Statement on Attacks on LGBTQIA+ Rights and Resources

The first day of June marks a month-long celebration of the LGBTQIA+ community. Honoring the progress and the vibrance of this community has been especially important with escalating attacks on the LGBTQIA+ community’s rights. 

On June 18, 2025, the Trump Administration announced the termination of the 988 national suicide prevention hotline’s support for LGBTQIA+ callers beginning July 17, 2025. Through providers like the Trevor Project, the 988 Lifeline has served almost 1.3 million youth since the launch of the program in September 2022. Soon, calls/texts will be routed to general crisis centers without LGBTQIA+ specialization. The shutdown of this hotline will have an enormous impact, considering that 1.8 million LGBTQIA+ young people consider suicide every year and are four times more likely to commit suicide than their peers. 

On the same day, transgender rights were also seriously curtailed by the new Supreme Court ruling United States v. Skrmetti, in which they upheld Tennessee’s ban on gender affirming care for transgender youth. This decision has wide-ranging implications: it maintains similar bans on gender affirming care across 25 states, which range from prohibiting providers from administering hormones or puberty blockers to prohibiting gender-affirming care surgeries. Although some states have enacted policies to shield patients receiving and/or providers practicing gender affirming care from civil or criminal charges, over 100,000 transgender youth living outside these areas will still face significant barriers to care. 

National APAMSA condemns these egregious and cruel decisions against the LGBTQIA+ community, who are already a vulnerable and marginalized population. As we approach the end of this month of celebration, this community faces even greater challenges that infringe on the right to exist and to thrive as their authentic self. Guided by our policy compendium, we stand firm in the belief that all patients, including but not limited to those based on their age, color, sex, gender, and sexual orientation, deserve equitable, evidence-based care. We call on medical professionals and trainees to continue advocating for sexual and gender minorities, and implore local, state, and federal leaders to promote health equity and fight inequities affecting the LGBTQIA+ community. 

Please contact your members of Congress to express your opposition against these efforts that degrade and inflict pain on LGBTQIA+ youth. You can use 5 Calls to quickly locate your representatives’ numbers and be prepared with prompts that can help you discuss this particular bill and other issues at ease. 

Sign the petition to voice your concern about the end of the LGBTQ Youth 988 Hotline: https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/protect-988-suicide-and-crisis-lifeline-for-lgbtq-youth/ 

For questions about this statement, please reach out to:

LGBTQIA+ Director, Joey Hua-Phan at lgbtqia@apamsa.org

LGBTQIA+ Committee Member, Elijah Liu at diversity.committees@apamsa.org

Rapid Response Director, Brian Leung at rapidresponse@apamsa.org.

LGBTQIA+ Care Is Under Attack.

Patients and professionals are at risk. These are recent federal actions as of June 27, 2025:

  • Bans on gender-affirming care sweeping across our nation 
  • Terminating crisis lifelines for LGBTQIA+ youth
  • Pressuring providers into silence

Criminalizing Providers: H.R. 3492

Congress is advancing H.R. 3492, which would:

  • Make it a federal crime to provide gender-affirming care to minors
  • Penalize clinicians with up to 10 years in prison

This is not about safety. It’s about eroding medical autonomy and the duty of healthcare providers!

Take action now: action.aclu.org/send-message/protect-trans-care-now

The “Chilling Effect” Is Already Here

The phenomenon describes providers and institutions withdrawing from offering LGBTQIA+ care out of fear of legal, professional, or political consequences. 

Across the U.S., providers are:

  • Asking to be removed from LGBTQIA+ directories
  • Canceling trainings and support programs
  • Backing away from DEI partnerships

Protect Your Patients and Yourself

Even in restrictive states, we urge providers to use your voice and position to support LGBTQIA+ patients further by:

  • Documenting decisions clearly and legally
  • Using encrypted, secure communication tools
  • Sharing vetted provider referral lists confidentially
  • Consulting with organizations like GLMA, ACLU, or Lambda Legal if in doubt

Ask your employers for clear legal guidance and know your rights.

