Howell Jamie, Maguire Rebecca
Department of Psychology, Maynooth University, Maynooth, Co. Kildare, Ireland.
Int J Transgend. 2019 Sep 4;20(4):421-433. doi: 10.1080/15532739.2019.1658145. eCollection 2019.
While there is growing awareness of the need to support the physical and mental wellbeing of transgender people, some may be reluctant to seek help from healthcare professionals. Little is understood about the mechanisms that influence help-seeking behavior in this group. This study aimed to compare transgender and cisgender participants in their likelihood to seek help for both physical and mental health conditions, and to explore whether this help-seeking behavior is predicted by a range of sociodemographic and psychological variables. : 123 participants living in Ireland (cisgender= 67; transgender= 56) completed a questionnaire which included demographic questions, as well as measures of optimism (LOT-R), self-esteem (RSES), psychological distress (GHQ-12), attitudes towards seeking psychological help (ATSPPH-SF), and attitudes towards seeking help for a physical health problem (Attitudes Towards Seeking Medical Help Scale- Action/Intervention subscale). Associations between predictor variables and mental and physical health seeking were explored using correlation analysis and stepwise regressions. Transgender participants were less likely to seek help for a physical health issue than cisgender participants, but did not differ in mental health help-seeking behaviors. Results suggest that this may be due to differences in optimism, self-esteem and psychological distress. Transgender participants had significantly lower optimism and self-esteem, which were two factors linked to poorer physical health seeking behaviors. Optimism also emerged as a significant predictor in mental health seeking behaviors. The lack of a significant difference for mental health help-seeking between the transgender and cisgender participants is encouraging, as it suggests that there is less stigma surrounding mental illness than expected, however findings also contradict previous findings suggesting that physical health is less stigmatized. This could be due to stigma relating to gender-specific healthcare and suggests that healthcare professionals should acknowledge the specific healthcare needs and concerns among transgender individuals.
虽然人们越来越意识到需要支持跨性别者的身心健康,但有些人可能不愿意向医疗保健专业人员寻求帮助。对于影响该群体寻求帮助行为的机制,我们了解甚少。本研究旨在比较跨性别者和顺性别者在为身心健康问题寻求帮助的可能性方面的差异,并探讨这种寻求帮助的行为是否由一系列社会人口统计学和心理变量所预测。123名居住在爱尔兰的参与者(顺性别者 = 67人;跨性别者 = 56人)完成了一份问卷,其中包括人口统计学问题,以及乐观主义量表(生活取向测试修订版)、自尊量表(罗森伯格自尊量表)、心理困扰量表(一般健康问卷 - 12项)、寻求心理帮助的态度量表(寻求心理帮助态度量表 - 简版),以及针对身体健康问题寻求帮助的态度量表(寻求医疗帮助态度量表 - 行动/干预子量表)。使用相关分析和逐步回归探索预测变量与寻求心理和身体健康帮助之间的关联。跨性别参与者比顺性别参与者寻求身体健康问题帮助的可能性更小,但在寻求心理健康帮助的行为方面没有差异。结果表明,这可能是由于乐观主义、自尊和心理困扰方面的差异。跨性别参与者的乐观主义和自尊水平显著较低,这是与较差的寻求身体健康帮助行为相关的两个因素。乐观主义在寻求心理健康帮助的行为中也成为一个显著的预测因素。跨性别和顺性别参与者在寻求心理健康帮助方面没有显著差异,这是令人鼓舞的,因为这表明围绕精神疾病的污名比预期的要少,然而研究结果也与之前表明身体健康污名较少的研究结果相矛盾。这可能是由于与特定性别的医疗保健相关的污名,并表明医疗保健专业人员应该认识到跨性别个体的特定医疗保健需求和担忧。