Judge tells agencies to restore webpages and data removed after Trump's
executive order
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[February 12, 2025]
By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge on Tuesday ordered government agencies
to restore public access to health-related webpages and datasets that
they removed to comply with an executive order by President Donald
Trump.
U.S. District Judge John Bates in Washington agreed to issue a temporary
restraining order requested by the Doctors for America advocacy group.
The judge instructed the government to restore access to several
webpages and datasets that the group identified as missing from websites
and to identify others that also were taken down “without adequate
notice or reasoned explanation.”
On Jan. 20, his first day back in the White House, Trump signed an order
for agencies to use the term “sex” and not "gender" in federal policies
and documents. In response, the Office of Personnel Management's acting
director required agency heads to eliminate any programs and take down
any websites that promote “gender ideology.”
Doctors for America, represented by the Public Citizen Litigation Group,
sued OPM, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and
Drug Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services.
The nonprofit group cited the executive order's adverse impact on two of
its members: a Chicago clinic doctor who would have consulted CDC
resources to address a recent chlamydia outbreak in a high school and a
Yale School of Medicine doctor who relies on CDC resources about
contraceptives and sexually transmitted infections.
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“These doctors’ time and effort are valuable, scarce resources, and
being forced to spend them elsewhere makes their jobs harder and their
treatment less effective,” the judge wrote.
The case is among dozens of lawsuits challenging executive orders that
Trump, a Republican, issued within hours of his second inauguration.
The scrubbed material includes reports on HIV prevention, a CDC webpage
for providing clinicians with guidance on reproductive health care and
an FDA study on “sex differences in the clinical evaluation of medical
products.”
Removing important information from the CDC and FDA websites is delaying
patient care, hampering research and hindering doctors' ability to
communicate with patients, the plaintiffs' attorneys argued in a court
filing.
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President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as he signs executive
orders in the Oval Office at the White House, Monday, Feb. 10, 2025,
in Washington. (Photo/Alex Brandon)
 “The agencies’ actions create a
dangerous gap in the scientific data available to monitor and
respond to disease outbreaks, halt or hamper key health research,
and deprive physicians of resources that impact clinical practice,”
they wrote.
Government lawyers argued that Doctors for America's claims fall
“well short of clearly showing irreparable harm” to any plaintiffs
and are unlikely to succeed on their merits.
“Either failure provides a sufficient basis for denying
extraordinary relief,” they wrote.
During a hearing Monday, the judge asked plaintiffs' attorney
Zachary Shelley if the removal of the online material harms the
public. Shelley said the doctors' interests align with their
patients.
“There is immense harm to the public,” Shelley said. “There are
massive threats to public health.”
The judge concluded that the harm in this case ultimately trickles
down to “everyday Americans” seeking doctors' care.
“If those doctors cannot provide these individuals the care they
need (and deserve) within the scheduled and often limited time
frame, there is a chance that some individuals will not receive
treatment, including for severe, life-threatening conditions,” Bates
wrote.
Doctors for America is a not-for-profit group representing more than
27,000 physicians and medical trainees. It was born from an earlier
organization that pushed for health reform and supported Barack
Obama, a Democrat, when he was running for president.
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