{"id":735,"date":"2023-01-22T11:35:53","date_gmt":"2023-01-22T12:35:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/vegacelis.com\/?p=735"},"modified":"2025-06-20T10:52:16","modified_gmt":"2025-06-20T10:52:16","slug":"athletics-bosses-set-to-rule-on-trans-participation-changes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/vegacelis.com\/index.php\/2023\/01\/22\/athletics-bosses-set-to-rule-on-trans-participation-changes\/","title":{"rendered":"Athletics bosses set to rule on trans participation changes"},"content":{"rendered":"
Officials are due to make a decision in March regarding entry to competitions for transgender athletes<\/strong><\/p>\n International track and field governing body World Athletics is set to rule in March on changes which could tighten the requirements for participation by transgender athletes but still allow a route for them to compete, according to reports.<\/p>\n UK newspaper The Telegraph<\/a> has reported that a “preferred option”<\/em> has been proposed under which the amount of plasma testosterone for transgender female competitors would be capped at 2.5 nanomoles per liter, which is exactly half the current limit.<\/p>\n However, the amount of time an athlete would need to remain below that level would be increased to two years – double the current requirement. <\/p>\n “Putting forward a preferred option is the best way to gather constructive feedback, but this does not mean this is the option that will be presented to [World Athletics] Council or indeed adopted,”<\/em> the organization said in a statement.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n It was reported by The Guardian<\/a>, which says it has seen a consultation document, that World Athletics accepts that athletes who have transitioned from male to female “retain an advantage in muscle mass, volume and strength over cis women after 12 months [of hormone treatment]”<\/em> and that “limited experimental data”<\/em> suggests advantages continue even after that period.<\/p>\n In July of last year, World Athletics president Sebastian Coe hinted at a more stringent stance, saying<\/a> he was “<\/em>really over having any more of these discussions with second-rate sociologists who sit there trying to tell me or the science community that there may be some issue.”<\/em><\/p>\n “Testosterone is the key determinant in performance,”<\/em> added Coe, who has vowed to protect “the integrity and future of women’s sport.”<\/em><\/p>\n \n Last year, international swimming governing body World Aquatics (formerly FINA) said<\/a> it was banning trans participation in women’s events for athletes who have completed any part of male puberty, instead promising to create a new ‘open’ category. Federations in sports such as rugby have also imposed<\/a> more stringent measures.<\/p>\n The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has promoted inclusivity<\/a> while widely being seen as passing the buck to individual sporting federations to rule on the matter.<\/p>\n
\n READ MORE: <\/span>Do new transgender restrictions signal rethink for sport?
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