Students: Don’t Be Discouraged

We are the next generation of providers.

  • Keep learning about gender-affirming care best practices
  • Seek out affirming preceptors or telehealth shadowing
  • Use platforms and private peer networks to build experience
  • Document and report any discriminatory practices during your training. You are protected.

How to Push Back as Providers (Legally + Ethically)

  • Advocate for inclusive care policies and language
  • Push for policy reviews on gender and identity
  • Join or form affirming clinician coalitions locally and nationally
  • Know how to refer patients to care in other states or via Telehealth

What Can You Still Do as Healthcare Professionals

Clinical Practice

  • Affirm: Use patients’ names/pronouns. Document care transparently.
  • Refer Safely: Maintain a trusted network of LGBTQIA+ providers (start with OutCare).
  • Provide Access: Offer virtual mental health services where care is restricted.
  • Trauma-Informed Approach: Acknowledge lived experiences. Normalize emotional responses to discrimination.

Education & Advocacy

  • Train colleagues in LGBTQIA+ cultural competency (OutCare, GLMA offer free modules)
  • Advocate within your institution for inclusive policies, even when statewide law is regressive
  • Build cross-discipline alliances: social workers, nurses, legal counsel, DEI officers

Resources for LGBTQIA+ Youth & Their Support Circles

If you are LGBTQIA+ youth, parents, teachers, and/or allies, we stand with you.

Crisis Support & Hotlines

  • The Trevor Project — 24/7 Crisis Support independent of 988.
    1-866-488-7386 | Text “START” to 678678
    thetrevorproject.org/get-help
  • Trans Lifeline — Peer-run and confidential.
    1-877-565-8860
    translifeline.org
  • LGBT National Help Center — Youth and senior talk lines.
    1-800-246-7743
    lgbthotline.org
  • Love is Respect — National teen dating violence support including LGBTQIA+ relationships.

1-866-331-9474 | Text “LOVEIS” to 22522

loveisrespect.org

Support & Education for Families

References

“We’re Not Going Anywhere: LGBTQ+ Health Equity Must Not Be Abandoned”

OutCare Health (2025). https://www.queerty.com/were-not-going-anywhere-lgbtq-health-equity-must-not-be-abandoned-20250605

“Trump Administration Orders Termination of National LGBTQ+ Youth Suicide Lifeline Effective July 17th”

The Trevor Project – 988 Shutdown Report. Published: June 18, 2025.

https://www.thetrevorproject.org/blog/trump-administration-orders-termination-of-national-lgbtq-youth-suicide-lifeline-effective-july-17th/

“Protect Trans Care Now: Tell Congress to Oppose the Criminalization of Gender-Affirming Care”

ACLU Action Page – H.R. 3492

https://action.aclu.org/send-message/protect-trans-care-now

“UC Berkeley experts react to U.S. Supreme Court ruling on medical care for trans minors”

UC Berkeley News. Published: June 18, 2025.

https://news.berkeley.edu/2025/06/18/uc-berkeley-experts-react-to-u-s-supreme-court-ruling-on-medical-care-for-trans-minors/

Fenway Health – The Fenway Institute

https://fenwayhealth.org/about/commitment-to-lgbts/

GLMA On-Demand CE/CME Access

https://www.glma.org/on-demand_ce_cme.php

Campaign for Southern Equality

https://southernequality.org/emergency-help/

Lambda Legal — State Specific Policies

https://lambdalegal.org/search/?keyword=webinar+&issue-area%5B%5D=21724&start-date=&end-date=&sort=desc



Response to Tragic Death of Arthur Folasa Ah Loo

On Saturday, June 14, 2025, Arthur Folasa Ah Loo, 39, was fatally shot in Salt Lake City, Utah. He was an innocent bystander participating in the “No Kings” protest—a nationwide day of defiance denouncing President Donald Trump’s authoritarian actions such as threatening freedom of the press and speech in universities to authorizing mass deportations without due process. Ah Loo was caught in the line of fire by a stray bullet when unsanctioned armed peacekeepers shot a nearby man who pulled out an AR-15 rifle during the protest. Ah Loo was taken to the hospital, where he eventually died. 

