Yes, that's one of the things I had to take out of my 10-minute statement, so I'm glad that's already been presented.
I think the main reason is that health care providers make assumptions about who does and does not need contraception based on how people present their gender and sexuality, and those assumptions are often incorrect.
I also think that, as everyone on this panel has said, when queer and trans youth expect the health information that's being presented in their classrooms or by their doctors does not to apply to them, we stop paying attention. Even if contraception is covered in a gender-affirming way, which is pretty unlikely given the state of what we know is happening about sex ed, people might already have made the assumption and already listened to most of the sex ed that wasn't that relevant, so they stopped listening.