Alright, people.
Long and important post incoming, please read & share. I will include a tl;dr at the end!
A lovely anon has informed me that WPATH (The World Professional Association for Transgender Health) has extended the deadline for folks to submit feedback on their newest Standards of Care, the document that serves as an international guide for trans healthcare.
The new deadline is
1/16/22, at 11:59pm GMT
The updated Standards of Care, once it is finalized and put into use, will affect and influence transgender healthcare for the next decade. It will impact trans care across the globe, not just in the US and Europe.
This will affect you.
This means we have to do our best to correct WPATH's errors and misinformation while we can. Many changes to the SOC are great and show progress, but other changes are going backwards and will make things more difficult for us and others within our community.
"It is absolutely imperative that the trans community and affirming healthcare providers provide important feedback to WPATH on the mistakes & problems within the new guidelines, as these issues can and will negatively impact trans healthcare for the next decade once the final document is published. Make no mistake, there are many positive changes to the new SOC as well: much more affirming language, lower recommended general minimum age to access gender-affirming healthcare, a new chapter for nonbinary people, etc.
But right now, the immediate & most pressing issue is to fix the problems. So let’s talk about them."
The above quote is taken from this reddit post. Please give it a read, as the author is way better at explaining everything than I am.
They go into detail explaining the issues with the problematic chapters of the new SOC, the biggest of which caters to the fictional idea of "rapid onset gender dysphoria" affecting young kids/teens, which is essentially a bullshit term coined by transphobes and terfs to explain why more young trans men and trans mascs are coming out and seeking transition. This junk science has been completely debunked, but WPATH including it in their guidelines will only give it power again.
There are three other chapters of the SOC with problems that need to be addressed. The topics include social transitioning for trans kids, the use of progesterone in hrt for trans women and girls, and the bodily autonomy of intersex people.
The reddit post (linked again here for convenience) is incredibly helpful for explaining these issues. They also provide links to the surveys for each faulty chapter.
If you scroll through the comments of the reddit post or follow this link to a Google document, a very helpful young ally has taken the time to share the feedback they submitted so that others can copy it and submit it themselves or use it as a guide for their own words. If you do this, please be certain to submit each part of the feedback to the individual chapter it is referring to. For example, copy the text about the Hormone Therapy Chapter and then submit that to the survey about that chapter.
If you want to go directly to the WPATH surveys, you can follow this link. It will take you to the page below (left). If you click the big ol' link on that page, it will open up a 2 page document (right) containing links to all the surveys, which also include the drafts of each chapter in the new Standards of Care, so you can review them yourself if you so desire.
Please, follow the links in this post. Get more info. Submit feedback. Help this post go around.
Once again, we have until 11:59pm GMT on January 16th, 2021 to submit feedback to WPATH.
tl;dr:
WPATH is changing their Standards of Care for trans folks, and their draft has problems that need to be addressed before the document is finalized and used to guide trans healthcare for the next decade.
They have surveys open to the public until 1/16/22. It is vital for us to complete these surveys for WPATH so that enough trans voices can reach them and let them know where they need to improve.
There are links in my post above that lead to the surveys, explanations of the new SOC draft's issues, and a document with feedback that you can literally copy-paste to submit to the surveys.














