Here's my perspective:
Don't say anything you are not willing to take personal responsibility for.
That said, I'm not responsible for what other people say, only what I say.
Sometimes we have to break the rules.
People are in danger, or perhaps about to do something really stupid and they need to be told.
Self medication is a hot topic because primarily of liability as far as I can tell.
That and that people don't want to see others get hurt.
Now on a personal note, I am personally against the censoring of the world, for the reason that real problems and issues don't often get addressed properly or even at all due to some peoples discomfort with talking about those issues (in whatever subject matter, Transgender, politics, world issues, etc, it's all the same)
People in our community used to inject raw silicone brake fluid into their breasts.
Some people in the big cities (especially kids) still do this.
I'll quote somebody who can say it better than me:
Quotefrom Transparrent, Love, Family, and Living the T with Transgender Teenagers. By Chris Beam:
"(From chapter: 'Body' interviewing Dr. Marvin Belzer) "...Essentially, he explained, if kids are prostituting themselves for hormones, if kids are living on the street rather than in foster care to earn enough money to buy hormones, if kids are risking their lives and HIV status for hormones, then for goodness' sake, give them hormones. The equation, for him, is obvious."
I feel the same way about information.
If people are going to do something anyway, at least give them information that they can accurately use and not just be guessing.
The current medical practice, and system, is incredibly poor with regard to Transgender people, and leaves many to fall through the cracks
In many parts of the world and even in our own perspective "first world" countries, people simply can not afford the medical care costs "required" as a prerequisite to hormones.
In our own cities and towns.
We do not have national health care in the US, and even in the UK where they do, it is shoddy at best with regard to Transgender care.
In my opinion we need to realize this and not just leave members of our community hanging.
Because kids especially will do stupid things if they get too impatient.
Are there liability concerns? Yes.
But there also seems to be a real need that needs to be addressed.
The "Standards of Care", in my opinion, is an idealistic goal, one that falls way short of the needs it's meant to address.
Those are my thoughts.
Sara