tennessee to publicize transgender registry
Just how far Tennessee’s new transgender care database goes—and why critics say anonymity may not protect patients—becomes clearer in the details.

Tennessee lawmakers have moved to create what critics describe as a de facto public database of people receiving gender-affirming care: the House passed HB 0754 by a 70–21 vote, requiring clinics to send detailed patient and provider data to the Department of Health for an annual public report starting in December. Supporters say the measure increases oversight. Opponents, including the Tennessee Equality Project and medical privacy advocates, argue it does something else: assemble a state-curated dataset about a politically targeted group, then release it publicly in aggregated form that may still carry serious privacy risks and access chilling effects.

Tennessee’s HB 0754 frames surveillance as oversight, creating a public-facing dataset on gender-affirming care with chilling implications.

According to the bill’s reporting requirements, clinics must submit patient lifespan, sex assigned at birth, state and county of residence, dates of care and referrals, neurological, behavioral, and mental-health diagnoses, plus treatment specifics. Those specifics include drug names, dosages, frequency, method of administration, and surgical procedure billing codes. The law excludes patient names and direct identifiers. But critics don’t accept that as meaningful protection, especially when multiple data points can be cross-referenced. In rural counties, they warn, a small number of patients could become easier to identify.

The measure also requires publication of provider information, including prescriber names, contact details, and medical specialty. That disclosure doesn’t just document care; it maps who provides it. Skeptics note that such transparency can function as pressure, not neutral oversight, particularly in a hostile political climate.

Enforcement adds another layer. Physicians who don’t comply face at least a six-month license suspension, while clinics can be fined up to $150,000. Those penalties leave little room for resistance. Critics say the state is forcing providers to choose between protecting patient confidentiality and keeping their practices open. The broader concern is precedent: if Tennessee can publish sensitive health data here, officials elsewhere may try similar reporting schemes tomorrow.

Profile Author / Editor / Publisher

Dora Saparow
Dora Saparow
Dora Kay Saparow came out in a conservative Nebraskan town where she faced both misunderstanding and acceptance during her transition. Seeking specialized support, she moved to a big city, where she could access the medical, legal, and social resources necessary for her journey. Now, thirteen years later, Dora is fully transitioned, happily married, and well-integrated into society. Her story underscores the importance of time, resources, and community support, offering hope and encouragement to others pursuing their authentic selves.
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