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Estrogen meds are used to treat menopause, and testosterone meds for andropause. Also used to treat hormonal imbalances, like if a woman is not producing enough estrogen naturally yet they do testosterone. Relatively more common than one would think, which the Olympics and other sport organizations have discovered.
Any usage of any medication that is not prescribed for a valid medical reason would be illegal and against CF drug policy I would think, hence cannot use hormones for performance.
The Doctor in the article would only handle hormones, and possibly mentoring/overseeing individual transitions. They would not be able to provide psych assessments or GRS surgery, so their definition of 'transitioned' is suspect. The only place you can get it done in Canada is Montreal, and they require letters from two psychologists/therapists, GP, and endocrinologist. A trans applicant having had surgery suggests they went through all these steps, and CF does not have to. Same for legal status change, as most if not all provinces require proof of surgery for that to be done. So for CF purposes, "transitioned' is completing surgery and legal status change.
At this point, CF would have experience with existing trans members, over a hundred last I heard, in the last few decades. They should have some accumulated institutional knowledge for a transgender enrollment considerations. Base on this thread alone, that individual in the article has not been the only trans applicant that the CF handled. Did any of them completed enrollment, and recruited?
Another question, does the new trans policy from last year or so posted/linked anywhere? Does it cover enrollment?
Any usage of any medication that is not prescribed for a valid medical reason would be illegal and against CF drug policy I would think, hence cannot use hormones for performance.
The Doctor in the article would only handle hormones, and possibly mentoring/overseeing individual transitions. They would not be able to provide psych assessments or GRS surgery, so their definition of 'transitioned' is suspect. The only place you can get it done in Canada is Montreal, and they require letters from two psychologists/therapists, GP, and endocrinologist. A trans applicant having had surgery suggests they went through all these steps, and CF does not have to. Same for legal status change, as most if not all provinces require proof of surgery for that to be done. So for CF purposes, "transitioned' is completing surgery and legal status change.
At this point, CF would have experience with existing trans members, over a hundred last I heard, in the last few decades. They should have some accumulated institutional knowledge for a transgender enrollment considerations. Base on this thread alone, that individual in the article has not been the only trans applicant that the CF handled. Did any of them completed enrollment, and recruited?
Another question, does the new trans policy from last year or so posted/linked anywhere? Does it cover enrollment?