AI Article Synopsis

  • Transgender and gender diverse (TGD) individuals face significant cardiovascular health disparities compared to cisgender peers, which are not solely explained by individual health risk behaviors.
  • Research indicates that psychosocial stressors, such as discrimination and lack of access to healthcare, contribute significantly to these disparities throughout a person’s life.
  • The American Heart Association's statement reviews existing literature, highlights research gaps, and emphasizes the need for a multifaceted approach in improving cardiovascular care and health promotion for TGD individuals.

Article Abstract

There is growing evidence that people who are transgender and gender diverse (TGD) are impacted by disparities across a variety of cardiovascular risk factors compared with their peers who are cisgender. Prior literature has characterized disparities in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality as a result of a higher prevalence of health risk behaviors. Mounting research has revealed that cardiovascular risk factors at the individual level likely do not fully account for increased risk in cardiovascular health disparities among people who are TGD. Excess cardiovascular morbidity and mortality is hypothesized to be driven in part by psychosocial stressors across the lifespan at multiple levels, including structural violence (eg, discrimination, affordable housing, access to health care). This American Heart Association scientific statement reviews the existing literature on the cardiovascular health of people who are TGD. When applicable, the effects of gender-affirming hormone use on individual cardiovascular risk factors are also reviewed. Informed by a conceptual model building on minority stress theory, this statement identifies research gaps and provides suggestions for improving cardiovascular research and clinical care for people who are TGD, including the role of resilience-promoting factors. Advancing the cardiovascular health of people who are TGD requires a multifaceted approach that integrates best practices into research, health promotion, and cardiovascular care for this understudied population.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8638087PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIR.0000000000001003DOI Listing

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