Ethics & Human Research
New Legal Measures Restricting Gender- Affirming Care: Implications for Research Ethics
ABSTRACT Increasingly, new legal measures are restricting the use of gender-affirming care, raising challenges not only for the medical care of transgender/gender-nonbinary individuals, but also for medical research and research ethics. These restrictions may discourage researchers from conducting various types of research with transgender/gender-nonbinary individuals, such as asking about sexual behavior and gender identity or related issues in studies of adolescents and young adults more broadly. Researchers and institutions may also face professional risks in pursuing such research. Thus, restrictions on the use of gender-affirming care have important implications for researchers, institutional review boards (IRBs), institutional officials, policy-makers, and others. Restrictions could have an impact on the design, implementation, and management of research studies, potentially requiring consent form modifications, reconsent of participants, and asking participants about possible resulting physical/legal/social problems. Researchers and IRBs need to carefully assess these shifting legal restrictions. Input from legal experts may be needed concerning the interpretation, implementation, and enforcement of local and federal legal measures for initial and continuing IRB review of research protocols and the assessment of any changes to relevant legal measures. Researchers, IRBs, and others thus need to recognize, address, and develop “best practices” regarding these new restrictions.