Pu Serena, Goldberg Leanne, Ren Jennifer, Goldberg A C, Courey Mark
Department of Otolaryngology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York, USA.
Department of Communication and Health Sciences, Bouvé College of Health Sciences at Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2025 Jun;172(6):2018-2025. doi: 10.1002/ohn.1207. Epub 2025 Mar 19.
Features that cause gender incongruence (gender identity not aligning with assumptions based on sex assigned at birth) in transgender individuals often motivate them to seek out gender-affirming treatments. Voice has rarely been included as a major contributor to gender dysphoria. The primary objective of this study is to understand the significance of dysphoria related to voice compared to dysphoria secondary to other features.
Prospective population-based survey study.
Social media.
The survey requested a ranking of features that contribute to gender dysphoria, whether the features were bothersome due to external or internal perception, and self-reported ideal order for pursuing gender-affirming treatments. The categories of features that were ranked included upper body, lower body, face, neck, voice, and height.
In total, 79% of respondents experience gender incongruence secondary to their voice. Voice was the second most important feature contributing to gender dysphoria, only after upper body. In transgender men (29.4%) and transgender women (25%), voice was both the second most important feature contributing to gender dysphoria and the second most important intervention to alleviate gender dysphoria. Specifically, vocal incongruence is largely due to perception by others, as opposed to lower body which contributes to incongruence due to perception by self.
Voice is the second most common contributor to gender dysphoria after upper body. Due to self-rated importance of voice to gender incongruence, health care providers must be aware that voice interventions are critical to improve gender dysphoria experienced by transgender individuals.
导致跨性别者性别不一致(性别认同与基于出生时指定性别的假设不符)的特征通常促使他们寻求性别肯定治疗。嗓音很少被视为性别焦虑的主要促成因素。本研究的主要目的是了解与嗓音相关的焦虑相较于其他特征所致焦虑的重要性。
基于人群的前瞻性调查研究。
社交媒体。
该调查要求对导致性别焦虑的特征进行排序,这些特征是因外部还是内部认知而令人困扰,以及自我报告的寻求性别肯定治疗的理想顺序。被排序的特征类别包括上半身、下半身、面部、颈部、嗓音和身高。
总体而言,79%的受访者因嗓音而出现性别不一致。嗓音是导致性别焦虑的第二重要特征,仅次于上半身。在跨性别男性(29.4%)和跨性别女性(25%)中,嗓音既是导致性别焦虑的第二重要特征,也是缓解性别焦虑的第二重要干预因素。具体而言,嗓音不一致很大程度上是由于他人的认知,而下半身导致的不一致则主要是由于自我认知。
嗓音是继上半身之后导致性别焦虑的第二常见因素。鉴于嗓音对性别不一致的自我评定重要性,医疗保健提供者必须意识到嗓音干预对于改善跨性别者所经历的性别焦虑至关重要。