Age group with highest increase in gender-affirming medication use by 2026?
8-12 years • 25%
13-15 years • 25%
16-17 years • 25%
No significant increase • 25%
Future studies or reports on healthcare data
JAMA Pediatrics Study: Less Than 0.1% of U.S. Adolescents Received Gender-Affirming Medications Over Five Years
Jan 6, 2025, 08:00 PM
A recent study published in JAMA Pediatrics by Landon Hughes, a Harvard University public health researcher, has found that fewer than 1 in 1,000 U.S. adolescents with private insurance received gender-affirming medications, such as puberty blockers or hormones, over a five-year period from 2018 to 2022. The research, analyzing insurance claims data of over 5 million patients aged 8 to 17, indicates that less than 0.1% of these youth received such treatments. Specifically, 926 adolescents received puberty blockers, and 1,927 received hormones. The study highlights that no patients under the age of 12 were prescribed hormones, suggesting a cautious approach by healthcare providers. This data comes amid ongoing debates and legal challenges in the U.S. regarding healthcare for transgender youth, with at least 26 states having enacted laws restricting or banning these treatments for minors.
View original story
Seniors (65+) • 25%
Children • 25%
Young Adults (18-24) • 25%
Adults (25-64) • 25%
45+ • 25%
18-24 • 25%
25-34 • 25%
35-44 • 25%
Adults aged 51 and older • 25%
Adults aged 31-40 • 25%
Adults aged 21-30 • 25%
Adults aged 41-50 • 25%
Adults aged 25-34 • 25%
Adults aged 45 and over • 25%
Adults aged 35-44 • 25%
Adults aged 18-24 • 25%
Adults (20+ years) • 25%
Infants (0-1 years) • 25%
Children (2-12 years) • 25%
Teenagers (13-19 years) • 25%
Infants (0-1 year) • 25%
Adults (20+ years) • 25%
Teenagers (13-19 years) • 25%
Children (2-12 years) • 25%
Teens (11-18 years) • 25%
Infants (0-1 years) • 25%
Children (2-10 years) • 25%
Adults (19+ years) • 25%
Adults (36-55) • 25%
Young Adults (18-35) • 25%
Children (0-17) • 25%
Seniors (56+) • 25%
Adults aged 55-64 • 25%
Adults aged 75 and older • 25%
Caregivers • 25%
Adults aged 65-74 • 25%
35-44 • 25%
18-24 • 25%
25-34 • 25%
45 and older • 25%
Hispanic Americans • 25%
Asian Americans • 25%
Black Americans • 25%
White Americans • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Ohio • 25%
Other • 25%
Texas • 25%
Florida • 25%