Ah Loo devoted his life to serving his family and the Utah Pacific Islander community. As a former Project Runway contestant and self-taught fashion designer from Samoa, he relentlessly advocated for Pacific Islander artists. His own designs challenged fashion norms by merging elements of modern design with traditional Pacific Islander attire, showcasing his heritage on a global stage. In his free time, Ah Loo voluntarily tailored and created clothing for people in need, often refusing payment for his work. 

We, at National APAMSA, are deeply saddened by the loss of Ah Loo and his powerful voice for representation and diversity in the fashion industry and Pacific Islander community. His loss is deeply felt not only by the Samoan and wider Pasifika communities, but also by anyone who believes in the power of creativity to inspire change. To Ah Loo’s family, his wife Laura and their two young children, and the community who are mourning him, we send our deepest condolences.

APAMSA reaffirms its stance denouncing gun violence as expressed in our policy compendium. The death of Ah Loo was senseless and avoidable, reflecting the devastating consequences of unchecked violence, open-carry policies, and failure to ensure protest safety. The presence of untrained, armed peacekeepers acting outside of official oversight directly contributed to this tragedy. This instance also raises questions about who has power, who is protected, and who is left vulnerable—even when their intentions are peaceful. We urge lawmakers, protest organizers, and community leaders to prioritize public safety. No one should have to fear for their life while standing for what they believe in. 

If you would like to support his family, please consider donating to the GoFundMe in honor of Arthur Folasa Ah Loo.

For questions or more information about this statement, please reach out to the Native Hawaiian Pacific Islander Director, Caitlin Tanji, at nhpidirector@apamsa.org and Rapid Response Director, Brian Leung, at rapidresponse@apamsa.org.



Statement on ICE Raids in Los Angeles

Following the Trump Administration’s plan to push for mass deportations, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents raided multiple communities in the Los Angeles area on Friday June 6, 2025, detaining over 100 people. This action mirrors similar immigration arrests in cities across the nation such as San Diego and Chicago. Federal agents, often equipped with military gear and traveling in armored vehicles, have increasingly targeted workplaces and courtrooms to increase arrests and deportations of undocumented immigrants in the United States. This surge in activity comes amid ongoing concerns about unsanitary conditions, inadequate health and medical treatment, and other rights violations at detention facilities. Since January 2025, further policy changes have eliminated protections for locations such as schools, hospitals, and places of worship from ICE activities. This has instilled fear in undocumented individuals, making them hesitant to access essential health services due to the risk of arrest and detention.

At National APAMSA, we are dismayed by these immigration sweeps, which directly threaten the health and safety of immigrants, a concern explicitly expressed in our policy compendium. These raids prioritize quotas set by the Trump Administration rather than ensure public safety, leading to overcrowding and an increased number of deaths in ICE facilities. A 2024 report by the American Immigration Council found no correlation between ICE operations and lower rates of violent crime despite the Trump Administration’s repeated claims that many immigrants are “committing vile and heinous acts against innocent Americans.” We have seen the rights of immigrants being violated, despite decades of legal precedent of equal protections afforded by the Constitution for all persons in the United States. Please help us stand up for the rights of immigrants and inform others about their fundamental protections 

Call to Action

  • Speak with your Congressional representatives about your concern for the violation of immigrant rights. To find your Representative and Senators, please use the following website: https://www.congress.gov/contact-us 
  • Inform all community members of their rights and about available resources. Please see below for a list of resources.

