Department of Medical Social Sciences, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
Department of Medical Social Sciences, Institute for Sexual and Gender Minority Health and Wellbeing, Northwestern University, 625 N. Michigan Ave., 14-059, Chicago, IL, 60611, USA.
Arch Sex Behav. 2020 Feb;49(2):645-659. doi: 10.1007/s10508-019-01533-9. Epub 2019 Aug 14.
Transgender and gender diverse (TGD) people are disproportionately impacted by various health issues and associated risk factors, but little is known about differences in these outcomes between gender identities within the TGD population. This study characterized the health of a diverse sample of TGD youth and young adults. Data were taken from the baseline visit of two longitudinal studies in the Chicago area, RADAR (N = 1079, M age = 20.8 years) and FAB 400 (N = 488, M age = 19.57 years), which are cohorts of young sexual and gender minorities assigned male at birth (AMAB) and assigned female at birth (AFAB), respectively. There was a combined sample of 214 TGD (128 AFAB, 86 AMAB) individuals across cohorts. We examined differences between gender identities in self-reported health and related psychosocial variables, and compared TGD youth and their cisgender sexual minority peers from their cohort of origin on all variables. Among TGD youth, we found high rates of depression and suicidality (ideation, plan, attempt), violence (trauma, victimization, childhood sexual abuse), and substance use (cigarette, alcohol, illicit drug use). With the exception of depression, transgender women and non-binary AMAB youth reported worse health outcomes than transgender men and non-binary AFAB youth. Non-binary AMAB youth reported the highest rates of certain outcomes, including traumatic experiences and suicidal ideation. TGD youth generally reported worse outcomes than cisgender sexual minority youth; these differences were less pronounced among AFAB youth. Findings point to the diversity of experiences within the TGD population and critical needs for intervention approaches to mitigate health disparities.
跨性别和性别多样化(TGD)人群受到各种健康问题和相关风险因素的不成比例影响,但对于 TGD 人群中不同性别认同之间的这些结果差异知之甚少。本研究描述了多样化的 TGD 青年和年轻人的健康状况。数据来自芝加哥地区两项纵向研究的基线访问,RADAR(N=1079,M 年龄=20.8 岁)和 FAB 400(N=488,M 年龄=19.57 岁),这两个队列分别是出生时被分配为男性(AMAB)和出生时被分配为女性(AFAB)的年轻性少数群体的队列。两个队列共有 214 名 TGD(128 名 AFAB,86 名 AMAB)个体。我们检查了不同性别认同之间在自我报告的健康和相关心理社会变量方面的差异,并在所有变量上比较了 TGD 青年及其原籍队列中的顺性别性少数群体同龄人。在 TGD 青年中,我们发现抑郁和自杀意念、计划和尝试、暴力(创伤、受害、儿童期性虐待)和物质使用(吸烟、饮酒、非法药物使用)的发生率很高。除了抑郁之外,跨性别女性和非二元 AMAB 青年报告的健康结果比跨性别男性和非二元 AFAB 青年差。非二元 AMAB 青年报告了某些结果的最高发生率,包括创伤经历和自杀意念。TGD 青年总体上报告的结果比顺性别性少数青年差;AFAB 青年的这些差异不太明显。研究结果表明 TGD 人群中的经验多样性以及需要采取干预措施来减少健康差距。