Illustration depicting Children's Hospital Colorado amid federal probe and subpoena battle over youth gender-affirming care records.
Illustration depicting Children's Hospital Colorado amid federal probe and subpoena battle over youth gender-affirming care records.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

HHS refers Children’s Hospital Colorado to inspector general as hospital fights DOJ subpoena over youth gender-affirming care records

Larawang ginawa ng AI
Fact checked

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said it has referred Children’s Hospital Colorado to its inspector general over what it described as noncompliance with newly announced federal standards targeting certain gender-related medical interventions for minors. The hospital is separately asking a federal court to block a Justice Department subpoena seeking records tied to its care for transgender adolescents, as a coalition of Democratic-led states challenges the federal initiative in court.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said Tuesday that it referred Children’s Hospital Colorado to the department’s Office of Inspector General, citing what HHS described as the hospital’s failure to meet “recognized standards of health care” set out in a public health declaration signed by HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (dailywire.com)

HHS General Counsel Mike Stuart said the department “will always take every possible action to ensure children all across the nation are safe and protected,” according to a statement quoted by The Daily Wire. (dailywire.com)

The referral comes amid a broader Trump administration push to restrict federally supported care the administration calls “sex-rejecting procedures” for minors. On December 18, 2025, HHS announced proposed Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services rules that would bar hospitals from performing such procedures on patients under 18 as a condition of participation in Medicare and Medicaid, and would also limit federal Medicaid funding for these procedures for those under 18, with a parallel restriction on federal Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) funding for those under 19. (hhs.gov)

HHS said Kennedy’s declaration—described by the department as based on an HHS “peer-reviewed report”—concluded that these interventions “do not meet professionally recognized standards of health care,” and warned that practitioners who perform them on minors would be deemed out of compliance with those standards. (hhs.gov)

Children’s Hospital Colorado is also in a separate court fight over a Justice Department administrative subpoena issued in July seeking documents related to the hospital’s provision of gender-affirming care to adolescents. The subpoena seeks materials including insurance claims and billing records, internal guidance, and information tied to prescriptions of puberty blockers or “cross-sex hormones,” according to court filings described in reporting and in a multistate amicus brief supporting the hospital’s motion to quash. (dailywire.com)

The Justice Department’s inquiry is focused on whether the “promotion, marketing, labeling, sale, and distribution” of puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones for treatment of gender dysphoria and related disorders could violate the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, according to court documents referenced in reporting. (dailywire.com)

The hospital has argued that complying would require disclosure of sensitive medical information. California Attorney General Rob Bonta, whose office backed the hospital in an amicus brief, said the subpoena seeks “patient records” and personally identifying information, and called it an overreach. (oag.ca.gov)

Separately, a coalition of 19 states and Washington, D.C., filed suit in federal court in Oregon in late December challenging Kennedy’s declaration and the administration’s effort to threaten exclusion from Medicare and Medicaid for providers offering the care. The states argue the declaration is unlawful and procedurally flawed; HHS has defended the declaration and related proposed rules as necessary to protect children. (apnews.com)

Ano ang sinasabi ng mga tao

X users, primarily conservative activists and officials, applaud HHS's referral of Children’s Hospital Colorado to the inspector general for alleged noncompliance with federal standards on gender-affirming care for minors. Critics accuse the hospital of hiding procedures despite prior denials and resisting DOJ subpoenas, with 20 Democratic states intervening in support. News accounts neutrally report on unsealed court records revealing the hospital's arguments. Sentiments are largely negative toward the hospital and supportive of federal oversight to protect children.

Mga Kaugnay na Artikulo

A courtroom scene illustrating a judge's ruling on protecting medical records of transgender youth from a federal subpoena.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

Federal judge temporarily bars Stanford children’s hospital from producing trans youth medical records sought by DOJ subpoena

Iniulat ng AI Larawang ginawa ng AI Fact checked

A federal judge in California has temporarily blocked Lucile Salter Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford from turning over records sought by a Justice Department grand jury subpoena involving transgender patients who received gender-affirming care, after six families sued to keep the information private.

A federal judge in Rhode Island has quashed a U.S. Justice Department administrative subpoena that sought identifying information and medical records for minors who received gender-affirming care at Rhode Island Hospital. The ruling criticized DOJ lawyers’ handling of the case and highlighted the government’s effort to pursue enforcement in a Texas federal court.

Iniulat ng AI

The US Supreme Court ruled 8-1 on Tuesday that Colorado's ban on licensed counselors attempting to change a minor's sexual orientation or gender identity through talk therapy requires strict First Amendment scrutiny. The decision in Chiles v. Salazar, written by Justice Neil Gorsuch, remands the case to lower courts after finding viewpoint discrimination. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented alone, warning of broad risks to medical regulations.

Vice President JD Vance has asked the Justice Department to consider a criminal investigation related to allegations in a Republican-led House Oversight Committee report that Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison failed to curb fraud risks in state-administered, federally funded programs.

Gumagamit ng cookies ang website na ito

Gumagamit kami ng cookies para sa analytics upang mapabuti ang aming site. Basahin ang aming patakaran sa privacy para sa higit pang impormasyon.
Tanggihan