NYU Langone Health has been ordered by the state to...

NYU Langone Health has been ordered by the state to resume its gender-related care for transgender youth. Credit: Ed Quinn

The New York Attorney General’s Office has ordered NYU Langone to resume transgender services for youth under 19 after the hospital system said it would end services, citing the "regulatory environment" and threat of losing federal funds.

NYU Langone announced last month it was ending certain treatments for teens diagnosed with gender dysphoria.

A Feb. 25 letter from state Attorney General Letitia James' office cited New York’s discrimination laws and advised NYU Langone to "immediately resume all service offerings as they had before the change in policy," including providing treatment for patients under 19, providing puberty-blocking medications and hormone therapies.

The letter said the hospital system had 10 business days to comply with the state’s order or face additional action by the attorney general.

Officials said the attorney general’s office received complaints from patients and families who were told that NYU Langone was closing its Transgender Youth Health Program "and ceasing care for these transgender and nonbinary patients" while medication was still available for other teenage patients.

"NYU Langone appears to be suddenly and indefinitely canceling transgender children’s future appointments, thereby jeopardizing access to medically necessary health care for some the most vulnerable New Yorkers," the attorney general’s letter said.

President Donald Trump’s original Jan. 28 executive order said, "It is the policy of the United States that it will not fund, sponsor, promote, assist, or support the so-called 'transition' of a child from one sex to another, and it will rigorously enforce all laws that prohibit or limit these destructive and life-altering procedures."

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services proposed changes in December that would cut Medicare and Medicaid programs for hospitals that perform "sex-rejecting procedures on children under the age of 18."

James has joined more than a dozen states challenging the Trump administration and the proposed changes to limit gender-affirming care to teens.

NYU Langone officials declined to comment on the attorney general’s letter, pointing to its original statement.

"Given the recent departure of our medical director, coupled with the current regulatory environment, we made the difficult decision to discontinue our Transgender Youth Health Program," hospital officials said in the statement.

On its website under transgender care for adolescent, the hospital says it provides psychological counseling for families but lists no additional services.

Attorney general’s officials said there has been no change in federal law regarding transgender care for youth and state law "prohibits discrimination based on a patient’s membership in a protected class, including sex, gender identity, and disability.

"The threat of federal funds being withheld or rescinded because of the provision of gender-affirming care does not excuse providers’ and medical institutions’ existing duties and obligations under New York law," the attorney general’s letter said. "NYU Langone’s change in policy is self-imposed."


 

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