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…Equality Michigan, alongside a collective of health care and civil rights organizations — including the HIV/AIDS Alliance of Michigan, the Michigan League for Public Policy, the NAACP Michigan State Conference, the Michigan Chapter of the National Association of Social Worker and the ACLU of Michigan — pointed to a recent guidance issued by Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel where she noted “Refusing healthcare services to a class of individuals based on their perceived status, such as withholding the availability of services from transgender individuals based on their gender identity or their diagnosis of gender dysphoria, while offering such services to cisgender individuals, may constitute discrimination under Michigan law.”

In a statement released alongside the letter, Knott said the best way to protect the health and wellbeing of transgender people is to “ensure that they can continue to access essential, age-appropriate medical care from licensed clinicians practicing according to the well-established standards of care.”

Read more at Michigan Advance.

Article also appeared in:
Iosca County News-Herald
BLOX Digital
City Pulse