Exploring Mediators of Mental Health Service Use Among Transgender Individuals in Ontario, Canada.

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Alex Abramovich, W Ariel Gould, Nelson Pang, Claire de Oliveira, Tomisin Iwajomo, Myriam Vigny-Pau, Kinnon MacKinnon, June Sing Hong Lam, Paul Kurdyak
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Abstract

Objectives: To determine if and to what degree neighbourhood-level marginalization mediates mental health service use among transgender individuals.

Methods: This retrospective cohort study identified 2,085 transgender individuals through data obtained from 4 outpatient community and hospital clinics in 3 large cities in Ontario, which were linked with administrative health data between January 2015 and December 2019. An age-matched 1:5 comparison cohort was created from the general population of Ontario. Outcome measures were analysed from March 2020 to May 2022. The primary outcome was mental health service utilization, which included mental health-related visits to primary care providers, psychiatrists, mental health- and self-harm-related emergency department visits, and mental health hospitalizations. Mediation variables included ethnic concentration, residential instability, dependency, and material deprivation at the neighbourhood level and were derived from the Ontario Marginalization Index.

Results: This study identified 2,085 transgender individuals from participating outpatient community and hospital clinics, who were matched to the general population (n = 10,425). Overall, neighbourhood-level marginalization did not clinically mediate mental health service use. However, transgender individuals were more likely to be exposed to all forms of neighbourhood-level marginalization, as well as having higher rates of health service use across all outcome measures.

Conclusions: In this study, mental health service use among transgender individuals was not clinically mediated by marginalization at the neighbourhood level. This study highlights the need to explore marginalization and mental health service use at the individual level to better understand the mental health disparities experienced by transgender individuals and to ensure that health-care services are inclusive and affirming.

探讨加拿大安大略省跨性别者心理健康服务使用的中介因素。
目的:确定社区边缘化是否以及在多大程度上影响跨性别者的心理健康服务使用。方法:本回顾性队列研究通过从安大略省3个大城市的4个门诊社区和医院诊所获得的数据确定了2085名跨性别者,这些数据与2015年1月至2019年12月的行政卫生数据相关。从安大略省的普通人群中创建了一个年龄匹配的1:5比较队列。结果指标从2020年3月到2022年5月进行了分析。主要结果是心理健康服务的利用,包括对初级保健提供者、精神科医生的心理健康相关就诊,与心理健康和自我伤害相关的急诊就诊,以及心理健康住院。中介变量包括族裔集中、居住不稳定、依赖性和社区层面的物质剥夺,这些变量来自安大略省边缘化指数。结果:本研究从参与的门诊社区和医院诊所确定了2,085名变性人,他们与一般人群相匹配(n = 10,425)。总体而言,社区层面的边缘化并没有在临床上调节心理健康服务的使用。然而,跨性别者更有可能遭受各种形式的社区边缘化,并且在所有结果衡量指标中都有更高的卫生服务使用率。结论:在本研究中,跨性别者的心理健康服务使用不受社区边缘化的影响。本研究强调有必要在个人层面探讨边缘化和心理健康服务的使用情况,以更好地了解跨性别者所经历的心理健康差异,并确保保健服务具有包容性和肯定性。
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
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
2.50%
发文量
69
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Established in 1956, The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry (The CJP) has been keeping psychiatrists up-to-date on the latest research for nearly 60 years. The CJP provides a forum for psychiatry and mental health professionals to share their findings with researchers and clinicians. The CJP includes peer-reviewed scientific articles analyzing ongoing developments in Canadian and international psychiatry.
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