People arrive here with different capacities. Some can volunteer. Some can share accurate information with one expecting family. Some can help with media or legislative work. A strong advocacy page respects those differences and makes the next step obvious.
Community Education
Educational advocacy is often the highest-leverage entry point. The site should encourage supporters to share evidence-based pages, correct misinformation calmly, and direct parents to intact-care guidance before a hospital decision is made.
Storytelling and Testimony
The sitemap calls for testimony from affected men, parents, and advocates. Storytelling should be voluntary, respectful, and framed as a human-rights and informed-consent issue rather than spectacle.
Personal Stories
Help others understand that this issue has lifelong ethical and emotional dimensions.
Parent Narratives
Show how families changed course after receiving better information.
Professional Voices
Add credibility through clinicians who support informed, non-coercive care.
Policy, Media, and Public Pressure
Not every supporter will work on legislation, but some will. This section should outline how to prepare concise letters, talk to journalists, support public testimony, and keep messaging aligned with the site’s tone: serious, compassionate, and evidence-driven.
Lead with autonomy, informed consent, and child protection. Avoid casual framing. This site’s brand is deliberately ethical and public-facing.
Volunteer and Donor Support
The site can also use this page as a future home for newsletters, volunteer intake, event calendars, and donation calls. For now, the page should communicate where that infrastructure will live and how supporters can stay connected as the project grows.
Best Starting Points
New supporters usually need one of three onboarding routes: learn the issue, share parent-focused material, or pull source material for a conversation with a clinician, journalist, or policymaker.