Correll-King Wesley M, Dusic Emerson J, Suen Daphne, Gamarel Kristi E, Shook Alic G, Restar Arjee J
Population Studies Center, University of Michigan Institute for Social Research, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; Department of Health Systems and Population Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Am J Prev Med. 2025 Apr;68(4):726-734. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2024.12.018. Epub 2024 Dec 26.
Healthcare avoidance and delay is prevalent among transgender (trans) populations. This study sought to identify patterns of healthcare avoidance and delay and examine their associations with 5 behavioral health outcomes among trans adults: depression, anxiety, tobacco and alcohol use, and intimate partner violence.
This study used survey data collected in 2023 from 789 trans adults in Washington state. Healthcare avoidance and delay was operationalized using latent class analysis with 4 indicators. Adjusted multinomial models predicted class membership by 10 demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, and adjusted logistic regression models predicted each outcome by class.
The sample was predominantly White (60.3%), trans women (82.7%), and financially stable (59.6%). Participants were assigned to one of 3 classes: Low Healthcare Avoidance and Delay (58.9%), Stigma Healthcare Avoidance and Delay class (33.6%), and Combined Healthcare Avoidance and Delay class (i.e., both cost and stigma, 7.5%). Combined members were younger, more likely to be trans men or nonbinary, and occupied lower socioeconomic positions than other classes. Stigma members were more likely to live in rural or suburban areas than the Low class. Stigma and Combined members were associated with increased odds of depressive symptoms, anxious symptoms, and intimate partner violence.
Although the demographic profiles of the Combined Healthcare Avoidance and Delay and Stigma Healthcare Avoidance and Delay classes were distinct, the behavioral health of these groups was comparable. Preventing healthcare avoidance and delay among trans adults and mitigating its potential health consequences requires greater attention to health services affordability and acceptability.
在跨性别群体中,医疗回避和延误现象普遍存在。本研究旨在识别医疗回避和延误的模式,并探讨其与跨性别成年人的5种行为健康结果之间的关联:抑郁、焦虑、烟草和酒精使用以及亲密伴侣暴力。
本研究使用了2023年从华盛顿州789名跨性别成年人收集的调查数据。通过潜在类别分析,利用4个指标对医疗回避和延误进行操作化定义。调整后的多项模型根据10个人口统计学和社会经济特征预测类别归属,调整后的逻辑回归模型根据类别预测每种结果。
样本主要为白人(60.3%)、跨性别女性(82.7%)且经济稳定(59.6%)。参与者被分为3类之一:低医疗回避和延误类(58.9%)、因污名化导致的医疗回避和延误类(33.6%)以及综合医疗回避和延误类(即成本和污名化两者皆有,7.5%)。综合类成员比其他类别更年轻,更有可能是跨性别男性或非二元性别者,且社会经济地位较低。污名化类成员比低医疗回避和延误类更有可能居住在农村或郊区。污名化类和综合类成员出现抑郁症状、焦虑症状和亲密伴侣暴力的几率更高。
尽管综合医疗回避和延误类与因污名化导致的医疗回避和延误类的人口统计学特征不同,但这些群体的行为健康状况相当。预防跨性别成年人的医疗回避和延误,并减轻其潜在的健康后果,需要更加关注医疗服务的可负担性和可接受性。