The Debilitating Impact of Transphobia on Health Care Services: The Moderated Mediation Model of Transphobia, Minority Stress, Social Exclusion, and Access to Health Care among People Who Are Transgender.

Zain Rafique, Sidra Riaz, Shahid Habib
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Abstract

Drawing on the perspective of minority stress theory, an elaboration of social stress theory, and the Social Exclusion Knowledge Network model, this study's aim is to develop and test the feasibility of a moderated mediation model in the context of Pakistan. This model investigates the roles that transphobia, minority stress, and social exclusion play in the transgender population's access to health care services by the individual's communities in Pakistan. By applying a time-lagged research design and collecting multisource data from public sector hospitals in the capital city of Pakistan, alongside conducting a single-source survey over 30 consecutive working days (N = 206), we explore these relationships in depth. The results reveal that transphobia is negatively related to health care access, with minority stress mediating this negative relationship. Furthermore, social exclusion not only moderates the connection between transphobia and minority stress but also amplifies the indirect association between leader transphobia and health care access via minority stress. This moderated mediation framework underscores the critical impact of transphobia on health care access and highlights the amplifying role of social exclusion. The findings from this study offer invaluable insights for future researchers and practitioners focused on mitigating transphobia's impact on health care access within transgender contexts.

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本研究从少数群体压力理论、社会压力理论阐述和社会排斥知识网络模型的角度出发,旨在开发并测试巴基斯坦背景下的调节调解模型的可行性。该模型研究了变性恐惧症、少数群体压力和社会排斥在巴基斯坦变性人群获得个人所在社区提供的医疗服务方面所起的作用。我们采用时滞研究设计,从巴基斯坦首都的公立医院收集多源数据,并在连续 30 个工作日内进行单源调查(N = 206),从而深入探讨了这些关系。结果表明,跨性别恐惧症与医疗服务的获取呈负相关,而少数群体的压力则是这种负相关关系的中介。此外,社会排斥不仅调节了跨性别恐惧症与少数群体压力之间的关系,还通过少数群体压力放大了领导者跨性别恐惧症与医疗服务获取之间的间接关联。这种调节中介框架强调了跨性别恐惧症对医疗服务获取的关键影响,并突出了社会排斥的放大作用。本研究的发现为未来研究人员和从业人员提供了宝贵的见解,有助于他们在跨性别背景下减轻跨性别恐惧症对医疗服务获取的影响。
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期刊最新文献
Information About Canadian Patient Groups' Conflicts of Interest and Industry Funding-Incomplete, Inconsistent, and Unreliable: A Cross-Sectional Study. The Debilitating Impact of Transphobia on Health Care Services: The Moderated Mediation Model of Transphobia, Minority Stress, Social Exclusion, and Access to Health Care among People Who Are Transgender. Reflecting on Current Challenges, Goals and Directions in SDOH. The Role of Justice in Addressing the Social Determinants of Health. The Global Polycrisis and Health Inequalities.
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