'Taking it one day at a time' and 'Reaching back out to help someone': How transgender women living with HIV and community stakeholders navigate violence, oppression, and health through coping and advocacy.

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Sannisha K Dale, Peyton R Willie, Ethel Kirabo Nalule, Camille Lewis, Summer Heard, Nadine Gardner, Chelsie Warman, Kirk Palmer, Belita Wyatt, Phara Benoit
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Transgender women living with HIV face intersectional oppression resulting in consequences for their mental and physical health. Interventions are needed that center the voices of transgender women living with HIV (TWLWH) and community stakeholders engrossed in work on behalf of the transgender community through advocacy and/or work roles.

Methods: Through a partnership with a trans led and focused program of a community-based health organization and an academic partner, from October 2020 through October 2021, TWLWH and community stakeholders participated in qualitative interviews on trauma, violence, mental health struggles, HIV stigma, gender discrimination, health behaviors (e.g., medication adherence), and their thoughts and recommendations for a proposed intervention. Using a virtual platform (i.e., Zoom or phone) TWLWH and stakeholders were administered a demographics survey via Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) and completed individual interviews that were audio recorded. These interviews were analyzed using thematic content analysis.

Results: All TWLWH and 50% of stakeholders were Black. Qualitative findings highlighted the magnitude of violence, stigma, and discrimination faced by TWLWH and the mental, physical, and economic consequences. Also highlighted were the adaptive strategies TWLWH are utilizing to cope, ways in which invested stakeholders (many of lived expertise) are showing up for women, and acceptability and valuable insights for a proposed intervention.

Conclusion: TWLWH are navigating a hostile society and multilevel interventions (at the structural, community, interpersonal, and individual levels) centering their voices and those invested in advocating for the community are needed to address the sequelae of oppression they face.

一天一天过 "和 "伸出援手帮助他人":感染艾滋病毒的变性妇女和社区利益相关者如何通过应对和宣传来驾驭暴力、压迫和健康。
背景:感染艾滋病毒的变性女性面临着交叉压迫,这对她们的身心健康造成了影响。我们需要采取干预措施,将感染艾滋病毒的跨性别女性(TWLWH)和通过宣传和/或工作角色代表跨性别社区工作的社区利益相关者的声音集中起来:从 2020 年 10 月到 2021 年 10 月,通过与一个社区卫生组织和一个学术伙伴的变性领导和重点项目合作,TWLWH 和社区利益相关者参与了定性访谈,内容涉及创伤、暴力、心理健康斗争、HIV 耻辱、性别歧视、健康行为(如坚持服药),以及她们对拟议干预措施的想法和建议。通过虚拟平台(即 Zoom 或电话),研究电子数据采集 (REDCap) 对 TWLWH 和利益相关者进行了人口统计学调查,并完成了个人访谈录音。我们使用主题内容分析法对这些访谈进行了分析:所有 TWLWH 和 50%的利益相关者都是黑人。定性研究结果突显了 TWLWH 所面临的暴力、羞辱和歧视的严重程度,以及所造成的精神、身体和经济后果。此外,还强调了 TWLWH 为应对所采取的适应策略、利益相关者(许多具有生活经验)为妇女提供帮助的方式,以及建议干预措施的可接受性和有价值的见解:TWLWH 在充满敌意的社会中游刃有余,需要采取多层次的干预措施(在结构、社区、人际和个人层面),以她们的声音为中心,以那些致力于倡导社区的人为中心,解决她们所面临的压迫后遗症。
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来源期刊
BMC Public Health
BMC Public Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.40%
发文量
2108
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: BMC Public Health is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on the epidemiology of disease and the understanding of all aspects of public health. The journal has a special focus on the social determinants of health, the environmental, behavioral, and occupational correlates of health and disease, and the impact of health policies, practices and interventions on the community.
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