| Literature DB >> 32281542 |
Ashleigh J Rich1, Jennifer Williams2, Mannat Malik3, Andrea Wirtz3, Sari Reisner4, L Zachary DuBois5, Robert Paul Juster6, Catherine R Lesko3, Nicole Davis2, Keri N Althoff3, Christopher Cannon7, Kenneth Mayer8, Ayana Elliott9, Tonia Poteat2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Black and Latina transgender women (TW) experience a disparate burden of HIV and related comorbidities, including poor mental health and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risks. Pervasive multilevel stigma and discrimination operate as psychosocial stressors for TW living with HIV and shape health disparities for this population. Gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) is commonly used by TW to facilitate alignment of the body with gender identity; in the context of stigma, GAHT may both improve mental health and increase CVD risks.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; comorbidity; racial factors; stress, biological; stress, physiological; transgender persons
Year: 2020 PMID: 32281542 PMCID: PMC7186865 DOI: 10.2196/17076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Figure 1Hypothesized pathways linking stigma, stress, mental health, and cardiovascular disease outcomes among transgender women living with HIV to be measured using (A) survey, (B) qualitative interviews, (C) salivary cortisol, (D) allostatic load index, and (E) clinical measures. GAHT: gender-affirming hormone therapy; CVD: cardiovascular disease.
Figure 2Overview of study visits and data collection intervals.
Key quantitative measures of the baseline survey.
| Construct | Measures |
| ARTa adherence | Self-reported use, treatment interruptions, recent missed doses and reasons for missed doses [ |
| Chronic stress | Perceived stress [ |
| Coping and resilience | Brief resilient coping [ |
| GAHTb | Duration, source, adherence, mode of delivery, frequency of monitoring of hormone levels in blood, discussion with health care provider regarding potential side effects, and perceptions of GAHT and ART interaction |
| Gender-affirming surgery | History of and need for |
| Health care access | Health insurance, health care access barriers, and typical health care setting |
| General health | History of diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, heart disease, blood clots, stroke, kidney disease, liver disease, cancer, obesity, etc, and perceived general health and healthy days (HRQOL-4c) [ |
| HIV outcomes | Last time viral load measured, if applicable: reasons for not having viral load measured recently (within 6 months), suppressed viral load at last measurement |
| Intersectional stigma and discrimination | Fear of deportation [ |
| Legal gender transition | Congruence between gender and preferred name and gender marker and name listed on IDs and records, and importance of congruent IDs and records [ |
| Medical distrust | Trust in HIV care providers [ |
| Mental health | Posttraumatic stress disorder (PCL-Cd) [ |
| STIf | History of STI testing and diagnosis, and history of hepatitis C |
| Sex work | Lifetime and recent history of engagement in sex work |
| Smoking history | Current smoking status [ |
| Social support | Material social support [ |
| Sociodemographics | Gender identity, sexual orientation, completed education, employment status, housing status and homelessness, immigration status, and material hardship [ |
| Soft-tissue fillers | Lifetime use, location (ie, body parts), source of injections (eg, medical provider and parties) |
| Substance use | Past-year alcohol use (AUDIT-Cg) [ |
| Violence experiences | Lifetime and recent psychological, physical, and sexual violence (RCTS-2i) [ |
aART: antiretroviral therapy.
bGAHT: gender-affirming hormone therapy.
cHROOL-4: Healthy Days Core Module health related quality of life measure.
dPCL-C: Post-traumatic stress disorder checklist- civilian version.
eCESD-10: Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale.
fSTI: sexually transmitted infection.
gAUDIT-C: Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test-Alcohol Consumption Questions.
hDAST-10: Drug Abuse Screening Test.
iRCTS-2: Revised Conflict Tactics Scales.
Stepped incentive structure.
| Visit | Incentive amount (US $) | ||
| Baseline | 50 | ||
| 6 months | 50 | ||
| 12 months | 60 | ||
| 18 months | 60 | ||
| 24 months | 70 | ||
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| Baseline saliva collection | 50 | |
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| 12-month saliva collection | 50 | |
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| 24-month saliva collection | 50 | |
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| In-depth Interview | 30 | |
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| Study completion bonus | 10 | |