AI Article Synopsis

  • There is a diverse range of interest and access to medical and surgical gender affirmation among transgender, non-binary, and gender expansive (TNG) individuals, with limited research on their experiences and the societal impact on their health.
  • Qualitative interviews with 54 TNG persons in the U.S. and Canada highlighted that the most desired forms of care included hormone therapy and surgeries, while access barriers consisted of financial issues, logistical challenges, personal fears, and societal discrimination.
  • Participants indicated that they sought gender-affirming care to enhance their social recognition, reduce dysphoria, and explore their identities, all of which reportedly led to significant improvements in their mental health.

Article Abstract

Among transgender, non-binary, and/or gender expansive (TNG) persons, interest in medical and/or surgical forms of gender affirmation is heterogenous, as is access to those forms of medically necessary health care. Yet, the literature characterizing TNG persons' interest in medical and/or surgical gender-affirming care, barriers to accessing that care, and how societal narratives and expectations impact TNG individuals' self-image and mental health, as well as their personal choices regarding gender-affirming care remains sparse. Here we present qualitative research exploring TNG participants' interest in gender-affirming care and how such interventions impact identity formation. We conducted loosely structured interviews with a convenience sample of 54 TNG persons in the U.S. and Canada from Facebook pages used to recruit TNG research participants. One-hour interviews were conducted by an openly TNG researcher; participants were compensated. The most frequently sought gender-affirming care was hormone therapy, followed by chest ("top") surgery, genital ("bottom") surgery, electrolysis, breast augmentation, hysterectomy, and voice training. Less commonly desired interventions included fertility preservation, facial feminization/masculinization, and vocal surgery. Participants described four main categories of access barriers: financial (e.g., cost of medical/surgical care, inadequate insurance), logistical (e.g., no local providers, gatekeeping policies around body size and mental health, pandemic-related delays), personal fears about sub-optimal outcomes (e.g., complications, loss of sensation, undesired aesthetic and/or functional results), and societal discrimination (e.g., familial rejection, job loss, safety concerns). Participants reported primarily seeking this healthcare for social legibility, alleviating dysphoria/pursuing euphoria, and/or gender exploration. All who sought gender-affirming care reported improved mental health-including depression, anxiety, dissociation, and eating disorders-and social relationships, though many struggled to find TNG-competent mental health providers. This work provides key insights into how gender-affirming care can contribute to improving mental health for TNG communities, which will assist health providers in optimally treating TNG patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10707481PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19359705.2023.2237841DOI Listing

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