These are the words the
Centers for Disease Control isn’t allowed to say anymore
The
Trump administration told policy analysts for the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta that they could not use certain words in
documents for the 2019 budget, the Washington Post reported.
Those
words were “fetus,”
“entitlement,” “diversity,” “transgender,” “vulnerable,” “evidence-based” and
“science-based.”
The
administration prohibited these words from being used in the budget, which
should be released in February, and in supporting materials for Congress and
CDC partners.
A
“longtime CDC analyst” who spoke to the Post said that they did not remember a
time when an administration previous banned “controversial” words from budget
documents.
The
analyst said it’s probable that other areas of the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services have had the same directive.
The
administration did not offer replacement words for all of the banned words, but
in the case of the terms “evidence-based” and “science-based,” the
administration suggested the CDC use the phrase “CDC bases its recommendations on science in consideration
with community standards and wishes.”
The CDC does research that involves LGBTQ people, fetuses, and health disparities among racial, ethnic, socioeconomic and geographic groups, so the administration’s decision to prohibit the use of these words may not please CDC officials.
The
CDC released an issue brief on transgender
communities and HIV in 2016 and gathers information on
LGB youth’s experience with harassment, dating violence, and bullying.
The
administration has already refused to recognize people in the LGBTQ community
in a variety of ways.
In
March, HHS decided to stop counting LGBT people in two
surveys, the National Survey of Older Americans Act Participants and the Annual
Program Performance Report for Centers for Independent Living. These
surveys address the health disparities LGBTQ people often experience.
The
Trump administration also moved away from the possibility of including
information about sexuality and gender identity in the U.S. Census.
Advocates
for the LGBTQ community had been pushing the government to include questions
about gender identity and sexuality in the U.S. Census for years and in 2015,
the Obama administration put together a task force to better understand how to
collect this data.
The
Census Bureau received letters from a few major agencies asking to include
LGBTQ data in the census.
Once
Trump took office, however, the administration pulled back from including the
questions.
Although
there could be several reasons for the questions not being included, such as
collecting more data on the subject before including questions, advocates for
the LGBTQ community said the community was being erased.
The
administration has been hostile to science and consensus on climate change as
well.
The phrases
“climate change” and “global warming” have been disappearing from government websites since
Trump took office.
A DOE Energy Information Administration’s Energy Kids page was changed to downplay climate change and a link to a guide on climate change was removed, according to the Environmental Data and Governance Initiative, a watchdog group.
A DOE Energy Information Administration’s Energy Kids page was changed to downplay climate change and a link to a guide on climate change was removed, according to the Environmental Data and Governance Initiative, a watchdog group.
Several
administration officials have shown themselves to be sympathetic to those who
resist learning basic facts about health and climate change if they don’t
outright make false claims themselves.
Education
Secretary Betsy DeVos has been supported by groups that do not believe in
human-caused climate change, such as the Heartland Institute, which sent
materials to K-12 and college science teachers that don’t accept basic facts
about climate change.
She
also champions voucher-program supported schools, some of which have little
accountability to teach accurate information.
One
example of a private evangelical Christian school supported by voucher programs
taught people that mental illness was a function of satanic influence, according to a Huffington Post feature on
these schools.
A
woman hired for a top position at HHS, Theresa Manning, claimed that contraceptives don’t work and
worked for the Family Research Council, which has fiercely opposed rights
for LGBTQ people.
According
to the Washington Post, the CDC analyst they interviewed said the reaction of
people in the meeting was “incredulous.” The analyst told the
Post, “It was very much, ‘Are you serious? Are you kidding?’ ”