World Health Organization Issues New Gender Guidance: ‘Sex Is Not Limited To Male Or Female’

The United Nations World Health Organization is slated to update its guidance on gender to declare that “sex is not limited to male or female” and goes “beyond non-binary.”

The WHO’s current “gender mainstreaming manual,” which was created in 2011, contends that there are many genders on a spectrum from male to female.

Now the organization will modify the guidance to focus on “highlighting and expanding on the concept of intersectionality.”

Intersectionality “looks at how gender power dynamics interact with other hierarchies of privilege or disadvantage, resulting in inequality and differential health outcomes for different people,” the WHO website states.

The updated manual will be “going beyond non-binary approaches” to recognize that gender identity exists on a continuum and that “sex is not limited to male or female,” a WHO website reads. Some health professionals are reportedly worried by the move.

The updated sex guidance will go “beyond non-binary approaches to gender and health to recognize gender and sexual diversity or the concepts that gender identity exists on a continuum and that sex is not limited to male or female,” the international health body continues.

The review and update of the 146-page gender mainstreaming manual is conducted in partnership with the United Nations University International Institute for Global Health.

The United States withdrew its members from the World Health Organization during the Trump administration, but immediately after taking office, Joe Biden rejoined.

As the WHO and Biden administration attempt to institute a gender fluid agenda, numerous studies confirm gender dysphoria increases the likelihood of being suicidal.

A study published in June by the Canadian Medical Association shows transgender youth are five times more likely to think about suicide and 7.6 times more likely to attempt taking their own lives.

Research conducted by the Heritage Foundation shows minors who undergo cross-sex medical interventions are more likely to commit suicide.

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Alicia is an investigative journalist and multimedia reporter. Alicia's work is featured on numerous outlets including the Gateway Pundit, Project Veritas, Red Voice Media, World Net Daily, Townhall and Media Research Center, where she uncovers fraud and abuse in government, media, Big Tech, Big Pharma and public corruption. Alicia has a Bachelor of Science in Political Science from John Jay College of Criminal Justice. She served in the Correspondence Department of the George W. Bush administration and as a War Room analyst for the Rudy Giuliani Presidential Committee.

You can email Alicia Powe here, and read more of Alicia Powe's articles here.

 

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