Florida high school board to hold emergency meeting after menstruation question controversy
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Florida’s menstruation question controversy
A proposed draft of a physical education form in Florida would have required all high school student athletes to disclose information regarding their menstrual history — a move drew pushback from opponents who say the measure would harm students and violate medical privacy laws.
The Florida High School Athletic Association’s 16-member board of directors had scheduled a vote on this issue in late February. The board, however, held an emergency meeting Thursday, Feb. 9 to discuss the FHSAA proposal.
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UPDATE: The Florida High School Athletic Association walked back a controversial proposal to require female high school athletes to disclose information regarding their menstrual history.
The Florida High School Athletic Association will reconsider a controversial proposal that could have required female students to reveal their menstruation history.
Its board of directors will hold an emergency meeting Thursday morning to discuss participation paperwork that recently drew widespread attention. The association’s executive director is recommending that students only submit one page to schools — a page where a medical professional verifies that an athlete is healthy enough to compete, or only able to participate partially. Specific details about a player’s health are not included on that form.
READ MORE: Sports board removes menstrual questions for Florida athletes after scathing criticism
“The intent of this proposal is to provide an updated (examination) form which protects a student-athlete’s privacy while including pertinent medical information a health care provider at a member school would need access to,” the agenda item reads.
READ MORE: Florida athletes may soon be required to submit their menstrual history to schools
The athletic association had been considering the idea of adopting a national form on the issue, which made previously optional questions about menstruation mandatory for female students to answer. Those forms would have been kept at school. That form “has created concerns and questions from parents, school district administrators, school board members, and coaches regarding the health privacy of student-athletes,” the agenda item said.
The move was widely panned on social media with many fearing girls and women would be deterred from participating in sports.
The latest recommendation tries to alleviate that concern by giving schools enough information about an athlete’s health while still protecting their privacy.
READ MORE: Doctors raise concerns over Florida possibly requiring student athletes’ menstrual info
Members of the public can submit questions or comments about the proposal to questions@fhsaa.org for board members to consider. The virtual meeting is scheduled for 10:30 a.m. and will be streamed on the FHSAA’s YouTube channel.
This story was originally published February 7, 2023 at 6:26 PM with the headline "Florida high school board to hold emergency meeting after menstruation question controversy."