Washington – A federal judge ordered the Department of Health and Human Services, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Food and Drug Administration to resume web pages and data that have been deleted under President Trump’s executive order on gender ideology.
U.S. District Court Judge John Bates agreed to approve the temporary restraining order sought by U.S. organising physicians that held that its members used the website while treating patients and conducting research. The nonprofit said the Department of Health and Human Services and its components of deleting web pages violated federal law.
Bates found that the challenger might succeed in saying that when the department’s health and public services, the CDC and the FDA deprives medical information from public-oriented websites, the challenger takes illegal action.
“It emphasizes who ultimately bear the harm of the defendant's behavior: every day Americans, the most acutely vulnerable Americans, seeking health care,” he wrote. Bates cited a statement from two doctors, who Bates said if they If these people cannot be provided with the required (and deserved) care within the planned schedule and usually limited time frame, then some people may not receive treatment, including, therefore, seriously life-threatening conditions.
His order directed the agency to restore an earlier version of its website by 11:59 p.m. Tuesday.
This is a developing story that will be updated.