Hospitals in Colorado, Virginia and the nation's capital said Thursday they have paused gender-affirming care for young people as they evaluate President Donald Trumpās executive order aimed at cutting federal support for such care.
Denver Health in Colorado has stopped providing gender-affirming surgeries for people under age 19, a spokesperson confirmed Thursday, in order to comply with the executive order and continue receiving federal funding. It is unclear whether the hospital will continue providing other gender-affirming care for youth, including hormone therapy and puberty blockers.
In Virginia, VCU Health and Childrenās Hospital of Richmond said they have suspended gender-affirming medication and gender-affirming surgical procedures for those under 19 years old.
In Washington, D.C., Childrenās National Hospital said the hospital had āpaused prescriptions of puberty blockers and hormone therapy to comply with the directives while we assess the situation further.ā The hospital already did not perform gender-affirming surgery on minors, a spokesperson said Thursday.
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Trump's order, signed Tuesday, is part of a push to reverse Biden administration policies meant to protect transgender people and their care. It ordered agencies to take steps to makes sure that hospitals receiving federal research and education grants āend the chemical and surgical mutilation of children.ā
Other hospitals told The Associated Press that their current practices would continue. Lurie Childrenās Hospital of Chicago said hospital officials are reviewing the order and āassessing any potential impact to the clinical services we offer to our patient families.ā
āOur team will continue to advocate for access to medically necessary care, grounded in science and compassion for the patient-families we are so privileged to serve,ā the statement said.
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The language in Trump's executive order ā using words such as āmaiming,ā āsterilizingā and āmutilationā ā contradicts what is typical for gender-affirming care in the United States. It also labels guidance from the World Professional Association for Transgender Health as ājunk science.ā
WPATH said in a statement that restrictions and bans on āaccess to necessary medical care for transgender youth are harmful to patients and their families.ā
Gender-affirming medical care for transgender youth isnāt common. A new study shows that fewer than 1 in 1,000 U.S. adolescents with commercial insurance received puberty blockers or hormones during a recent five-year period, and the bulk of gender-affirming surgeries are not performed on youth.
The Denver hospital said Trumpās order would affect the mental health of its transgender patients, and that they would continue to receive primary and behavioral health care.
āDenver Health is committed to and deeply concerned for the health and safety of our gender diverse patients under the age of 19,ā the hospitalās statement said.