- by foxnews
- 20 Sep 2025
Rush Medical Center in Chicago is the latest large health system to announce that it is stopping these gender-related treatments.
The hospital's spokesperson, Tobin Klinger, confirmed to local outlets that it has "paused" hormonal therapies for new patients under 18.
(Adults will continue to be eligible for treatments, as will minors who were already receiving care.)
The order states that the administration will not "fund, sponsor, promote, assist or support the so-called 'transition' of a child from one sex to another," and that it will "rigorously enforce all laws that prohibit or limit these destructive and life-altering procedures."
For patients age 19 and under, "chemical and surgical mutilation" includes the use of puberty blockers, sex hormones and surgical procedures, according to the order on The White House's website.
On July 9, the Department of Justice announced that it has issued more than 20 subpoenas to doctors and clinics involved in performing "transgender medical procedures" on children.
"Medical professionals and organizations that mutilated children in the service of a warped ideology will be held accountable by this Department of Justice," Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in a statement on the DOJ's website.
Other hospitals appear to have followed actions similar to Rush Medical Center.
The website now describes the program as "a supportive space for youth and gender," and references to gender-affirming care have been removed.
A spokesperson for NewYork-Presbyterian provided the below statement to Fox News Digital.
"We continue to work through this evolving situation to comply with applicable state and federal laws and regulations. As always, our priority is to serve all our patients in a compassionate and responsible way."
Stanford Medicine has also reportedly halted "gender-affirming surgeries," according to a statement provided to the San Francisco Chronicle.
"After careful review of the latest actions and directives from the federal government and following consultations with clinical leadership, including our multidisciplinary LGBTQ+ program and its providers, Stanford Medicine paused providing gender-related surgical procedures as part of our comprehensive range of medical services for LGBTQ+ patients under the age of 19, effective June 2, 2025," the statement said.
It was also reported that shortly after Trump's executive order, NYU Langone canceled some appointments for hormone treatments and gender surgeries, with parents claiming they were told the hospital no longer offers those services to new patients under 19.
Cleveland Clinic also responded to Fox News Digital's inquiry, confirming that the clinic "does not provide gender-affirming treatments for patients under the age of 19."
Previous studies have suggested that "gender-affirming surgeries" can be harmful to young people's mental health.
Florida neurosurgeon Dr. Brett Osborn and Jonathan Alpert, a Manhattan-based psychotherapist and author, both previously cautioned against gender-affirming surgeries for youth.
"You don't amputate a limb because of temporary pain, and you certainly don't permanently alter your body without exhausting every other option first," he said.
Osborn expressed the same cautions about hormone therapy - "we're talking about irreversible changes that demand lifelong management."
Fox News Digital reached out to all hospitals mentioned above for comment.
United Airlines' 24/7 Network Operations Center near Chicago has more than 2,000 employees across 26 departments who manage nearly 5,000 flights a day worldwide.
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