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Rachel Levine: Making History Every Step of the Way


 

Despite those efforts, Levine said, “staff members who have dedicated their lives to caring for these vulnerable Pennsylvanians unknowingly contracted COVID-19 in their communities and carried it into these facilities.” She pointed out that residents who returned from hospitals had been isolated if they contracted COVID-19. Patients returning to nursing homes did not introduce COVID-19, Levine said, “because it was there that they first came into contact with the virus.” Moreover, those patients were isolated, just as they had been before they required hospital-level care, she added.

When a long-term care facility reports a case of COVID-19, Levine noted, the Pennsylvania Health Department considers it an outbreak and offers a variety of resources to the facility, including mitigation measures and the services of an infection control consultant, or even deploying the Pennsylvania National Guard to assist with staffing. Pennsylvania cannot force facilities to accept these services, she pointed out, but some refuse out of fear of receiving citations. “[O]ur top priority,” Levine said, “is halting COVID-19, not issuing citations.”

Her decisions on health restrictions and closures to combat the pandemic created controversy in the state, but much of the criticism also took aim at Levine identifying openly as transgender. Her selection as the first openly transgender official to be confirmed by the Senate has been targeted by conservative groups as a political gesture by President Biden. Tom Fitton, president of the conservative legal group Judicial Watch, posted on Facebook: “Biden gang playing quota politics with public health service.”

In her remarks to the Senate committee, however, Levine calmly noted that her appointment by Gov. Wolf was confirmed unanimously and that she was approved twice more on a bipartisan basis to be Secretary of Health. She met with nearly all of the senators personally. Her confirmation by the senate Republicans was particularly meaningful, she told NBC Out. “[They] judged me strictly on my professional qualifications.”

Social media has made much of Levine’s transgender identification, both pro and con. The Twitterverse, predictably, is packed with anti-Levine and anti-LGBTQ+ rants. But Levine’s rise has energized the LGBTQ+ community, who hail it as a breakthrough. Scout, the single-named executive director of the National LGBT Cancer Network, said, “The fact that she is trans is an inspiration for the many of us who have never had a role model this senior before.” Levine herself is determined to be a “beacon” in representing the LGBTQ+ community in her latest role at the corps: “Diversity makes us stronger,” she said.

“What people don’t understand, they fear,” Levine, who is a frequent public speaker, has said. “The more we can educate people and show that we’re productive members of the community—with families, lives, careers—that helps people understand us better.” That includes education of medical professionals. “We need to do a better job educating medical students about LGBT issues and transgender medicine,” she told NBC Out. She may need to start with the members of Congress. At Levine’s confirmation hearing to serve as Assistant Secretary for Health, Sen. Rand Paul, for instance, compared transgender surgery to “genital mutilation.”

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