shelter-in-place order
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- DeSantis won’t condemn Musk for endorsing an antisemitic post. ‘I did not see the comment,’ he says
- Support pours in after death of former first lady Rosalynn Carter
- Amid the Israel-Hamas war, religious leaders in the U.S. reflect on the power of unity
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Tributes for Rosalynn Carter pour in from Washington, D.C., and around the country
Skip the shopping frenzy with these 4 Black Friday alternatives
Test flight for SpaceX's massive Starship rocket reaches space, explodes again
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
Got fall allergies? Here's everything you need to know about Benadryl.
Judge rules that adult film star Ron Jeremy can be released to private residence
Billboard Music Awards 2023: Taylor Swift racks up 10 wins, including top artist