Division of Adolescent/Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Division of Adolescent/Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Psychology, Suffolk University, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Adolesc Health. 2019 Sep;65(3):344-349. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2019.03.009. Epub 2019 Jun 18.
Transgender adults may avoid medical settings due to concerns about discrimination or past experiences of maltreatment. Emerging evidence shows improved outcomes and psychosocial functioning when transgender adolescents receive gender-affirming care, but little is known about transgender adolescents' experiences in primary care. The objective of this study was to learn about the experiences in primary care of transgender and gender nonconforming (TGN) adolescents and their recommendations for primary care practices and clinicians.
Participants were recruited from primary care clinics, gender care clinics, and list serves. Semistructured qualitative interviews were conducted with 20 TGN adolescents aged 13-21 years (75% white/non-Hispanic, average age 16.7 years). Participants answered questions about primary care experiences, how to improve care, suggestions regarding how to ask about gender identity, and recommendations for making offices more welcoming for TGN adolescents. Interviews were transcribed verbatim, coded, and analyzed for themes.
Overall, participants reported positive experiences in primary care. Most participants commented on distress resulting from being called the incorrect name or the incorrect pronoun. Several concrete recommendations emerged from the interviews, including asking all patients about their gender identity and pronouns at every primary care visit and not asking about gender identity when caregivers are in the room. Participants emphasized the importance of using their affirmed name and pronouns and wanted providers to be knowledgeable about transgender health.
Delivery of primary care services for transgender adolescents may be optimized if offices provide a welcoming environment, use correct names and pronouns, and discuss gender confidentially with patients.
由于担心歧视或过去遭受虐待的经历,跨性别成年人可能会避免去医疗场所。越来越多的证据表明,当跨性别青少年接受性别肯定护理时,他们的预后和社会心理功能会得到改善,但对于跨性别青少年在初级保健中的经历却知之甚少。本研究的目的是了解跨性别和性别不一致(TGN)青少年在初级保健中的经历,以及他们对初级保健实践和临床医生的建议。
参与者是从初级保健诊所、性别护理诊所和名单服务中招募的。对 20 名年龄在 13-21 岁的 TGN 青少年(75%为白人/非西班牙裔,平均年龄为 16.7 岁)进行了半结构化定性访谈。参与者回答了关于初级保健经历、如何改善护理、关于如何询问性别认同的建议以及使办公室更适合 TGN 青少年的建议的问题。采访内容逐字转录、编码并进行主题分析。
总体而言,参与者报告了在初级保健中的积极体验。大多数参与者提到因被称呼错误的名字或代词而感到痛苦。访谈中提出了一些具体建议,包括在每次初级保健就诊时询问所有患者的性别认同和代词,以及在照顾者在场时不要询问性别认同。参与者强调使用他们认可的名字和代词的重要性,并希望提供者了解跨性别健康知识。
如果办公室提供一个欢迎的环境、使用正确的名字和代词,并与患者私下讨论性别问题,那么为跨性别青少年提供初级保健服务可能会得到优化。