학술논문

Intersecting Sexual Behavior and Gender Identity Stigmas Among Transgender Women in the United States: Burden and Associations with Sexual Health
Document Type
article
Source
AIDS and Behavior. 27(9)
Subject
Public Health
Health Sciences
Violence Research
Behavioral and Social Science
Violence Against Women
HIV/AIDS
Infectious Diseases
Clinical Research
Mental Health
Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*)
Infection
Gender Equality
Peace
Justice and Strong Institutions
Good Health and Well Being
Humans
Female
Male
United States
Gender Identity
Transgender Persons
Social Stigma
Sexual Health
Quality of Life
HIV Infections
Sexual Behavior
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Sexual and Gender Minorities
Transgender women
Gender identity stigma
Sexual behavior stigma
Sexual health
Public Health and Health Services
Social Work
Public health
Language
Abstract
In the United States, a context of multiple marginalization shapes sexual health disparities experienced by transgender women. Using data from 396 transgender women with negative or unknown HIV status, we performed exploratory factor analysis on responses to gender identity and sexual behavior stigma items and regressed sexual health outcomes on extracted factors via modified Poisson regression with robust variance estimation. Overall, 97.2% of participants endorsed ≥ 1 gender identity stigma; 67.2% endorsed ≥ 1 sexual behavior stigma; and 66.9% endorsed ≥ 1 of each. Extracted factors included gender-identity social stigma, reflecting experiences related to family, fearfulness in public, and verbal harassment (α = 0.68); gender-identity institutional stigma/violence, reflecting experiences related to healthcare, police interactions, and interpersonal violence (α = 0.73); and global sexual behavior stigma, reflecting experiences related to family, friends, and healthcare, as well as police interactions, fearfulness in public, verbal harassment, and interpersonal violence (α = 0.83). Gender-identity social stigma was significantly, positively associated with testing for HIV and testing for sexually transmitted infections. Gender-identity institutional stigma/violence and global sexual behavior stigma were both significantly, positively associated with condomless anal sex, sex work, testing for HIV, testing for sexually transmitted infections, and use of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis. Stigma-mitigation remains critical to improve quality of life and sexual health for transgender women in the United States.