학술논문

Factors Related to Treatment Attendance for Patients Seeking Gender-Affirming Voice Therapy.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology. Jan2023, Vol. 32 Issue 1, p216-233. 18p.
Subject
*Statistics
*Social support
*COVID-19 pandemic
Kruskal-Wallis Test
Research
Health services accessibility
Nonbinary people
Retrospective studies
Mental health
Treatment effectiveness
Gender identity
Research funding
Descriptive statistics
Employment
Transgender voice therapy
Patient compliance
Logistic regression analysis
Data analysis software
Data analysis
Telemedicine
Insurance
Language
ISSN
1058-0360
Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate factors related to treatment attendance for patients seeking gender-affirming voice therapy (GAVT). Method: We completed retrospective chart reviews of 50 patients (43 transgender women, three transgender men, four nonbinary patients; aged 18-67 years, M = 34.92 years, SD = 12.32 years) referred for GAVT at a Midwest outpatient center from 2016 to 2021. Data extraction included patient demographics, therapy visit specifics (e.g., number of sessions attended, treatment completion status, and in-person vs. virtual visits) and treatment timing (in relation to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic), and psychosocial and socioeconomic information. Results: There was no impact of treatment-timing relative to the onset of the pandemic on any attendance measure; however, patients were 1.9 times more likely to complete therapy with each virtual telehealth session attended. Individual factors of outside social support and hormone replacement therapy were positively related to the number of therapy sessions attended, whereas insurance provider and employment status were related to therapy completion. Conclusions: Telehealth attendance during the COVID-19 pandemic was positively associated with GAVT completion. Future research should investigate psychosocial and socioeconomic factors to understand how to identify patients at risk for poor treatment adherence and facilitate access to clinical care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]