Resources

ACLU – Know Your Rights

Immigrant Defense Project – Know Your Rights infographics and fact sheets (also available in multiple languages) 

Stop AAPI Hate – Community Resources

Immigrant Legal Resource Center – Red Cards to place in cars and at home

Email Script to Congress

Subject: Urgent: Oppose ICE Raids and Military Violence Against Protesters

Dear [Representative/Senator Last Name],

My name is [Your Name], and I am a constituent living in [Your ZIP Code]. I am writing with deep concern about the Trump administration’s cruel and inhumane immigration enforcement and violent suppression of peaceful protests.

I urge you to take a firm stand against ICE raids in Los Angeles and throughout the U.S. These raids do not just target undocumented immigrants — they also intimidate and harm documented immigrants. Families are being separated, children traumatized, and entire communities pushed into fear and silence.

Undocumented immigrants are the backbone of our country. They do the labor that many Americans are unwilling to do, often under brutal and hazardous conditions. From working in fields under extreme heat and air pollution, to dangerous construction sites and underregulated factories, these workers sustain critical industries — with little or no workplace protection.

Despite these conditions, undocumented immigrants pay over $37.3 billion in state and local taxes every year, including $8.5 billion in California alone. They are our neighbors, colleagues, and essential contributors to our country.

And yet, the Trump administration responded with cruelty — targeting not just those undocumented, but also documented immigrants with new restrictions, denials, and deportations.

To make matters worse, this administration has used the National Guard and military force against peaceful protesters, weaponizing power against people who are simply exercising their First Amendment rights. Peaceful dissent is a hallmark of American democracy — not a threat to be met with tear gas and rubber bullets.

I urge you to:

  • Publicly condemn ICE raids and the targeting of immigrant families.
  • Oppose any militarization of protest response.
  • Support legislation that protects immigrant communities and ensures humane treatment.
  • Defend our right to protest without fear of violence or retaliation.

Please act now to protect our communities and uphold justice.

Sincerely,

[Your Name]

Call Script: 

Hi, my name is [Your Name], and I’m a constituent calling from [Your City, ZIP Code].

I’m calling to express my deep concern about the Trump administration’s cruel and aggressive immigration enforcement and the violent use of military force against peaceful protesters.

I urge [Representative/Senator’s Last Name] to:

  • Publicly condemn ICE raids, especially those happening in Los Angeles and across the country. These raids tear families apart and push entire communities into fear — including many documented immigrants.
  • Oppose the militarization of protest responses. Peaceful protest is a constitutional right — not something to be met with tear gas or rubber bullets.
  • Support legislation that protects immigrant communities and ensures they are treated with dignity and humanity.

Undocumented immigrants are the backbone of essential industries in our country. They work in harsh and dangerous conditions that many others won’t — often without protections — yet still contribute over $37 billion in state and local taxes.

We need leaders who will protect communities, not terrorize them. Please tell [Representative/Senator’s Last Name] to stand up for human rights and democracy.

Thank you.

For more information or questions regarding this statement, please contact our Rapid Response Director, Brian Leung, at rapidresponse@apamsa.org and our Southeast Asian Director, Fern Vichaikul, at seadirector@apamsa.org.



Joint Statement on H.R. 1 by APAMSA, SNMA, LMSA, AMSA, SOMA, and MSDCI

On May 22, 2025, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 1 One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which contained disconcerting provisions aimed at cutting Medicaid funding by almost $700 billion over the next decade. Medicaid has been a central fixture for 83 million Americans, providing essential healthcare and long-term care for children, seniors, people with disabilities, and low-income adults. The Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion to adults who earn up to 138% of the federal poverty level ($21,597 for a single adult) has insured millions of Americans with health coverage. These potential changes will deprive over 10 million Americans from healthcare coverage through Medicaid and disproportionately affect communities of color.

