World Athletics has approved the introduction of cheek swabbing to determine if an athlete is biologically female.
The global bodyâs president Sebastian Coe said the decision taken by the World Athletics Council was further evidence his organisation would âdoggedly protect the female category.â
No timeline for the introduction of pre-clearance testing has been officially set out, but the PA news agency understands World Athleticsâ intention is to have the testing in place for athletes wanting to compete in the female category at the World Championships in Tokyo in September.
Coe said on Tuesday: âItâs important to do it because it maintains everything that weâve been talking about, and particularly recently, about not just talking about the integrity of female womenâs sport, but actually guaranteeing it.
âWe feel this is a really important way of providing confidence and maintaining that absolute focus on the integrity of competition.â
World Athletics conducted consultation on the proposal earlier this year, and Coe said: âOverwhelmingly, the view has come back that this is absolutely the way to go, within the caveats raised (on testing not being too intrusive).â
Coe said he was confident the policy would stand up to legal challenge.
âI would never have set off down this path to protect the female category in sport if Iâd been anything other than prepared to take the challenge head on. Weâve been to the Court of Arbitration on our DSD (difference of sexual development) regulations.
âThey have been upheld, and they have again been upheld after appeal. So we will doggedly protect the female category, and weâll do whatever is necessary to do it.â
A World Athletics working group on gender diverse athletes said in February that the required test will be for the SRY gene and, if required, testosterone levels, either via cheek swab with any necessary follow-up, or via dry blood spot analysis.
The SRY gene is almost always on the Y chromosome, which plays a crucial role in determining male sex characteristics. The working group said that the test in this context was âa highly accurate proxy for biological sexâ.
The working group said new evidence had prompted it to bring forward the proposal.
It said there was now evidence that testosterone suppression in DSD and transgender athletes could only ever partly mitigate the overall male advantage in the sport of athletics.
It also said that an exclusive focus on whether an athlete had been through male puberty was wrong, since ânew evidence clarifies that there is already an athletically significant performance gap before the onset of pubertyâ.
The consultation document stated: âThe childhood or pre-pubertal performance gap in the sport of athletics specifically is three to five per cent in running events, and higher in throwing and jumping events.â
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Jamie Gardner
(Australian Associated Press)
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