Nebraska
Lawsuit filed against UNMC, Nebraska Medicine over trans teen’s breast-removal surgery in 2018
OMAHA, Neb. (WOWT) – A lawsuit has been filed against the University of Nebraska Medical Center and Nebraska Medicine alleging negligence and lack of informed consent after a 16-year-old identifying at that time as a trans male had both breasts removed in 2018.
The lawsuit filed in Douglas County Court on Wednesday afternoon by the Center for American Liberty, Nebraska malpractice attorney Jeff Downing, and the Thomas More Society on behalf of the patient alleges medical personnel didn’t try hard enough to pursue other avenues of treatment for the teen and instead rushed them into surgery.
The document filed about nine months after the patient declared they no longer identified as a male also names three doctors, alleging the defendants:
- Shifted from a standard medical diagnosis to a “gender-affirming care” model, following a flawed “Dutch protocol.”
- Used misleading descriptions and false claims, violating Nebraska’s Consumer Protection Act.
- Placed the patient in a “closed feedback loop” of treatment by an “affirming” therapist and the UNMC Gender Clinic.
- Breached standard of care in performing surgery ahead of other treatments and failing to warn of adverse medical outcomes.
- Failure to obtain “free and fully informed consent.”
The lawsuit, alleging the patient’s therapist and doctors were negligent, seeks “damages based on the evidence of negligence and lack of informed consent.”
According to the filing, the teen “may have been swept up in a social contagion and/or unduly influenced by social media” and was “suffering from significant psychosocial comorbidities.” The lawsuit also suggests that the teen patient was vulnerable as their parents had gone through a divorce in 2015 when the teen was 13 years old, which caused the teen to begin questioning their identity. The following year was a struggle at school, and the teen began seeing a therapist and a psychiatrist. The teen was diagnosed with depression and generalized anxiety disorder and was placed on antipsychotic medication, but “continued to spiral downward,” the document states.
As their mental health continued to deteriorate, the teen was placed in a partial care psychiatric program in February 2017.
“Around this same time, (the teen) was groomed online and preyed upon by an older man from out of state,” and was “enticed … to send him sexually explicit pictures” and threatened when refusing to do so. Law enforcement was notified at the time, and “an upsetting and difficult investigation followed,” further traumatizing the teen.
The teen was placed in an “intensive partial care psychiatric program” in May 2017, at which point the therapist increased their antipsychotic medication and added an SSRI.
The lawsuit alleges that doctors gave the teen’s parents the impression that the teen would be suicidal despite not having any “documented suicidal ideation” for nearly a year before the surgery performed in July 2018. The teen was referred by a therapist with expertise in gender care to an OB-GYN, who was also a gender care clinic director, and both doctors recommended breast removal. According to the lawsuit, it was implied that if they did not consent, the teen would commit suicide as a means of getting the parents “on board” with the surgery.
According to the lawsuit, the teen first visited the gender clinic in January 2018 at age 15 and was immediately diagnosed with “gender identity disorder.” The lawsuit alleges that the breast-removal surgery was fast-tracked.
About four months later, the teen was placed on testosterone; about a year later, the doctor treating the teen recommended a partial hysterectomy as the next step in the teen’s transition, the document states. The teen’s parents allegedly met with the doctor, and after a heated discussion, did not consent to the surgery, and it was not performed.
The lawsuit alleges there was no warning given about any potential harm long-term use of testosterone could cause and suggests that the surgery should have come after the teen had been on hormone treatments for at least a year. According to the document, the teen ended up on testosterone for four years and that it caused significant mental and physical harm.
The patient stopped taking testosterone in late 2022, “due to heart irregularities, aching joints, and pelvic pain,” alleging their condition had deteriorated so much as to prevent them from functioning or even getting out of bed.
In January 2023, the patient, now 21 years old, made it known via a telehealth appointment that they no longer identified as male, and told the doctor that they didn’t think they were old enough in 2018 to have consented to the transgender “treatments.” At that point, the doctor recommended the patient seek mental health counseling.
“I was going through the darkest and most chaotic time in my life, and instead of being given the help I needed, these doctors affirmed that chaos into reality,” the patient said in a Wednesday news release. “I was talked into medical intervention that I could not fully understand the long-term impacts and consequences of.”
