住房和医疗服务的不稳定性:COVID-19 大流行对美国变性人群的不公平影响》(The Inequitable Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on U.S. Transgender Populations)。

IF 2 4区 医学 Q1 Social Sciences
Transgender Health Pub Date : 2023-02-08 eCollection Date: 2023-02-01 DOI:10.1089/trgh.2021.0129
Dylan Felt, Jiayi Xu, Ysabel Beatrice Floresca, Ella Segovia Fernandez, Aaron K Korpak, Gregory Phillips, Xinzi Wang, Caleb W Curry, Lauren B Beach
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:评估 COVID-19 大流行是否不公平地影响了美国变性人群的主要健康社会决定因素 (SDoH),特别是就业、住房和医疗保健:在 2020 年 4 月 13 日至 2020 年 8 月 3 日期间,我们对性少数群体和性别少数群体个人(N=870)进行了一次全国性横断面在线调查。我们使用逻辑回归法计算了未调整和调整后的失业、无家可归/住房不稳定以及因大流行病而中断医疗的几率,并按性别和性别方式进行了分类。调整后的模型对年龄、种族/民族和地区进行了控制:在调整后的模型中,变性人和不同性别者报告无家可归/住房不稳定的几率是同性别者的 2.12 倍,报告医疗服务中断的几率是同性别者的 2.88 倍。变性男性、女性和非二元人群中断医疗护理的调整后几率分别是同性别男性的 4.12 倍、3.29 倍和 3.48 倍。我们没有观察到就业方面的明显差异:研究结果为 "COVID-19 的社会经济后果对变性人造成了不公平的影响 "这一假设提供了实证支持。为了将我们的研究结果与背景联系起来并支持该领域的未来研究,我们提出了一个概念模型,以污名化为健康不平等的根本原因为框架,说明 COVID-19 对跨性别人群的短期和长期影响。我们的研究结果强调,公共卫生专业人员必须紧急考虑并采取干预措施,以解决该流行病对变性人群的 SDoH 相关影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Instability in Housing and Medical Care Access: The Inequitable Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on U.S. Transgender Populations.

Purpose: To assess whether the COVID-19 pandemic has inequitably impacted key social determinants of health (SDoH), specifically employment, housing, and health care, for U.S. transgender populations.

Methods: Between April 13, 2020 and August 3, 2020, we conducted a national, cross-sectional online survey of sexual and gender minority individuals (N=870). We used logistic regression to calculate both unadjusted and adjusted odds of unemployment, homelessness/housing instability, and interruptions in medical care owing to the pandemic by gender and gender modality. Adjusted models controlled for age, race/ethnicity, and region.

Results: In adjusted models, transgender and gender diverse people had 2.12 times the odds of reporting homelessness/housing instability and 2.88 times the odds of reporting medical care interruptions compared with cisgender peers. Transgender men, women, and nonbinary people had 4.12, 3.29, and 3.48 times the adjusted odds of interruptions in medical care compared with cisgender men, respectively. We did not observe significant differences in employment.

Conclusions: Findings add empirical support to the hypothesis that socioeconomic consequences of COVID-19 are inequitably impacting transgender people. To contextualize our results and support future research in this area, we present a conceptual model of the short- and long-term impacts of COVID-19 on transgender populations using a framework of stigma as a fundamental cause of health inequities. Our findings emphasize that public health professionals must urgently consider-and intervene to address-the pandemic's SDoH-related impacts on transgender populations.

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来源期刊
Transgender Health
Transgender Health Social Sciences-Gender Studies
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
10.00%
发文量
122
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