| Literature DB >> 29159304 |
Abstract
Transgender women experience decreased access to HIV-related healthcare relative to cisgender people, in part due to pervasive transphobia in healthcare. This perspective describes intersectionality as a salient theoretical approach to understanding this disparity, moving beyond transphobia to explore how intersecting systems of oppression, including cisnormativity, sexism/transmisogyny, classism, racism, and HIV-related, gender nonconformity, substance use, and sex work stigma influence HIV-related healthcare access for transgender women living with HIV. This perspective concludes with a discussion of how intersectionality-informed studies can be enhanced through studying underexplored intersections and bringing attention to women's resiliency and empowerment.Entities:
Keywords: HIV/AIDS; access-to-care; health disparities; intersectionality; transgender women
Year: 2016 PMID: 29159304 PMCID: PMC5685282 DOI: 10.1089/trgh.2016.0018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transgend Health ISSN: 2380-193X
Intersectionality and Transgender Women Living with HIV: Key Definitions
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Oppression | The systematic and ongoing denial of one group's access to the resources of society by another group (p. 6).[ |
| Internalized HIV-related stigma | The degree to which people living with HIV endorse negative beliefs and feelings driven by society about themselves (p. 1163).[ |
| Enacted HIV-related stigma | Subtle or overt forms of discrimination as a result of one's HIV status (p. 1163).[ |
| Anticipated HIV-related stigma | The degree to which people living with HIV believe they will experience prejudice and discrimination from others in the future (p. 1163).[ |
| Cisnormativity | The sociocultural assumptions and expectations that all people are cis-sexual and/or have a cisgender body (p. 356).[ |
| Sexism | The belief in the inherent superiority of one sex and thereby the right to dominance (p. 45).[ |
| Transmisogyny | The ridiculing or dismissal of a transgender person not merely for failing to live up to gender norms, but for their expressions of femaleness or femininity (p. 14).[ |
| Gender nonconformity stigma | Stigma or discrimination of cisgender and transgender women who have a masculine/masculine-of-center gender presentation.[ |
| Racism | The belief in the inherent superiority of one race and thereby the right to dominance (p. 45).[ |

Intersecting stigmas influencing access to HIV-related healthcare for transgender women.