Medicaid has been linked to increased access in rural and disadvantaged areas and improved health outcomes like decreasing all-cause mortality by almost 2% and lowering maternal mortality. In a recent report authored by the Asian & Pacific Islander American Health Forum, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and other national health organizations, Medicaid is the primary source of healthcare for almost 30% of people of color. 

Medicaid has consistently enjoyed broad bipartisan support. A recent poll demonstrates that most Americans—Democrats, Republicans, and independents alike—favor maintaining and increasing spending on Medicaid access. Forty states across the political spectrum have opted into Medicaid expansion, recognizing the program’s role in improving health outcomes, supporting rural hospitals, and reducing uncompensated care. Despite the overwhelming evidence that Medicaid is extremely popular across the political spectrum and saves lives, House Republicans have moved to sacrifice public health in favor of funding tax cuts that primarily benefit the wealthy. The harmful provisions in H.R. 1 stand in contrast to the values shared by voters of all political backgrounds who believe Americans should not be denied care due to their income.

The bill will attempt to cut costs by

  1. Reducing the incentives and federal subsidies given to states for expanding Medicaid, specifically punishing any state that provides any health benefits or assistance to undocumented immigrants with lower expansion matches,
  2. Establish cost-sharing and copays of $35 for services provided to anyone above the federal poverty level ($15,650 for a single adult),
  3. Instituting stringent work requirements and eligibility verifications that burdens Medicaid recipients and state governments with more paperwork,
  4. Prohibiting Medicaid payment to nonprofits and providers that focus on reproductive health, family planning, and abortion services like Planned Parenthood,
  5. Removing gender affirming care as an Essential Health Benefit under the Affordable Care Act and prohibiting coverage for any Medicaid/CHIP recipient,
  6. Suspending rules that streamline application and enrollment into Medicaid and for patients who qualify for the Medicare Savings Program (covers Medicare premiums and cost-sharing for low-income Medicare beneficiaries).

We strongly condemn any legislation aimed at limiting equitable access to Medicaid or attacking access to abortion services and gender affirming care. Among the many destructive changes also embedded in H.R. 1, the elimination of federal student loans and loan forgiveness programs will severely limit access for students from all backgrounds to pursue careers in medicine. This bill proposes a lifetime cap of $150,000 for federal graduate student borrowing, specifically for those enrolled in professional programs. This will potentially force students to rely on private loans with less favorable terms and fewer protections, undoubtedly compounding the physician shortages in the very communities that rely on us. 

At the heart of these proposed cuts lies an uncomfortable truth – healthcare is not a human right if equal access is not afforded to everyone regardless of socioeconomic class and immigration status. These actions go against the principles set by other nations, the World Health Organization, and the EU among others, highlighting the precarious path that the U.S. government is currently steering the country down. If passed in the Senate as is, the “One Big Beautiful Bill” will greatly harm patients across the United States and hamper the ability for physicians and other healthcare providers to serve their communities. 

Call to Action:

To Senators – We call on all senators to reject this bill to protect the American public’s interest and maintain our great nation’s founding principles of “Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness” 

To Medical Students – we urge all medical students to contact their Senators in Congress and demand a No vote on the “One Big Beautiful Bill.”

Signed,

Asian Pacific American Medical Student Association (APAMSA)

Student National Medical Association (SNMA)

Latino Medical Student Association (LMSA)

American Medical Student Association (AMSA)

Student Osteopathic Medical Association (SOMA) 

Medical Students with Disabilities and Chronic Illness (MSDCI)

 

Additional Resources:

Contact your Congressional Representatives: https://www.congress.gov/contact-us 

More information about federal student loans changes: Official Statement and infographic

Call or email your Representative today with a call script from our partner organization, Vot-ER: https://go.vot-er.org/0mAQQu

For questions regarding this statement, please contact:

Rapid Response Director, Brian Leung at rapidresponse@apamsa.org



Response to Proposed Limits and Elimination of Federal Student Loans

On April 28, 2025, Congress released a draft proposal to overhaul the federal student loan system, aiming to add limits to federal student loans, eliminate Grad PLUS loans, and drastically scale back current repayment plans and loan forgiveness options. For 75% of medical students who take out federal loans to pay for medical school, these new proposed rules will stifle the training of future physicians in a nation already facing a physician shortage among a growing and aging population. Congress is also discussing changes to reduce Pell Grants, which help fund undergraduate education for low-income students, including pre-medical students. 

