After a week of uncertainty for Illinois hospitals and clinics over an executive order seeking to end gender-affirming care for minors, the Illinois attorney general issued a statement Wednesday saying the state will protect such care.
The statement, from Attorney General Kwame Raoul and the attorneys general of 14 other states, says that federal dollars remain available to institutions that provide gender-affirming care, and that Illinois and the other states will take legal action if that funding is halted.
“State attorneys general will continue to enforce state laws that provide access to gender-affirming care, in states where such enforcement authority exists, and we will challenge any unlawful effort by the Trump administration to restrict access to it in our jurisdictions,” the statement says.
The statement comes about a week after Trump issued an executive order seeking to end gender-affirming care that involves federal dollars for people under the age of 19, and that prohibits institutions that receive federal research grants from offering gender-affirming care for people under 19.
It’s an executive order that’s ignited confusion among hospitals and other providers of gender affirming care across the country, with some hospitals and clinics in other states abruptly halting such care.
It’s unclear whether any health care providers in Illinois that offer gender-affirming care for minors have stopped those services in the last week. A Rush spokesman said the hospital system is still providing gender-affirming care for minors. Lurie Children’s Hospital said in a statement Wednesday that it “is proud to provide access to comprehensive, family-centric, and developmentally appropriate healthcare in a safe and inclusive clinical space. We are reviewing the recent Executive Orders addressing gender care and assessing any potential impact to the clinical services we offer to our patient-families.”
Howard Brown Health, which receives federal funds to care for low-income patients and specializes in care for patients who are LGBTQ+, said in a statement Tuesday, “The order has no immediate impact on our operations, and we will be monitoring developments working with our partners. We are continuing to provide gender-affirming care to all patients who rely on our services and remain committed to improving the health of trans and gender diverse communities.”
Gender-affirming care can include a range of services, such as counseling, medications to delay puberty, hormone therapy and/or surgery.
The statement from the attorneys general says that “… federal funding to institutions that provide gender-affirming care continues to be available, irrespective of President Trump’s recent executive order. If the federal administration takes additional action to impede this critical funding, we will not hesitate to take further legal action.”
Raoul also notes in the statement that Illinois law requires health care providers to provide care to all residents and prohibits unlawful discrimination on the basis of gender identity.
Other states that joined Illinois in the statement include California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont and Wisconsin.
The statement comes a day after PFLAG, the American Association of Physicians for Human Rights and transgender young adults and their families filed a lawsuit in federal court in Maryland challenging the executive order.
More to come.