Illinois said with 14 other states that it would protect gender-suit care despite Trump’s executive order

Illinois Attorney General Quame Raul said in a joint statement with other lawyers on Wednesday that Illinois Gender-Failure will continue to protect health care, and federal dollar will be available for the care that an executive order by President Donald Trump last week Despite this is available.

This statement from the Attorney General of Raul and 14 other states comes about a week after Trump issued an executive order, seeking to abolish gender-confirmation care, including people under 19 years of age Federal dollars are included, and it restricts federal receiving institutions that receive federal. Research grant from offering gender-suggestion care for people under 19 years of age.

It is an executive order that ignites confusion between hospitals and other providers across the country, suddenly such care with some hospitals and clinics in other states stopped such care. Large hospitals in Illinois that confirm the penis, they still provide services.

Gender-confusion care may include a series of services, such as counseling, medicines puberty, hormone therapy and/or delay in surgery.

The Attorney General’s statement said that “… Federal funding that provides gender-suit care to institutions is available, even though President Trump’s recent executive order. If the federal administration takes additional action to disrupt this important money, we will not hesitate to take further legal action. ,

Raul also noted in this statement that the Illinois law requires health care providers to provide care to all residents and restrictions illegal discrimination based on gender identity.

Other states involved in Illinois include California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Main, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Road Island, Vermont and Visconsin.

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The statement came a day after the PFLAG, the American Association of Physician for Human Rights and Transgender Young Adults and their families filed a case in the federal court in Maryland challenging the executive order.

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