APAMSA’s membership is made up of over 4,500 medical and pre-medical students from across the country, and our national organization opposes these alarming changes that will irrevocably damage medical education financing for tens of thousands of medical students and for the many other health profession students.

We urge students to spend 5 minutes of their time to reach out to their Congressional representative to demand the protection of federal student loans. Please send this to your fellow classmates – more people contacting means higher importance to our representatives.

To find your Representative and Senators, please use the following website: https://www.congress.gov/contact-us 

We have provided scripts that you can use in an email or in a short phone call to deliver your concerns about the proposed changes. Please feel free to adjust these scripts as you wish to better express your concerns. If you have voted for the Congressional representative or senator before, please mention that as a part of your statement. 

Version 1: 

Hi, my name is [NAME] and I’m a constituent from [CITY, ZIP].

Thank you so much for your continued support of our medical students and the future patients they’ll serve, especially in rural and underserved communities. I’m reaching out today not just as a student, but as someone who grew up in [brief personal background] and who relies on the Grad PLUS program to afford medical school. If this option were taken away, students like me would be forced to reconsider whether they can even afford to complete their training—despite our deep commitment to serving communities in need. I remain concerned about proposals to eliminate Grad PLUS or impose borrowing caps below the true cost of medical education. These changes would severely limit access for students from all backgrounds and risk worsening the physician shortage in the very communities that rely on us. I respectfully urge you to continue advocating for policies that protect access to medical education and ensure that future physicians can continue serving the communities that need us most. Thank you again for your leadership and for considering the impact this would have on students like me.

Version 2: 

Hi, my name is [NAME] and I’m a constituent from [CITY, ZIP].

I’m calling to urge [REP/SEN NAME] to protect funding for the federal student loan program and oppose the elimination of Grad PLUS loans and other loan repayment options. As a [medical student/pre-medical student] at [your school], access to federal student loans are crucial to the training of America’s future physicians. In order to provide the best care to our patients across the nation, we must be supported in our education.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

IF LEAVING VOICEMAIL: Please leave your full street address to ensure your call is tallied.

For questions regarding this statement, please contact:

Rapid Response Director, Brian Leung at rapidresponse@apamsa.org

Editor Director, Christine Le at editor@apamsa.org 

Director of Organized Medicine, Jennifer Deng at organizedmed@apamsa.org



Statement on Lapu Lapu Day Festival Tragedy

The Asian Pacific American Medical Student Association (APAMSA) extends its deepest condolences to the Filipino Canadian community in the wake of the devastating tragedy at Vancouver’s Lapu Lapu Day festival. On April 26, 2025, a vehicle was driven into a crowd celebrating Filipino heritage, resulting in the loss of 11 lives and injuring over 20 individuals.

This senseless act has left an indelible mark on a community that was gathered together in joy and cultural pride. As future healthcare professionals committed to serving Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities, we stand in solidarity with those affected. We honor the resilience of the Filipino community and the dedication of the first responders and healthcare workers who provided immediate care and continue to support the victims and their families.

APAMSA reaffirms its commitment to fostering safe and inclusive environments for all communities. We pledge to advocate for mental health awareness, community support systems, and preventive measures to ensure such tragedies do not recur (Resolution 30.001). In this time of mourning, we offer our support and stand united with the Filipino Canadian community.

For more information on how to help, please look to Filipino BC (@filipino_bc) and at the official City of Vancouver website for more updates and ways to support the community in the future.

