Federal health workers are expressing fear and alarm after a website called âDEI Watch Listâ published the photos, names and public information of a number of workers across health agencies, describing them at one point as âtargets.â
Itâs unclear when the website, which lists mostly Black employees who work in agencies primarily within the Department of Health and Human Services, first appeared.
âOffensesâ for the workers listed on the website include working on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, donating to Democrats and using pronouns in their bios.
The website, a government worker said, is being circulated among multiple private group chats of federal health workers across agencies, as well as through social media links.
The site also reached Dr. Georges Benjamin, the executive director of the American Public Health Association, who learned about it Tuesday evening when a federal health worker sent it to him.
âThis is a scare tactic to try to intimidate people who are trying to do their work and do it admirably,â Benjamin said. âItâs clear racism.â
A government worker said they found out theirs was among the names on the website Tuesday afternoon after a former co-worker sent them the link on social media.
âItâs unnerving,â said the person, who requested anonymity because of safety concerns. âMy name and my picture is there, and in 2025, itâs very simple to Google and look up someoneâs home address and all kinds of things that potentially put me at risk.â
âI donât know what the intention of the list is for,â the person said. âItâs just kind of a scary place to be.â
On Tuesday evening, the site listed photos of employees and linked to further information about them under the headline âTargets.â Later Tuesday night, the headline on each page had been changed to âDossiers.â
The site lists workersâ salaries along with what it describes as âDEI offenses,â including political donations, screenshots of social media posts, snippets from websites describing their work, or being a part of a DEI initiative that has been scrubbed from a federal website.
Benjamin suggested the acts of online harassment are criminal. âLaw enforcement should look into them.â
A person who isnât on the list but works at a federal health agency called the website âpsychological warfare.â The link, this person said, is being circulated in their private group chat of federal health workers, causing some to âfreak out.â
Itâs hard to gauge, the worker said, whether itâs a legitimate threat. âI donât know anything about the organization doing this or their parent association. People are just paranoid right now.â
A note at the bottom of the website says, âA project of the American Accountability Foundation.â That group is a conservative watchdog group.
Itâs not the first time the group has created such a list. In December, it sent Pete Hegseth, then the nominee for defense secretary, a list of names of people in the military whom it deemed too focused on diversity, equity and inclusion, the New York Post reported at the time.
Neither the American Accountability Foundation nor HHS immediately responded to requests for comment.
The website comes after a bruising two weeks for public health workers. Employees at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say they have received âthreateningâ memos from the Department of Health and Human Services directing them to terminate any activities, jobs and research with any connection to diversity, equity and inclusion â and turn in co-workers who donât adhere to the orders. HHS oversees federal health agencies, including the CDC and the National Institutes of Health.
âThe tone is aggressive. Itâs threatening consequences if we are not obedient. Itâs asking us to report co-workers who arenât complying,â said a CDC physician who wasnât authorized to speak to reporters. âThereâs a lot of fear and panic.â
NBC News reviewed one of the memos, which directed employees to âreview all agency position descriptions and send a notification to all employees whose position description involves inculcating or promoting gender ideology that they are being placed on paid administrative leave effective immediately.â
The result, staffers said, is paranoia.
âI know of people who have been put on administrative leave for perceived infractions related to these ambiguous memos. People are thinking if I put one foot wrong, Iâm just going to be fired,â another CDC physician said.
In one case, a potluck luncheon among co-workers was hastily canceled for fear it would be seen as a way to promote cultural diversity.
Despite the harassment, public health employees said they remain committed to their work.
âIf I leave, whoâs going to replace me?â a CDC physician said. âIf nobody replaces me and enough of us leave, then whoâs going to be doing the public health work?â