Skip to main content

Citation

Soled, Kodiak R. S.; Dimant, Oscar E.; Tanguay, Jona; Mukerjee, Ronica; & Poteat, Tonia (2022). Interdisciplinary Clinicians’ Attitudes, Challenges, and Success Strategies in Providing Care to Transgender People: A Qualitative Descriptive Study. BMC Health Services Research, 22(1), 1134. PMCID: PMC9454229

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Access to clinicians competent in transgender health remains a significant barrier and contributor toward health inequity for transgender people. Studies on access and barriers to care have predominantly evaluated transgender patients’ perceptions, but scant research has included the perspectives of clinicians.
AIMS: We conducted a qualitative study to explore how clinicians (meaning physicians and advanced practice providers, in this paper) in the United States: (1) attain and utilize information, (2) perceive barriers and facilitators, and (3) understood gaps in their professional training, in regard to practicing transgender health care.
METHODS: A Qualitative Descriptive approach guided our conventional content analysis of field notes and interviews with clinicians within a parent study that explored health care access among transgender adults. Transcripts were coded into meaning units that were iteratively abstracted into themes. Standard measures were performed to promote the trustworthiness of the analysis and reduce bias.
RESULTS: Participants (n = 13) consisted of physicians (n = 8), physician assistants (n = 3), and nurse practitioners (n = 2). The majority were women (n = 11), identified as White (n = 9), cisgender (n = 13), and ages ranged from 31 – 58 years. Five main themes were identified: (1) Knowledge Acquisition: Formal and Informal Pathways to Competency; (2) Perceived Challenges and Barriers: I didn’t know what I was doing; (3) Power to Deny: Prescriptive Authority and Gatekeeping; (4) Stigma: This is really strange, and I can’t really understand it; (5) Reflections: Strategies for Success, Rewards, and Personal Motivations.
DISCUSSION: Clinicians gained a sense of comfort and competence with mentorship, self-directed learning, clinical experience, and person-centered, harm-reduction approaches. Stigma, bias, and structural-level factors were barriers to providing care. This study offers a unique perspective of clinicians’ motivations and strategies for providing gender-affirming care and elucidates how stigma impacts the delivery of gender-affirming care.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-022-08517-x

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

BMC Health Services Research

Author(s)

Soled, Kodiak R. S.
Dimant, Oscar E.
Tanguay, Jona
Mukerjee, Ronica
Poteat, Tonia

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC9454229

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

Nonspecific

Sex/Gender

Transgender Men
Transgender Women

ORCiD

Poteat - 0000-0001-6541-3787