If you or someone you know needs support, please reach out:

988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: Call or text 988 (24/7, nationwide)

Asian Mental Health Collective – Resource Directory: asianmhc.org/resources 

Crisis Text Line: Text HELLO to 741741

For questions about this statement, please reach out to the National President, James Chua at president@apamsa.org, the Southeast Asian Director, Fern Vichaikul at sadirector@apamsa.org, or the Rapid Response Director, Brian Leung at rapidresponse@apamsa.org



Response to SAVE Act (H.R. 22)

On April 10, 2025, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 22, the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act, which requires all voters to provide documented proof of citizenship in person while voting. If passed in the Senate and signed into law, this bill will create unnecessary barriers to voting and disenfranchise millions of eligible voters. 

 

Parts of the SAVE Act Who does this impact?
  1. Requiring documented proof of citizenship in the form of a birth certificate, passport, or naturalization certificate
One in 10 eligible American citizens lack these documents or face significant barriers in obtaining them.

Voters of color, married women who change their names, and young voters will be significantly affected.

Those with REAL ID, military or tribal ID would not be considered as having sufficient proof of citizenship under this new law. 

  1. Must present proof of United States citizenship to an election official for voting by mail 
Every current and new voter will have to present their proof of citizenship to election offices, which can be hours away, in order to update their registration status. This poses a significant burden for rural, disabled, and elderly citizens

This also eliminates voter registration drives and online voter registration, thus reducing voter turnout. 

  1. Remove noncitizens from registration rolls
Voting as a noncitizen is already illegal and very rare – only 30 votes out of 23.5 million votes during the 2016 general election were suspected to be made by noncitizens. 

During previous voter roll purges, almost two-thirds of suspected noncitizens in Alabama were, in fact, later found out to be eligible voters. If rolled out on a larger scale, this will unjustly disenfranchise eligible voters as already seen in Virginia during the 2024 election

 

National APAMSA strongly condemns this bill, as it will have far-reaching effects in limiting the voices of millions of Americans, especially people of color who are disproportionately affected by this potential voting law. We stand by the statements put out by organizations like ACLU and APIA Vote that echo our same concern for diminishing voting access. As mentioned by previous statements, National APAMSA recognizes that voting is a pivotal social determinant of health that underlies our ability as medical students, health advocates, and future leaders of health to serve our communities and strive for better health outcomes. 

Please contact your local Senator to express your opposition against the passage of the SAVE Act. You can use 5 Calls to quickly locate your representatives’ numbers and be prepared with prompts that can help you discuss this particular bill and other issues at ease. Other resources like When We All Vote can also streamline the process to contact the appropriate representatives.

For questions or concerns, please reach out to Brian Leung at rapidresponse@apamsa.org



Response to Executive Order to Eliminate the Department of Education

On March 20, 2025, President Donald J.Trump signed a new executive order directing the Education Secretary, Linda McMahon, to pursue the closure of the Department of Education (ED). The ED distributes over $1.6 trillion in federal loans and financial aid for students, enforces civil right laws such as Title VI and Title IXfunds public school budgets, and gathers education statistics. The executive order also directs the Education Department to restrict any federally funded programs or activities under the label of “diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI),” reinforcing previous executive orders aimed at rolling back DEI initiatives.

Given that over 70% of medical students take out loans, especially utilizing federal loan programs like the Direct Unsubsidized Loan or Graduate Plus loans, the closure of the ED will jeopardize these loan programs and loan repayment programs that have been a cornerstone reducing medical education debt.

National APAMSA condemns this policy directive that will undermine student education funding and diminish the protections against racism and discrimination in schools and colleges across the nation. As mentioned in our previous statements and in our official policy compendium, APAMSA continues to advocate and work with policymakers and professional organizations to protect efforts to increase diversity and equity in medical education.

