DULUTH — Instead of listening to another person misgender them last fall on a bonding tour across the state, Duluth Rep. Liish Kozlowski simply told the driver of a bus full of lawmakers to pull over.
“I had told them over and over and over again to stop calling me she/her,” said Kozlowski, who is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns. “So I chose to get off the bus instead of driving back two hours with them.” (A friend picked Kozlowski up.)
Kozlowski is undergoing hormone therapy, and being misgendered “was really brutal,” they said, especially with “the backdrop of a national attack on trans and queer folks” with hundreds of bills across the country “seeking to literally relegate us to the coffin or to the closets.”
Kozlowski shared this story with more than 100 people at a gender-affirming care event at Duluth’s Peace United Church of Christ on Thursday. Organized by medical students and others, it’s a response to a growing rift within the Duluth campus of the University of Minnesota Medical School, where some of its students formed a Catholic group that opposes gender-affirming care for minors. Such care includes medications to suppress puberty and hormones for older teens, according to the group’s website.
The Duluth campus, where most students stay for two years before moving on to the Twin Cities or a rural town for training, focuses on family medicine in rural areas and Native American communities. The rural focus has some fellow students worrying how those beliefs — contrary to their curriculum — will affect future patient care, especially when it involves gender and in areas where provider choices are slim.
Kozlowski is among the Duluth legislators who sent a letter to U and University of Minnesota Duluth leaders following a Star Tribune story about the group. It cited an off-campus seminar some Duluth medical students attended where a discredited pediatric endocrinologist advised the audience to ignore patients’ preferred pronouns and called gender-affirming care “nonsense.”
“Unfortunately, reports we have received indicate that this egregious incident did not happen in isolation, and rather, that it reflects a larger environment of anti-[LGBTQ+] sentiment and systemic racism that exist in the pharmacy and medical school programs, impacting students, faculty and future patients,” reads the letter signed by Sen. Jen McEwen, Rep. Liz Olson and Kozlowski, among others.
In a statement Friday, Duluth medical school campus dean Kevin Diebel said its curriculum teaches students to care for patients of all backgrounds.