Testosterone rule for female athletes is unscientific, Canadian researcher says
MONTREAL — Proposed rules to limit natural testosterone levels in some female track and field athletes are unscientific and would set a precedent for discriminating against people based on their natural abilities, a Canadian researcher says.
In an editorial published Wednesday in the medical journal BMJ, Universite de Montreal professor Cara Tannenbaum and Sheree Bekker of the University of Bath take aim at restrictions proposed by the international governing body for the sport of athletics. The rules would force female runners with differences of sex development to medically lower their testosterone levels before they could race internationally at distances from 400 meters through the mile.
In an interview, Tannenbaum said there isn’t enough evidence to prove that increased testosterone causes improved results, and there’s no reason to force women with naturally high hormone levels to compete with men.
“What they’re doing is they’re essentially defining a female athlete by the (level) of testosterone in her blood, and certainly in medical science we don’t define individuals as men and women based on a blood test,” Tannenbaum said in a phone interview.