Prevalence of Discrimination and the Association Between Employment Discrimination and Health Care Access and Use - National HIV Behavioral Surveillance Among Transgender Women, Seven Urban Areas, United States, 2019-2020.

Q1 Medicine
Amy R Baugher, Evelyn Olansky, Larshie Sutter, Susan Cha, Rashunda Lewis, Elana Morris, Christine Agnew-Brune, Lindsay Trujillo, Ebony Respress, Kathryn Lee
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Abstract

Transgender women experience discrimination in many settings, including in employment. Because employment and health insurance are intertwined in the United States, employment discrimination might be related to lower health insurance coverage and health care use, including gender-affirming care. This analysis used data from transgender women (N = 1,608) in seven urban areas in the United States collected during 2019-2020 to present the prevalence of six discrimination types (employment, housing, bathroom, businesses, health care, and abuse) and to measure the association between employment discrimination (defined as trouble getting a job or fired due to being transgender) and sociodemographic characteristics, health care access, and health care use. Log-linked Poisson regression models were conducted to estimate adjusted prevalence ratios and 95% CIs. Seven in 10 transgender women experienced at least one type of discrimination during the past 12 months. During the same period, 9.9% of transgender women were fired and 32.4% had trouble getting a job because of being transgender. Employment discrimination was associated with younger age and lower socioeconomic status. Having trouble getting a job was associated with health care access and health care use factors, including having no health insurance or having Medicaid only, having an unmet medical need because of cost, never having transgender-specific care, and having an unmet need for gender-affirming procedures. These findings suggest that employment discrimination contributes to transgender women's economic marginalization and their ability to obtain adequate health insurance coverage and achieve their transition goals. These findings might help guide efforts that protect transgender women's right to pursue their work, health, and life goals without discrimination.

歧视的普遍性以及就业歧视与医疗保健的获取和使用之间的关联--2019-2020 年美国七个城市地区变性妇女的全国艾滋病毒行为监测。
变性妇女在许多环境中都会受到歧视,包括在就业方面。由于美国的就业和医疗保险相互交织,就业歧视可能与医疗保险覆盖率和医疗保健使用率(包括性别确认护理)较低有关。这项分析使用了2019-2020年间收集的美国七个城市地区变性女性(N = 1,608)的数据,以呈现六种歧视类型(就业、住房、浴室、商业、医疗保健和虐待)的普遍程度,并测量就业歧视(定义为因变性而难以找到工作或被解雇)与社会人口特征、医疗保健获取和医疗保健使用之间的关联。我们采用对数链接泊松回归模型来估算调整后的流行率和 95% CI。在过去 12 个月中,每 10 名变性女性中就有 7 人至少遭受过一种歧视。在同一时期,9.9% 的变性女性被解雇,32.4% 的女性因为变性而找不到工作。就业歧视与年龄较小、社会经济地位较低有关。找不到工作与获得医疗服务和使用医疗服务的因素有关,这些因素包括没有医疗保险或只有医疗补助、因费用问题而无法满足医疗需求、从未接受过专门针对变性人的治疗,以及对性别确认程序的需求未得到满足。这些研究结果表明,就业歧视导致变性女性在经济上被边缘化,也影响了她们获得足够的医疗保险和实现变性目标的能力。这些研究结果可能有助于引导人们努力保护变性女性不受歧视地追求工作、健康和生活目标的权利。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
MMWR supplements
MMWR supplements Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
48.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR ) series is prepared by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Often called “the voice of CDC,” the MMWR series is the agency’s primary vehicle for scientific publication of timely, reliable, authoritative, accurate, objective, and useful public health information and recommendations. MMWR readership predominantly consists of physicians, nurses, public health practitioners, epidemiologists and other scientists, researchers, educators, and laboratorians.
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