Shorey Ryan C, Briley D A, Hereth Jane, Munson Michael, Fishbach Jaclyn S, Cohen Joseph R
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, USA.
Drug Alcohol Rev. 2025 Jul;44(5):1374-1383. doi: 10.1111/dar.14077. Epub 2025 May 13.
This study examined an intersectional perspective on alcohol use disparities within transgender and nonbinary (TGNB) adults.
We examined the data from the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey (N = 27,715), a cross-sectional, nationwide survey of TGNB adults. The number of drinking days and the number of binge-drinking days were primary outcomes. Analyses followed a multilevel analysis of individual heterogeneity and discriminatory accuracy approach to examine alcohol disparities across gender identities (transgender, nonbinary and crossdresser) and intersections with race/ethnicity, age, sex assigned at birth and dis/ability status.
Significant identity-related differences existed within TGNB communities across all facets of identity. Relative to the sample average, individuals at the intersection of White and crossdressers reported elevated levels of alcohol use. Further, effects were most pronounced across combinations of transgender, nonbinary, White and Black participants to accurately describe alcohol risk in subpopulations relative to examining risk associated with each one of these identities independently.
Disparities in alcohol use among TGNB adults are best understood from an intersectional perspective. Affirming public health initiatives for alcohol use should consider identity-related differences across TGNB communities.
Results provide the first evidence that alcohol use disparities exist across gender and intersecting identities in a large sample of TGNB adults. Findings lay the groundwork for future research examining mechanisms responsible for these disparities.
本研究从交叉性视角审视了跨性别和非二元性别(TGNB)成年人中的酒精使用差异。
我们分析了2015年美国跨性别调查的数据(N = 27,715),这是一项针对TGNB成年人的全国性横断面调查。饮酒天数和暴饮天数是主要结果。分析采用了个体异质性的多层次分析和判别准确性方法,以检验不同性别认同(跨性别、非二元性别和异装癖者)以及与种族/民族、年龄、出生时指定的性别和残疾状况交叉情况下的酒精差异。
在TGNB群体的所有身份层面上都存在与身份相关的显著差异。相对于样本平均值,白人且有异装癖身份的个体报告的酒精使用水平较高。此外,相对于单独考察与这些身份之一相关的风险,跨性别、非二元性别、白人和黑人参与者的组合在准确描述亚群体中的酒精风险方面效果最为显著。
从交叉性视角能最好地理解TGNB成年人中的酒精使用差异。针对酒精使用的公共卫生倡议应考虑TGNB群体中与身份相关的差异。
研究结果首次证明,在大量TGNB成年人样本中,存在跨性别和交叉身份的酒精使用差异。研究结果为未来研究这些差异的成因机制奠定了基础。