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- RFK Jr proposes rules to limit children's access to gender-related care.
- The rules bar hospitals from Medicare Medicaid if providing such care.
- Civil rights groups condemned the proposals calling them "unAmerican" and harmful.
WASHINGTON — U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. moved on Thursday to cut children's access to gender-related care, marking one of the Trump administration's most sweeping restrictions yet on transgender health care.
Kennedy proposed rules barring hospitals that deliver such care from Medicare and Medicaid programs and prohibiting Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program from paying for it.
The moves are the latest in a wider crackdown by the Trump administration on the rights of transgender people through the elimination of legal protections in the military, health care, education and the workplace.
"Medical professionals or entities providing sex-rejecting procedures to children are out of compliance with ... standards of health care," said Kennedy, contradicting the nation's largest medical organizations.
The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Medical Association endorse gender-related care, saying decisions should rest between children, parents and health care professionals.
AAP President Susan Kressly criticized the move as misrepresenting medical consensus and said it would harm families in need.
Republican President Donald Trump signed an executive order in January seeking to roll back protections and health care coverage for transgender people.
His Department of Justice has already cracked down on some hospitals that provide the care, resulting in a lawsuit by 16 Democratic states seeking to block the moves.
Nearly all U.S. hospitals participate in the Medicare program for people aged 65 and older or who have disabilities. Around 53% of U.S. children receive their health coverage through the federal and state-based Medicaid and CHIP programs.
Top U.S. health officials denounced gender-related care during an hour-long press conference on Thursday.
"The blurring of the lines between sexes and radical social agendas is a hatred for nature as God designed it," said Kennedy's deputy, Jim O'Neill.
Officials announced additional steps, including a rule reversing the classification of gender dysphoria as a disability, which would exempt organizations restricting gender-related care from anti-discrimination laws. The Food and Drug Administration will issue warnings to 12 companies marketing breast binders for treating gender dysphoria.
Wider campaign
State officials, including New York Attorney General Letitia James, vowed to challenge the measures, while Maryland Health Secretary Meena Seshamani, who served as deputy Medicare and Medicaid chief under former President Joe Biden, said Medicaid coverage for gender-related care remains unchanged for now.
The proposed rules are subject to a public comment period — 60 days for the CMS rules and 30 days for the disability designation reversal — before they can be finalized.
Civil rights groups swiftly condemned the proposals; GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders called them "unAmerican" and the American Civil Liberties Union pledged to challenge them in court.
U.S. health data analyzed for Reuters by Komodo Health indicates more than 121,000 children aged 6 to 17 were diagnosed with gender dysphoria between 2017 and 2021, with 17,683 of those starting puberty blockers or hormone therapy.
Both figures are likely undercounts, as many cases are not formally diagnosed or receive treatment outside insurance coverage.
The Trump administration has sought this year to ban transgender people from the military, bar them from designating the sex reflecting their gender identities on passports, and prohibit federal workers from using bathrooms reflecting their gender identity.
Trump seeks to end what he says was the government's promotion of "gender ideology," a loose term often used by conservative groups to reference ideologies that promote nontraditional views on sex and gender. Rights activists view the term as an anti-LGBTQ trope and dehumanizing.
Transgender rights have become a contentious political topic in recent years. Several Republicans campaigned to reverse transgender protection laws during the 2024 election, and more than two dozen Republican-led states have passed laws banning or restricting gender-related care for transgender youth.
Contributing: Bhargav Acharya and Courtney Rozen in Washington





