
Pages wiped from US government websites as Trump targets ‘gender ideology'
Public health data disappeared from websites, entire web pages went blank and employees erased pronouns from email signatures on Friday as federal agencies scrambled to comply with a directive tied to US President Donald Trump's order rolling back protections for transgender people.
The Office of Personnel Management directed agency heads to strip 'gender ideology' from websites, contracts and emails in a memo sent on Wednesday, with changes ordered to be instituted by 5pm on Friday.
It also directed agencies to disband employee resource groups, terminate grants and contracts related to the issue, and replace the term 'gender' with 'sex' on government forms.
Much public health information was taken down from the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention's website: contraception guidance; a fact sheet about HIV and transgender people; lessons on building supportive school environments for transgender and non-binary children; details about National Transgender HIV Testing Day; a set of government surveys showing transgender students suffering higher rates of depression, drug use, bullying and other problems.
Some pages appeared with the message: 'The page you're looking for was not found.'
03:03
Trump signs series of executive orders on first day back in White House Trump signs series of executive orders on first day back in White House
Disease experts said eliminating resources created dangerous gaps in scientific information. The Infectious Diseases Society of America, a medical association, issued a statement decrying the removal of information about HIV and people who are transgender. Access is 'critical to efforts to end the HIV epidemic,' the organisation's leaders said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
5 days ago
- South China Morning Post
Australia's Albanese says compromise on biosecurity ‘not worth it' ahead of Trump talks
Australia will not relax its strict biosecurity rules during tariff negotiations with the United States, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Friday ahead of a potential meeting with US President Donald Trump at the G7 summit this month. Australia has restricted the entry of US beef since 2003 due to the detection of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, known as mad cow disease, but it exports beef worth A$4 billion (US$2.6 billion) annually to the US, its largest market. 'We will not change or compromise any of the issues regarding biosecurity – full stop, exclamation mark. It's simply not worth it,' Albanese told ABC Radio. Trump in April singled out Australian beef while announcing a 10 per cent baseline tariff on all imports. Years of dry weather have shrunk US cattle numbers to their lowest since the 1950s, but Australia, with a herd swollen by wet weather, is flush with supply, offering lower prices and lean cuts that the US lacks. A report in The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper on Friday, citing unidentified government officials, said Australian authorities were reviewing whether to allow entry of beef products from cattle raised in Mexico and Canada but slaughtered in the US, as the Trump administration has demanded.


South China Morning Post
03-06-2025
- South China Morning Post
Philippines HIV cases jump 500%, prompting ‘public health emergency' warning
Philippine medical authorities on Tuesday warned of a looming 'public health emergency' as HIV infections have soared this year, with young males especially hard hit. Advertisement On average, 57 new cases a day were tallied in the country of 117 million people over the first three months of 2025, a 500 per cent jump from a year earlier, health department data shows. 'We now have the highest number of new cases here in the Western Pacific,' Health Secretary Ted Herbosa said in a video message released on Tuesday. 'What is frightening is, our youth make up many of the new cases,' he said. 'It would be in our interest to [declare] a public health emergency, a national emergency for HIV to mobilise the entire society, the whole of government to help us in this campaign to reduce the number of new HIV cases,' Herbosa added. Advertisement The health department said 95 per cent of newly reported cases were male, with 33 per cent aged 15–24 and 47 per cent aged 25–34.


South China Morning Post
03-06-2025
- South China Morning Post
Philippines faces HIV ‘public health emergency' as new cases jump 50%
Philippine medical authorities on Tuesday warned of a looming 'public health emergency' as HIV infections have soared this year, with young males especially hard hit. On average, 57 new cases a day were tallied in the country of 117 million people over the first three months of 2025, a 50 per cent jump from a year earlier, health department data shows. 'We now have the highest number of new cases here in the Western Pacific,' Health Secretary Ted Herbosa said in a video message released on Tuesday. 'What is frightening is, our youth make up many of the new cases,' he said. 'It would be in our interest to [declare] a public health emergency, a national emergency for HIV to mobilise the entire society, the whole of government to help us in this campaign to reduce the number of new HIV cases,' Herbosa added. The health department said 95 per cent of newly reported cases were male, with 33 per cent aged 15–24 and 47 per cent aged 25–34.