Bigio Jacob, Butler Megan, Sood Swati, Cox Joseph, Jackson Beth, Marshall Zack, Aho Josephine
Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infections Surveillance Division, Public Health Agency of Canada, Montreal, Québec, Canada.
Library Services Division, Health Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2025 May 20;20(5):e0322521. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0322521. eCollection 2025.
In the 2021 census, 100,815 people in Canada aged 15 and older identified as transgender or non-binary. Globally, transgender people are disproportionately burdened by several Sexually Transmitted and Blood-Borne Infections (STBBIs) but limited data are available in Canada. Transgender and non-binary people are recognised as key populations in the STBBI Action Plan 2024-2030. We conducted a scoping review of the evidence relating to STBBI prevalence; risk exposures; and use of STBBI testing, treatment and prevention services among transgender and non-binary people in Canada. We searched six databases for articles published between January 1, 2013 and September 1, 2023 and conducted a grey literature search of information published on provincial and territorial public health department websites and websites of eight relevant community organisations. 26 of 934 screened records were included, of which five were provincial surveillance reports from Ontario and Quebec. It is difficult to quantify the prevalence of any STBBI among transgender and non-binary people in Canada. Most provinces and territories, and the federal government, do not publish disaggregated STBBI prevalence data for these populations. Peer-reviewed literature provides HIV prevalence data for several subgroups of the transgender population in some parts of Canada but, in general, these studies were not designed to produce valid prevalence estimates. Transgender people may be less sexually active than other population groups, though this may vary between subgroups of the transgender population. Transgender people face many barriers to accessing healthcare, testing and treatment for STBBIs, while almost no research has been conducted on STBBIs in non-binary people. It is not possible to make specific recommendations for public policy based on the evidence as it currently exists. More public health surveillance and research, conducted in collaboration with transgender and non-binary communities across Canada, would help to better understand the burden of STBBIs in these populations nationally.
在2021年人口普查中,加拿大15岁及以上的100,815人认定自己为跨性别者或非二元性别者。在全球范围内,跨性别者承受着多种性传播和血源感染(STBBIs)的不成比例的负担,但加拿大的相关数据有限。跨性别者和非二元性别者被视为《2024 - 2030年性传播和血源感染行动计划》中的重点人群。我们对加拿大跨性别者和非二元性别者中与性传播和血源感染患病率、风险暴露以及性传播和血源感染检测、治疗及预防服务使用情况相关的证据进行了范围审查。我们在六个数据库中搜索了2013年1月1日至2023年9月1日期间发表的文章,并对省级和地区公共卫生部门网站以及八个相关社区组织网站上发布的信息进行了灰色文献搜索。934条筛选记录中有26条被纳入,其中五条是来自安大略省和魁北克省的省级监测报告。难以量化加拿大跨性别者和非二元性别者中性传播和血源感染的患病率。大多数省份、地区以及联邦政府都没有公布这些人群的性传播和血源感染患病率的分类数据。同行评审文献提供了加拿大部分地区跨性别群体几个亚组的艾滋病毒患病率数据,但总体而言,这些研究并非旨在得出有效的患病率估计值。跨性别者的性活动可能比其他人群少,不过这在跨性别群体的亚组之间可能有所不同。跨性别者在获得性传播和血源感染的医疗保健、检测和治疗方面面临许多障碍,而针对非二元性别者的性传播和血源感染研究几乎没有。根据现有证据无法为公共政策提出具体建议。与加拿大各地的跨性别者和非二元性别社区合作进行更多的公共卫生监测和研究,将有助于更好地了解这些人群在全国范围内性传播和血源感染的负担。