Is gender dysphoria associated with increased hospital cost per stay among patients hospitalized for depression? Focus on the racial and regional variance in US hospitals

Sun Jung Kim, M. Medina, Jeong-Hui Park, Na-Eun Cho, Jongwha Chang
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Abstract

Individuals with gender dysphoria do not identify with their sex assigned at birth and face societal and cultural challenges, leading to increased risk for depression, anxiety, and suicide. Gender dysphoria is a DSM-5 diagnosis but is not necessary for transition therapy. Additionally, individuals with gender dysphoria or who identify as gender diverse/nonconforming may experience “minority stress” from increased discrimination, leading to a greater risk for mental health problems. This study aimed to identify possible health disparities in patients hospitalized for depression with gender dysphoria across the United States. Depression was selected because patients with gender dysphoria are at an increased risk for it. Various patient and hospital-related factors are explored for their association with changes in healthcare utilization for patients hospitalized with depression.The National Inpatient Sample was used to identify nationwide patients with depression (n = 378,552, weighted n = 1,892,760) from 2016 to 2019. We then examined the characteristics of the study sample and investigated how individuals’ gender dysphoria was associated with healthcare utilization measured by hospital cost per stay. Multivariate survey regression models were used to identify predictors.Among the 1,892,760 total depression inpatient samples, 14,145 (0.7%) patients had gender dysphoria (per ICD-10 codes). Over the study periods, depression inpatients with gender dysphoria increased, but total depression inpatient rates remained stable. Survey regression results suggested that gender dysphoria, minority ethnicity or race, female sex assigned at birth, older ages, and specific hospital regions were associated with higher hospital cost per stay than their reference groups. Sub-group analysis showed that the trend was similar in most racial and regional groups.Differences in hospital cost per stay for depression inpatients with gender dysphoria exemplify how this community has been disproportionally affected by racial and regional biases, insurance denials, and economic disadvantages. Financial concerns can stop individuals from accessing gender-affirming care and risk more significant mental health problems. Increased complexity and comorbidity are associated with hospital cost per stay and add to the cycle.
在因抑郁症住院的患者中,性别障碍是否与每次住院费用的增加有关?关注美国医院的种族和地区差异
性别焦虑症患者并不认同其出生时的性别,他们面临着社会和文化的挑战,导致抑郁、焦虑和自杀的风险增加。性别焦虑症是 DSM-5 的一项诊断,但并非过渡治疗的必要条件。此外,性别焦虑症患者或被认定为性别多元化/不符合性别的人可能会因歧视加剧而经历 "少数群体压力",从而导致出现心理健康问题的更大风险。本研究旨在确定美国各地因抑郁症住院的性别认知障碍患者在健康方面可能存在的差异。之所以选择抑郁症,是因为性别障碍患者患抑郁症的风险更高。我们探讨了患者和医院的各种相关因素与抑郁症住院患者医疗利用率变化之间的关系。我们使用全国住院患者样本来识别2016年至2019年全国范围内的抑郁症患者(n=378,552,加权n=1,892,760)。然后,我们研究了研究样本的特征,并调查了个人的性别焦虑症与以每次住院费用衡量的医疗利用率之间的关系。我们使用多变量调查回归模型来确定预测因素。在 1,892,760 个抑郁症住院患者样本中,有 14,145 名(0.7%)患者患有性别障碍(根据 ICD-10 编码)。在研究期间,患有性别障碍的抑郁症住院患者人数有所增加,但抑郁症住院患者总人数保持稳定。调查回归结果表明,与参照组相比,性别障碍、少数族裔或种族、出生时性别为女性、年龄较大以及特定医院地区与较高的每次住院费用有关。亚组分析表明,大多数种族和地区群体的趋势相似。患有性别障碍的抑郁症住院病人每次住院费用的差异体现了这一群体如何受到种族和地区偏见、保险拒绝和经济劣势的严重影响。经济上的顾虑会阻碍患者获得性别确认护理,并可能导致更严重的心理健康问题。复杂性和并发症的增加与每次住院费用有关,并加剧了这一恶性循环。
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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