Umm... This is kind of a big deal.

If this ruling stands, it'd mean that basically every health insurance plans in America (because of the health insurance marketplace) would be required to cover everything WPATH SoC8 deems medically necessary.

Which is... *everything*.

Holy crap.

https://www.lambdalegal.org/news/cp_wa_20221219_court-rules-that-bcbs-cannot-administer-health-plans-with-gender-affirming-exclusions

VICTORY: Court Rules that Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois Cannot Administer Health Plans with Gender-Affirming Care Exclusions

“Third-party administrators that accept federal funds cannot discriminate when administering employer-sponsored health plans.”

Lambda Legal

So uhh, let's break this down.

The ruling is based directly on Bostock's sex protections. It means that even plans which are fully paid by the employer would be bound by this, as long as whichever company runs the processing takes even one red cent of federal money.

The ruling will definitely be appealed to the SC. But unless Roberts and Gorsuch reverse their positions in Bostock, I think this one stands.

Overwhelmingly, fully funded insurance plans are administered by big corps, like BCBS or Aetna. All of those companies take federal $.

All of them. Because of the Health Insurance Marketplace.

And once the standard is on medical necessity, the definitive worldwide standards is WPATH SoC8. Which, if you want to check coverage, I did a write up a few months ago (https://stainedglasswoman.substack.com/p/what-do-wpath-standards-of-care-8).

Or you can check this list. **Everything's** on it.

What do WPATH Standards of Care 8 actually say?

From The Blue Bird App

Stained Glass Woman

If this ruling stands, it's over.

We won.

Every last fucking transition-related procedure will have to be fully covered, by federal law. No asterisks. No ifs, ands, or buts.

Everything.

@Impossible_PhD …facial hair reduction and removal?!?!? No way, I can’t believe it. Don’t get my hopes up… REALLY!?!?!?
@ShatteredWorldCrisis That's what SoC8 says. And I've been hearing that insurers are starting to update coverage for it--and, frankly, it's a dirt cheap procedure to cover. A few grand is a rounding error for these people.
@Impossible_PhD I… shit. How long before one can take advantage of this? Weeks? Months? Who to talk to? Who to press? This is huge… This is overwhelming and amazing. I read it, surgeries too, and… I just don’t believe it. Please keep us in the loop!

@ShatteredWorldCrisis The ruling is in effect immediately.

Probably the best thing to do is to put a copy of this ruling and WPATH SoC8 in your insurer's hands ASAP. Call customer service and tell them you have documents that you'd like their legal team to review.

Then...? Well, here's a guide.

https://stainedglasswoman.substack.com/p/how-to-force-your-insurer-to-cover

How To Force Your Insurer To Cover Your Transition

A tutorial, partially from the Blue Bird Website

Stained Glass Woman
@Impossible_PhD this is an amazing resource. I have a marketplace plan but… Florida. :( Oh well. Unless it needs to be updated? I gotta go deep an exhaust this. Thank you again, so much.
@ShatteredWorldCrisis It's not that simple. Look into your specific plan details. You might be better off than you think.
@Impossible_PhD @ShatteredWorldCrisis the real question is finding hair removal places that take insurance
@dangerdyke you would just need to get a referral to see a dermatologist. basically all medical derma clinics (not “aesthetic care clinics”) offer hair removal.
@ShatteredWorldCrisis @Impossible_PhD our last bc insurance covered this. Was amazing.

@ShatteredWorldCrisis @Impossible_PhD just read SOC8, and yeah, everything does seem to fall under medically necessary!

Medically necessary gender-affirming interventions are discussed in SOC-8. These include but are not limited to hysterectomy +/- bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy; bilateral mastectomy, chest reconstruction or feminizing mammoplasty, nipple resizing or placement of breast prostheses; genital reconstruction, for example, phalloplasty and metoidioplasty, scrotoplasty, and penile and testicular prostheses, penectomy, orchiectomy, vaginoplasty, and vulvoplasty; hair removal from the face, body, and genital areas for gender affirmation or as part of a preoperative preparation process; gender-affirming facial surgery and body contouring; voice therapy and/or surgery; as well as puberty blocking medication and gender-affirming hormones; counseling or psychotherapeutic treatment as appropriate for the patient and based on a review of the patient’s individual circumstances and needs

emphasis on the procedures that often have issue with coverage.

super exciting! i suspect even if it does pass, there will be a delay, and issues in the speed at which people pick it up.

for example, my insurance already covered gender-affirming hair removal, however the medical clinic of my dermatologist had a policy of not dealing with insurance specifically when it had to do with those procedures.

which means even if your insurance must cover it in the future, you might still run into issues resulting in having to submit superbills yourself in the form of a claim.