"Coming Home to My Body": A Qualitative Exploration of Gender-Affirming Care-Seeking and Mental Health.

IF 0.4 4区 社会学 Q4 SOCIOLOGY Tempo Social Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-09-05 DOI:10.1080/19359705.2023.2237841
Teddy G Goetz, Amanda C Arcomano
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Abstract

Among transgender, non-binary, and/or gender expansive (TNG) persons, interest in medical and/or surgical forms of gender affirmation is heterogenous, as is access to those forms of medically necessary health care. Yet, the literature characterizing TNG persons' interest in medical and/or surgical gender-affirming care, barriers to accessing that care, and how societal narratives and expectations impact TNG individuals' self-image and mental health, as well as their personal choices regarding gender-affirming care remains sparse. Here we present qualitative research exploring TNG participants' interest in gender-affirming care and how such interventions impact identity formation. We conducted loosely structured interviews with a convenience sample of 54 TNG persons in the U.S. and Canada from Facebook pages used to recruit TNG research participants. One-hour interviews were conducted by an openly TNG researcher; participants were compensated. The most frequently sought gender-affirming care was hormone therapy, followed by chest ("top") surgery, genital ("bottom") surgery, electrolysis, breast augmentation, hysterectomy, and voice training. Less commonly desired interventions included fertility preservation, facial feminization/masculinization, and vocal surgery. Participants described four main categories of access barriers: financial (e.g., cost of medical/surgical care, inadequate insurance), logistical (e.g., no local providers, gatekeeping policies around body size and mental health, pandemic-related delays), personal fears about sub-optimal outcomes (e.g., complications, loss of sensation, undesired aesthetic and/or functional results), and societal discrimination (e.g., familial rejection, job loss, safety concerns). Participants reported primarily seeking this healthcare for social legibility, alleviating dysphoria/pursuing euphoria, and/or gender exploration. All who sought gender-affirming care reported improved mental health-including depression, anxiety, dissociation, and eating disorders-and social relationships, though many struggled to find TNG-competent mental health providers. This work provides key insights into how gender-affirming care can contribute to improving mental health for TNG communities, which will assist health providers in optimally treating TNG patients.

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"回到我身体的家":对性别认同护理和心理健康的定性探索。
在变性、非二元和/或性别扩张(TNG)人群中,对医疗和/或手术形式的性别确认的兴趣各不相同,获得这些形式的必要医疗保健的途径也不尽相同。然而,关于 TNG 人对医疗和/或外科性别确认护理的兴趣、获得护理的障碍、社会叙事和期望如何影响 TNG 人的自我形象和心理健康以及他们对性别确认护理的个人选择的文献仍然很少。在此,我们将介绍有关 TNG 参与者对性别确认护理的兴趣以及此类干预措施如何影响身份形成的定性研究。我们从用于招募 TNG 研究参与者的 Facebook 页面上抽取了美国和加拿大的 54 名 TNG 参与者,对他们进行了结构松散的访谈。一位公开的 TNG 研究人员进行了一小时的访谈;参与者获得了报酬。最常寻求的性别确认治疗是激素治疗,其次是胸部("上")手术、生殖器("下")手术、电解法、隆胸、子宫切除和发声训练。不太常见的干预措施包括保留生育力、面部女性化/男性化和发声手术。参与者主要描述了四类就医障碍:经济(如医疗/手术费用、保险不足)、后勤(如当地没有医疗服务提供者、有关体型和心理健康的把关政策、与大流行相关的延误)、个人对次优结果的恐惧(如并发症、感觉丧失、不理想的美学和/或功能结果)以及社会歧视(如家庭排斥、失业、安全问题)。据参与者报告,他们寻求这种医疗服务的主要目的是为了获得社会认可、缓解心理障碍/寻求快感和/或进行性别探索。所有寻求性别确认医疗服务的人都报告说,他们的心理健康(包括抑郁、焦虑、分离和饮食失调)和社会关系都得到了改善,尽管许多人都在努力寻找与 TNG 相符的心理健康服务提供者。这项工作为性别肯定护理如何有助于改善 TNG 群体的心理健康提供了重要见解,这将有助于医疗服务提供者为 TNG 患者提供最佳治疗。
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来源期刊
Tempo Social
Tempo Social SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
审稿时长
42 weeks
期刊介绍: Tempo Social to publish original contributions in Sociology; Sociological Theory; Other specific sociologies. Its abbreviated title is Tempo soc., which should be used in bibliographies, footnotes and and bibliographical references and strips.
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