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Some states have laws or rules that directly restrict “online” (telehealth) access to gender-affirming care, but the impact differs sharply for minors vs. adults.
Several states’ youth-care restrictions are written broadly enough that providers and families treat telehealth prescribing/support as legally risky or directly barred, even when the statute is not framed as a “telehealth ban” headline.
Kaiser Family Foundation’s tracker notes that some state restrictions prohibit care including via telehealth.
Bottom line
Yes, some states restrict “online access” to gender-affirming care.
These restrictions are most common and most explicit for minors (e.g., Tennessee).
Adult online restrictions exist but are less common;
Florida is the standout example because it effectively blocks telehealth adult care through in-person requirements.
1) States that restrict gender-affirming care via telehealth (especially for minors)
Tennessee:
(explicit telehealth coverage in the ban)
Texas:
(telehealth restrictions in state policy materials)
Operates under an informed consent model of care.
Operates under an informed consent model of care.
Operates under an informed consent model of care.
Operates under an informed consent model of care.
Operates under an informed consent model of care.
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