社会经济和结构障碍如何影响变性人的牙科保健。

Donald Clermont, Valerie Nieto, Elizabeth Alpert, Elvin Yao, Annaliese Cothron
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摘要

背景:虽然美国最近的政策限制了跨性别群体获得医疗保健的机会,并导致了健康差异,但人们对这一人群的口腔健康获取和利用知之甚少。本研究评估了居住在美国的跨性别成年人自我报告的牙科护理情况。方法:研究样本包括1,284,526个观察结果,代表来自行为风险因素和监测调查(BRFSS)数据集的290,000,163个加权人群。跨性别身份被分为两类,并测试与过去一年中看牙医的联系。皮尔逊卡方统计计算了关联,多变量逻辑回归评估了去年看牙医的几率。结果:几乎所有的社会经济和医疗保健获取协变量都与跨性别认同相关。更小比例的跨性别受访者表示高中毕业,收入超过50,000美元,非西班牙裔白人种族和民族身份,以及过去一年的医疗检查(所有p结论:迄今为止,除了本研究之外,没有研究评估跨性别身份与口腔保健获取之间的联系。这一分析的结果与变性人所经历的其他医疗保健差异是一致的,因为与顺性受访者相比,去年变性受访者中看牙医的比例更小。本文讨论了为未来口腔健康的可及性、利用和政策建议的研究奠定基础的意义。
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How socioeconomic and structural barriers influence dental care among transgender people.

Background: While recent US policies restrict access to healthcare and resulting health disparities among the transgender community, little is known about oral health access and utilization among this population. This study assessed self-reported access to dental care among transgender adults living in the United States.

Method: The study sample included 1,284,526 observations representing a weighted population of 290,000,163 from Behavioral Risk Factor and Surveillance Survey (BRFSS) datasets. Transgender identity was dichotomized and tested for association with having a dental visit in the past year. Pearson chi-square statistics were computed for associations and multivariate logistic regression assessed the odds of seeing a dentist in the last year.

Results: Nearly all socioeconomic and healthcare access covariates were associated with transgender identity. A significantly smaller proportion of transgender respondents reported established employment graduating high school, income over $50,000, non-Hispanic White racial and ethnic identities, and a past-year medical checkup (all p < 0.01). In all three models and across all analyses, transgender respondents had significantly lower odds of having seen a dentist in the past year, compared to cisgender people.

Conclusions: To date, no research, aside from the present study, has assessed connections between transgender identity and oral healthcare access. The results of this analysis are consistent with other healthcare disparities that transgender people experience in that a smaller proportion of transgender respondents saw a dentist in the last year compared to cisgender respondents. Implications for establishing a foundation in future research to explore oral health access, utilization, and policy recommendations are discussed.

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