Harriet Hall



Harriet A. Hall (also known as The SkepDoc) was a retired American family physician, blogger, and skeptic. She wrote for Science-Based Medicine, Skeptical Inquirer, Quackwatch, and Skeptic magazine (US). Hall also published two books titled Women Aren't Supposed to Fly: The Memoirs of a Female Flight Surgeon and There's No Such Thing as the Tooth Fairy!, the latter of which was a children's book promoting skepticism.

Unfortunately, she has been criticized by fellow bloggers as well as pro-trans activists for spreading misinformation about the recommended medical care for transgender people, elevating transphobic voices while minimizing or ignoring relevant experts, and using an anecdote as data. One of her articles, for instance, gives cover for the garbage transphobic pseudoscience of autogynephilia, which is alarmingly tied to the TERF movement, under the pretense of not shooting the messenger.

Hall died at age 77 in January 2023 following long-endured health issues, particularly heart problems. Online anti-vaccination activists reacted typically: purporting that her death must be evidence that COVID-19 vaccines are dangerous.

Irreversible Damage: Hall's reputation
On June 15th 2021, Hall published an uncritical book review of Abigail Shrier's Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters to Science-Based Medicine, which has been criticized for spreading misinformation about the recommended medical care for transgender people. On June 17th, that review, along with racking up criticism for glaring inaccuracies (such as the notion that in California, people can just get top surgery at their own whims and rarely get turned away), was redacted by Steven Novella and David Gorski because "there were too many issues with the treatment of the relevant science, and leaving the article up would not be appropriate given the standards of SBM." The review was subsequently reposted in full on Skeptic.com, with editor Michael Shermer, who, we remind you, has let hereditarianism proponent pollute his website, citing Science-Based Medicine's "far-left progressive political bias that has compromised their otherwise stellar reputation as a trustworthy source" as a reason to keep it publicly viewable, though that passage has been removed. The redaction has also attracted claims of "censorship", and Dr. Gorski himself has been accused of banking for "Big Trans", which is a new one after all the pharma shill accusations he gets.

But no, Harriet Hall isn't a transphobe. She said so herself, so it must be true. And especially not after she's said these things:

Scaremongering about "destroying families" (even though chilling children to not express how they feel has actual damage) and the dropping amount of lesbians? The first part can be explained by "people meet with like minds through the Internet to get support from each other because the families are often not safe places to discuss such things". Wow, how terrible! Also, maybe people realize more identities exist and they more accurately describe how they are. How horrible.

This whole obsession about lesbian numbers is the same rhetoric espoused by the staunch TERF lesbian "protectionists". Hall's language is also very indicative. A section called "mantra of trans influencers" and the "gurus" (again note the scaremongery wording; their advice is deemed a "mantra" and "influencing" as if they're brainwashing and misleading children) appears to misrepresent what the trans support communities aim to do. It's hard to tell since there's zero citations. A therapist suggesting a gender identity is also seen as a Bad Thing when therapists, being, well, therapists, simply encourage people to explore themselves. Therapists have also suggested that a patient might have ADHD, autism, be asexual, and more, so why is this bad to suggest being trans? Finally, there's this assumption that being a lesbian and being trans are two mutually exclusive concepts, and that trans people are "erasing" lesbians by existing. It's the same vein as suggesting that LGBT+ labels are erasing hetero people as people that originally thought were hetero but "wrong" now adopt a new label for themselves.

This is in a section titled " The Schools are Not Helping", thus implying there's a problem. The "opting out" part additionally implies that students are "forced" into such instruction. The real issue is that why students can opt out of sex ed in the first place (well, we know, it's an unfounded compromise between providing vital health education and pandering to social conservatives imposing their beliefs on others). In addition, this section straight-up lies about the contents of California's curriculum, claiming it promotes gender stereotypes when the curriculum explicitly states it does the opposite.

This one is stupid and feels irrelevant except maybe to talk down on trans people? This "many" number isn't even quantified. How many is "many"? Additionally, Hall is again confusing sexual preference with gender identity. "Many" cis girls, even have never had a single sexual or romantic experience either. The existence of a-spec girls (aromantic asexual identity for instance), which this passage also makes it appear there's something wrong with them, easily counter this, but "many" allosexual girls do have anecdotes of never having these experiences until even college.

Throughout the article, Hall uses some very questionable language: being trans as not a simple adjective for someone but implies some sort of choice or ideology. Being trans is "gender ideology", a "self-diagnosis", that therapists must accept. Adolescent trans girls are called "adolescent girls who adopt a transgender identity." Trans "influencers" "facilitate the discovery of a trans identity". "Clusters of adolescents are discovering transgender identities together and are clamoring for hormones and surgery."

Totally not transphobic though. Or, again, she's just quoting the crappy book (hopefully, but we have major doubts given her prior record of promoting medical misinformation about transgender people's healthcare ). It's hard to tell.

On June 30th, Steven Novella and David Gorski published part one in a series of posts to rebut Hall and Shrier's claims. It points out Shrier used outdated definitions, equivocates between pre-pubescent and adolescent children, presents misinformation about the standard of care, dramatically inflates the number of transgender people who regret transitioning, points out both good evidence against Shrier's thesis of social contagion as well as that she has no evidence in favour of it, and that contrary to Dr. Hall's claims "denying gender-affirming care is likely the riskiest option" among those available. They ultimately conclude "Abigail Shrier’s narrative and, unfortunately, Dr. Hall’s review grossly misrepresent the science and the standard of care."

Nonetheless, both editors defend Dr. Hall.

It is also worth pointing that Shrier's book whitewashes the reputations of two disgraced researchers, while simultaneously using blurbs from both to help promote the book. Shrier and Hall claim that the scientific record makes no mention of AFAB girls developing gender dysphoria before 2012, which a simple web search reveals is false. Both invoke one study that they claim states shows gender-affirmative care leads to an increase in suicide rate, when in reality it demonstrates no such link.

One wonders what it takes to become an editor in poor standing at Science-Based Medicine. Perhaps plagiarism would be enough? Several sentences from Shrier's book wind up in Hall's review, with no indication they were originally written by Shrier. That combined with the matching flow of ideas suggests Hall wrote portions of the review by copy-pasting notable sentences from Shrier's book into another document, then rephrasing those sentences to disguise their original source. .

The long article by Novella and Gorski pledged to bring in some experts on transgender people's health to write their own reviews Shrier's book. Three have been published by two authors, Rose Lovell and AJ Eckert. . Jesse Singal claimed both authors promoted misinformation, and made grave errors like paraphrasing Shrier instead of quoting her directly, failing to acknowledge the sheer number of footnotes in Shrier's book, and refusing to accept that sex is binary. Novella and Gorski allowed both authors to return to defend themselves, where they and the editors (presumably Novella or Gorski) point out his "weaponization of pedantry" and call him out for recycling long-debunked myths about the health of transgender people.