Receipt of Gender-Affirming Surgeries Among Transgender and Gender Diverse Veterans.

IF 4.3 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Journal of General Internal Medicine Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-26 DOI:10.1007/s11606-024-08917-1
Alyson J Littman, Amy Jeon, Carolyn L Fort, Krista Dashtestani, Anna Korpak, Michael R Kauth, Jillian C Shipherd, Guneet K Jasuja, Hill L Wolfe, Paula M Neira, Josie Caballero, Sady Garcia, Cassandra Williamson, Benjamin Collongues, Tracy L Simpson
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Abstract

Background: Gender-affirming surgery (GAS) can be an important part of comprehensive care for transgender and gender diverse (TGD) individuals, but this care is not provided by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) because of an exclusion in the medical benefits package.

Objective: To describe the receipt of GAS by veterans and assess the associations between key sociodemographic characteristics and receipt of chest ("top") and genital ("bottom") surgeries.

Design: Cross-sectional national survey (the GendeR Affirming Care Evaluation (GRACE)), among TGD Veterans conducted between September 2022 and July 2023.

Participants: A total of 6653 Veterans (54% response rate) completed the survey.

Main measures: Self-reported "top" and "bottom" GAS were key outcomes. Covariates included gender identity, sex assigned at birth, age, race, ethnicity, income, employment status, education, relationship status, sexual orientation, and geographic region.

Key results: Among all respondents, 39% had ≥ 1 GAS. Among the 4430 veterans interested in top surgery, 38% received it; 23% of 3911 veterans interested in bottom surgery had received it. In multivariable models, older age (50 + vs. 18-39) was associated with higher receipt of top and bottom surgery while nonbinary gender identity (vs. binary gender identity), lower household income (< $50,000 vs. > $75,000), less education (less than a college graduate vs. Master's degree or more), sexual orientations other than heterosexual, and residing in a region other than the Pacific were associated with lower receipt of top and bottom surgery. Individuals assigned male (vs. assigned female) at birth had lower receipt of top surgery and higher receipt of bottom surgery.

Conclusions: GAS receipt was low and there were important disparities by gender, sex, income, education, sexual orientation, and region. By removing the exclusion to providing GAS, VA could reduce barriers to accessing GAS and decrease disparities among TGD veterans.

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变性和不同性别退伍军人接受性别确认手术的情况。
背景:性别确认手术(GAS)可以成为变性者和性别多元化者(TGD)综合护理的重要组成部分,但由于医疗福利包中的一项排除条款,退伍军人事务部(VA)并未提供这种护理:描述退伍军人接受 GAS 的情况,评估主要社会人口特征与接受胸部("上")和生殖器("下")手术之间的关联:设计:在 2022 年 9 月至 2023 年 7 月期间对 TGD 退伍军人进行横断面全国调查(GendeR Affirming Care Evaluation,GRACE):共有 6653 名退伍军人(回复率为 54%)完成了调查:自我报告的 "最高 "和 "最低 "GAS是主要结果。协变量包括性别认同、出生时性别、年龄、种族、民族、收入、就业状况、教育程度、关系状况、性取向和地理区域:在所有受访者中,39% 的人≥ 1 次 GAS。在 4430 名对上部手术感兴趣的退伍军人中,38% 接受了手术;在 3911 名对下部手术感兴趣的退伍军人中,23% 接受了手术。在多变量模型中,年龄越大(50 岁以上 vs. 18-39 岁),接受上部和下部手术的比例越高,而非二元性别认同(vs. 二元性别认同)、家庭收入较低(75,000 美元)、教育程度较低(大学毕业以下 vs. 硕士学位或以上)、性取向非异性恋以及居住在太平洋地区以外的其他地区,则与接受上部和下部手术的比例较低有关。出生时被指定为男性(与被指定为女性)的人接受上部手术的比例较低,接受下部手术的比例较高:结论:接受 GAS 的比例较低,而且不同性别、性别、收入、教育程度、性取向和地区之间存在很大差异。通过取消提供 GAS 的限制,退伍军人事务部可以减少获得 GAS 的障碍,并减少 TGD 退伍军人之间的差异。
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来源期刊
Journal of General Internal Medicine
Journal of General Internal Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
5.30%
发文量
749
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of General Internal Medicine is the official journal of the Society of General Internal Medicine. It promotes improved patient care, research, and education in primary care, general internal medicine, and hospital medicine. Its articles focus on topics such as clinical medicine, epidemiology, prevention, health care delivery, curriculum development, and numerous other non-traditional themes, in addition to classic clinical research on problems in internal medicine.
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