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Citation

Hughes, Landon D.; Gamarel, Kristi E.; King, Wesley M.; Goldenberg, Tamar; Jaccard, James; & Geronimus, Arline T. (2022). State-Level Policy Stigma and Non-Prescribed Hormones Use among Trans Populations in the United States: A Mediational Analysis of Insurance and Anticipated Stigma. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 56(6), 592-604. PMCID: PMC9242548

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Medical gender affirmation (i.e., hormone use) is one-way transgender (trans) people affirm their gender and has been associated with health benefits. However, trans people face stigmatization when accessing gender-affirming healthcare, which leads some to use non-prescribed hormones (NPHs) that increase their risk for poor health.
PURPOSE: We examined whether healthcare policy stigma, as measured by state-level trans-specific policies, was associated with NPHs use and tested mediational paths that might explain these associations. Because stigmatizing healthcare policies prevent trans people from participation in healthcare systems and allow for discrimination by healthcare providers, we hypothesized that healthcare policy stigma would be associated with NPHs use by operating through three main pathways: skipping care due to anticipated stigma in healthcare settings, skipping care due to cost, and being uninsured.
METHODS: We conducted analyses using data from the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey. The analytic sample included trans adults using hormones (N = 11,994). We fit a multinomial structural equation model to examine associations.
RESULTS: Among trans adults using hormones, we found that healthcare policy stigma was positively associated with NPHs use and operated through insurance coverage and anticipating stigma in healthcare settings. The effect sizes on key predictor variables varied significantly between those who use supplemental NPHs and those who only use NPHs suggesting the need to treat NPHs use as distinct from those who use supplemental NPHs.
CONCLUSIONS: Our work highlights the importance of healthcare policy stigma in understanding health inequities among trans people in the USA, specifically NPHs use.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaab063

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

Annals of Behavioral Medicine

Author(s)

Hughes, Landon D.
Gamarel, Kristi E.
King, Wesley M.
Goldenberg, Tamar
Jaccard, James
Geronimus, Arline T.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC9242548

Data Set/Study

U.S. Transgender Survey (USTS)

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

Nonspecific

Sex/Gender

Transgender Men
Transgender Women

ORCiD

Goldenberg - 0000-0003-3998-2913