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Nebraska
Tigers Top Flip Target Locks in Commitment with Nebraska
Eli Drinkwitz and the Missouri football staff have compiled the No. 20 ranked recruiting class in the nation up to this point, according to 247Sports’ composite rankings.
The Tigers hoped to add to that class with the addition of 4-Star safety Jeremiah Jones from Murray, Kentucky, but the talented defender had other ideas.
Despite taking a visit to Columbia last week and speaking highly of his time in Missouri, Jones locked in his commitment to Nebraska this week with a post on social media.
Jones is rated as the No. 4 player in the state of Kentucky and is the No. 35 safety in the nation, according to 247Sports. He committed to Nebraska in July of this year, joining the Cornhuskers’ 21st ranked recruiting class. As just a sophomore at Murray High School in Kentucky, Jones compiled an impressive 97 tackles and five interceptions.
Nebraska has struggled in recent weeks after a hot start that saw them jump out to a 5-1 record. The Cornhuskers now sit at 5-5 after dropping four straight games to conference opponents, but still have a chance at bowl eligibility with games remaining against Wisconsin and Iowa.
Head coach Matt Rhule put together a strong recruiting class in 2024, headlined by 5-Star quarterback Dylan Raiola, that finished in the top-20 in the nation. As it stands now, Nebraska looks to be in position once again to secure a top-20 class potentially.
Despite missing out on the flip, Drinkwitz and Missouri are also still in play for one of the nation’s top classes. The Tigers finished 20th in the country in 2024, and are still in position to do so again.
Nebraska
Badgers Wire staff predictions for Wisconsin vs. Nebraska
Both programs enter play Saturday trying to figure out who they are and what they have left in the tank.
Wisconsin will be working with a new play-caller on offense, attempting to reestablish their strong form from earlier in the season. If the Badgers are to get back on track, it will be as a result of the reemergence of Tawee Walker in the backfield. Braedyn Locke is more suited for a rush-heavy attack on offense, sprinkling in passes when needed.
On the other side, after being a top 25 team, Nebraska fell back into the program’s old ways, losing several consecutive one-score games. Losers of four straight and at home for the last time in 2024, Matt Rhule’s squad will be itching to snap the 10-game skid versus Wisconsin. I’m inclined to go with history here.
Prediction: Wisconsin 24, Nebraska 20
Nebraska
'This is actually a cool place': Tourists spent record $4.6 billion in Nebraska last year
LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN) — Is Nebraska a new tourism hot spot?
A new report from Visit Nebraska shows a major increase in travel, providing an economic boost.
Last year, out-of-state visitors spent $4.6 billion in Nebraska, an all-time record.
And since 2019, the number of overnight hotel guests has doubled, with 76% of them coming from out of state.
What happened in 2019? Visit Nebraska began a new marketing strategy that included ideas such as finding out what locations it should be promoting and focusing on attracting out of state visitors.
“Truly it’s just because people have been invited to the state in a way they understand, in a way that makes sense,” said John Ricks, executive director of Visit Nebraska, also known as the Nebraska Tourism Commission.
SEE ALSO: Nebraska tourism slogan is no more. ‘Everything has a shelf life,’ official says
Ricks says the preconceived notion of Nebraska being a flyover state isn’t true. The commission just had to let people know what the state offers.
After talking with out-of-state visitors, it learned what barriers were keeping people from the Cornhusker State.
“There’s just a simple awareness problem and a familiarity problem,” Ricks said.
SEE ALSO: Nebraska Tourism receives second national award for ‘not for everyone’ campaign
We asked users of the Now Local News App, some who live here and some who don’t, what their favorite spots are in Nebraska.
“I think that going out to western Nebraska is my family’s favorite place to go,” Melanie Dawkins said. “I don’t think enough Nebraskans make it all the way out there, like to the Panhandle.”
Kimberly Grace, who lives out of state, said she likes visiting the Stuhr Museum at Grand Island.
“You can learn about the pioneer days, and they have houses that they put on the land where you can go to visit.”
SEE ALSO: Rooms fill up in Lincoln, one of Airbnb renters’ top college football destinations
Ricks says to keep this growth going, it’s always going to be about getting the word out.
“The more people we make aware, the more people who are discovering that, ‘Hey, whatever I heard in the past isn’t true, and this is actually a cool place.’”
According to Ricks, despite the 2023 numbers just getting released, this year’s numbers are already beating last year’s by over 10%.
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