really? too little gatekeeping? how could anyone possibly come to that conclusion from a single case, especially one like this? like, here's the thing. this person has the right to do whatever they want, to make whatever choices they feel are right, up to and including whatever surgeries they want to feel comfortable in their own skin.
but to go from there and decide that the proper course of action is to make it harder for trans people to access surgery seems to me to be the height of cruelty. it's not my responsibility if someone decides that detransition is their best course of action, but it also shouldn't reflect on policies that should allow for easier access for trans people, who are still subject to a uniquely brutal, dehumanizing gantlet to prove to physicians to their satisfaction that we are suffering enough to legitimize their authorization for drugs, and then, if we're STILL suffering, then MAYBE surgery. what the fresh hell? how is that a "standard of care"?
honestly, when it comes to the possibility that cis people might accidentally take a hormone pill, i just don't care. when trans people have a system that doesn't use our suffering as a currency to access even the most basic of rights in healthcare systems, then maybe it'll matter more. but until then, i think the overwhelming priority for reducing the greatest amount of suffering is abolishing gatekeeping, and in no way instituting it more.