Judge orders Trump admin. to restore CDC and FDA webpages by midnight
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Restore Judge orders Trump admin. to restore CDC and FDA webpages by midnight Removed pages include guidance and data on HIV, contraceptives, and teen health. Beth Mole Feb 11, 2025 4:10 pm | 71 Barricades stand outside the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, on Saturday, March 14, 2020. As the novel coronavirus has spread in the US, the CDC is under increasing heat to defend a shaky rollout of crucial testing kits. Credit: Getty | Bloomberg Barricades stand outside the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, on Saturday, March 14, 2020. As the novel coronavirus has spread in the US, the CDC is under increasing heat to defend a shaky rollout of crucial testing kits. Credit: Getty | Bloomberg Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreA federal judge today, February 11, gave the Trump administration until 11:59 pm tonight to restore public documents and datasets that were abruptly removed or altered from federal health websites to comply with an executive order on gender ideology.Information was taken down from websites for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration following a January 29 memo from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). The memo ordered all agencies to remove any public-facing media that "inculcate or promote gender ideology" that would violate an executive order President Trump signed on January 20. OPM gave agencies until just January 31 to comply.The webpages that were subsequently removed include key guidance and data on health risks in youth, school health policies, social vulnerability, environmental justice, HIV testing and prevention, assisted reproductive technologies, contraceptives, and recommendations for improving clinical studies, among other essential information.In a lawsuit filed February 4, the nonprofit organization Doctors for America, represented by consumer advocacy group Public Citizen, claimed that the documents and data removed were critical for research and the efficient care of patients. Further, they were taken down without warning and reasoned decision-making, violating the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) and Administrative Procedure Act (APA).In an opinion and order Tuesday, US District Judge John D. Bates agreed, issuing a temporary restraining order that requires the CDC, FDA, and their parent agency the Department of Health and Human Services to restore the specific websites Doctors for America list in their Memorandum of Law (pages 6 through 12) to their January 30 versions by midnight. Additionally, the agencies must work with the doctors to identify any additional resources they rely on and restore those by February 14. The information will remain available online while the lawsuit proceeds.Irrational removalIn his opinion, Bates cited the declarations from Stephanie Liou, a physician who works with low-income immigrant families and an underserved high school in Chicago, and Reshma Ramachandran, a primary care provider who relies on CDC guidance on contraceptives and sexually transmitted diseases in her practice. Both are board members of Doctors for America.Liou testified that the removal of resources from the CDC's website hindered her response to a chlamydia outbreak at the high school where she worked. Ramachandran, meanwhile, testified that she was left scrambling to find alternative resources for patients during time-limited appointments. Doctors for America also provided declarations from other doctors (who were not members of Doctors for America) who spoke of being "severely impacted" by the sudden loss of CDC and FDA public resources.With those examples, Bates agreed that the removal of the information caused the doctors "irreparable harm," in legal terms."As these groups attest, the lost materials are more than 'academic references'they are vital for real-time clinical decision-making in hospitals, clinics and emergency departments across the country," Bates wrote. "Without them, health care providers and researchers are left 'without up-to-date recommendations on managing infectious diseases, public health threats, essential preventive care and chronic conditions.' ... Finally, it bears emphasizing who ultimately bears the harm of defendants actions: everyday Americans, and most acutely, underprivileged Americans, seeking healthcare."Bates further noted that it would be of "minimal burden" for the Trump administration to restore the data and information, much of which has been publicly available for many years.In a press statement after the ruling, Doctors for America and Public Citizen celebrated the restoration."The judge's order today is an important victory for doctors, patients, and the public health of the whole country," Zach Shelley, a Public Citizen Litigation Group attorney and lead counsel on the case, said in the release. "This order puts a stop, at least temporarily, to the irrational removal of vital health information from public access."Beth MoleSenior Health ReporterBeth MoleSenior Health Reporter Beth is Ars Technicas Senior Health Reporter. Beth has a Ph.D. in microbiology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and attended the Science Communication program at the University of California, Santa Cruz. She specializes in covering infectious diseases, public health, and microbes. 71 Comments
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