So the majority of the 'experts' are activists and advocates promoting one side of a very controversial issue. As far as I can tell the panel does not have anyone who is critical of, say, the use of puberty blockers given that there is very little longer term follow-up information on those who have been on them for several years. And there is no representation from those countries which have decided to limit puberty blocker use to research purposes, given that lack of longer term health information.
The time period allowed for commenting made me laugh aloud! From December 18 to January 8. If you wanted to find a time slot when people, especially women, in Europe and North America (the continents most affected by these issues) would be too busy to read online or write letters to the WHO then this would be that time period!
So the attempt is to do this behind the curtains, as the Denton papers suggest.
But I would still love to know who it is in the WHO that chose who would be on this panel, what the ideological beliefs of that person or persons are, and why another organisation supposed to serve us all (like the UN Women) seems to be totally captured by ideologues from one secular religion.
Surely what truly should matter here is the overall health and well-being of individuals with gender dysphoria and those who transition (and in some cases detransition), and to study that requires actual data on both the benefits and costs which we do not have. So this panel seems extremely premature.