We urge Congress to oppose any bills aimed at formalizing the elimination of the ED and to commit to the protection of the department and countless other diversity programs. Please contact your local Congressional representative to express your support to maintain the Department of Education.

For questions about this statement, please reach out to Brian Leung at rapidresponse@apamsa.org. For local support, please contact your regional director.

For questions or concerns, please reach out to Brian Leung at rapidresponse@apamsa.org



Response to Government Censorship of LGBTQIA+ Health

On January 20th, as part of President Donald J. Trump’s day-one executive orders, the Office of Personnel Management directed federal agencies to eliminate “gender ideology” from employee resource groups and grants and replace the term “gender” with “sex” on government forms. As a result, vital public health information and data have been erased from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website, including HIV testing information, the Social Vulnerability Index, contraceptive eligibility guidelines, the largest adolescent behavioral health monitoring program, multiple resources addressing health disparities among LGBTQIA+ communities, and more. 

National APAMSA denounces the draconian censorship of science, public health, and medicine in federal policy to further disenfranchise marginalized communities. Regardless of federal mandates, we will continue to advocate for the dissemination of evidence-based, culturally competent care and support initiatives that combat health disparities among sexual and gender minorities. We affirm that gender-affirming care is life-saving care, as discussed in our previous statements and policy compendium, and affirmed in the stances of the World Health Organization, American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and American Academy of Family Physicians.

We urge all healthcare professionals to adhere to the evidence-based clinical recommendations and guidelines that have ensured quality care for all communities. We urge institutions to support their employees and patients by continuing to ensure diversity, equity, and inclusion in their resources and programs. Lastly, we urge community leaders and policy makers to prioritize the health of the public and act against censorship of medical terminology and public health institutions.

To our colleagues in medicine, we stand with you and fight alongside you. We affirm that diversity is what makes our communities strong.

To our patients, please know that there is an overwhelming majority of healthcare workers that will fight to provide the highest level of care possible. Please continue to share your stories and seek the care you deserve. It is our highest honor and privilege to care for you and your loved ones. 

“It is in collectivities that we find reservoirs of hope and optimism.”

― Angela Y. Davis, Freedom Is a Constant Struggle

For questions about this statement, please reach out to Nataliyah Tahir at rapidresponse@apamsa.org. For local support, please contact your region director. To get more involved with National APAMSA’s diversity initiatives, please visit www.apamsa.org/diversity or contact Sandra Kumwong at diversity@apamsa.org.

For questions or concerns, please reach out to Nataliyah Tahir at rapidresponse@apamsa.org



National APAMSA Statement on President Trump’s Day One Executive Orders

On Monday, January 20th, President Donald J. Trump issued a slew of executive orders disrupting public health and safety, including actions related to health care, Covid-19 and emergency preparedness, diversity, equity, and inclusion, LGBTQ+ protections, immigration, climate change, reproductive rights, and the death penalty. 

National APAMSA condemns these overwhelmingly unconstitutional policies aimed at disempowering marginalized communities. As discussed in previous statements and our policy compendium, we will continue to uphold health care reform; protection of migrants, refugees, and undocumented immigrants; and advocacy in favor of dismantling racial, ethnic, and gender disparities. 

While these recent events may be discouraging, we encourage our community to practice resilience, center optimism, and remain energized. In memory of Martin Luther King, Jr. this week, we offer a reminder: “We are now faced with the fact that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now. In this unfolding conundrum of life and history, there ‘is’ such a thing as being too late. This is no time for apathy or complacency. This is a time for vigorous and positive action.” 

We urge community leaders, lawmakers, and judicial systems to challenge these executive actions and fight for justice, equity, and inclusion for all. Find and contact your representatives in Congress by visiting www.congress.gov/members/find-your-member

For questions about this statement, please reach out to Nataliyah Tahir at rapidresponse@apamsa.org. For local support, please contact your region director. 

For questions or concerns, please reach out to Nataliyah Tahir at rapidresponse@apamsa.org