| Literature DB >> 34199049 |
Lovro Markovic1,2, Daragh T McDermott3, Sinisa Stefanac4, Radhika Seiler-Ramadas1, Darina Iabloncsik1, Lee Smith5, Lin Yang6,7, Kathrin Kirchheiner8, Richard Crevenna2, Igor Grabovac1.
Abstract
Medical care of transgender and non-binary (TNB) patients if often a complex interdisciplinary effort involving a variety of healthcare workers (HCWs) and services. Physicians not only act as gatekeepers to routine or transitioning therapies but are also HCWs with the most intimate and time-intensive patient interaction, which influences TNB patients' experiences and health behaviors and healthcare utilization. The aim of this study was to investigate the physician-patient relationship in a sample of TNB individuals within the Austrian healthcare system, and explore its associations with sociodemographic, health-, and identity-related characteristics. A cross-sectional study utilizing an 56-item online questionnaire, including the Patient-Doctor Relationship Questionnaire 9 (PDRQ-9), was carried out between June and October 2020. The study involved TNB individuals 18 or older, residing in Austria, and previously or currently undergoing medical transition. In total, 91 participants took part, of whom 33.0% and 25.3% self-identified as trans men and trans women, respectively, and 41.8% as non-binary. Among participants, 82.7% reported being in the process of medical transitioning, 58.1% perceived physicians as the most problematic HCWs, and 60.5% stated having never or rarely been taken seriously in medical settings. Non-binary participants showed significantly lower PDRQ-9 scores, reflecting a worse patient-physician relationship compared to trans male participants. TNB patients in Austria often report negative experiences based on their gender identity. Physicians should be aware of these interactions and reflect potentially harmful behavioral patterns in order to establish unbiased and trustful relations.Entities:
Keywords: gender-nonconforming; health behavior; healthcare utilization; non-binary; physician–patient relationship; trans; transgender
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34199049 PMCID: PMC8297154 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18136895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Sociodemographic and identity characteristics of the study sample.
| Variable | Participants ( |
|---|---|
| Age | |
| M 1, SD 1 | 29.0 (10.0) |
| Austrian citizenship ( | |
| No | 4 (4.4%) |
| Yes | 87 (95.6%) |
| Geographical area ( | |
| Countryside/town | 29 (31.9%) |
| City | 62 (68.1%) |
| Education ( | |
| None/Primary/Vocational | 24 (26.4%) |
| Secondary | 34 (37.4%) |
| Tertiary | 33 (36.3%) |
| Income ( | |
| Up to EUR 1000/month | 53 (59.6%) |
| Up to EUR 2000/month | 24 (27.0%) |
| >2000 EUR/month | 12 (13.5%) |
| Employment status ( | |
| No paid employment | 39 (43.3%) |
| In paid employment | 51 (56.7%) |
| Living situation ( | |
| Single/Alone/Shared flat | 45 (57.0%) |
| With partner | 21 (26.6%) |
| Other | 13 (16.5%) |
| Gender assigned at birth ( | |
| Female | 64 (70.3%) |
| Male | 26 (28.6%) |
| Other | 1 (1.1%) |
| Gender identity ( | |
| Trans man | 30 (33.0%) |
| Trans woman | 23 (25.3%) |
| Non-binary person | 38 (41.8%) |
| Sexual orientation ( | |
| Heterosexual | 10 (11.0%) |
| Homosexual | 22 (24.2%) |
| Bisexual | 30 (33.0%) |
| Asexual | 3 (3.3%) |
| Queer/Pansexual | 26 (28.6%) |
| Gender expression ( | |
| Very dissatisfied | 9 (9.9%) |
| Somewhat dissatisfied | 10 (11.0%) |
| Neutral | 10 (11.0%) |
| Somewhat satisfied | 41 (45.1%) |
| Very satisfied | 21 (23.1%) |
| Out ( | |
| Yes | 90 (98.9%) |
| No | 1 (1.1%) |
1 M = mean value (arithmetic mean), SD = standard deviation.
Aspects of transitioning and health-related characteristics.
| Variable | Participants ( |
|---|---|
| Medically transitioning ( | |
| No | 16 (17.6%) |
| Yes | 75 (82.4%) |
| * Age at begin of transitioning | |
| M (SD) | 26.2 (8.9) |
| * Coordinator of referral statement ( | |
| Psychotherapist | 55 (75.3%) |
| Psychologist | 4 (5.5%) |
| Psychiatrist | 6 (8.2%) |
| Gynecologist | 1 (1.4%) |
| Endocrinologist | 1 (1.4%) |
| Other | 6 (8.2%) |
| * Duration of wait for positive referral | |
| M (SD) | 10.2 (7.7) |
| * Hormonal replacement therapy (HRT) ( | |
| No | 9 (12.3%) |
| Yes | 64 (87.7%) |
| * Months on HRT | |
| M (SD) | 35.5 (38.5) |
| * Gender-affirming surgery ( | |
| Chest (top) | 20 (27.0%) |
| Other (±top) | 15 (20.3%) |
| None | 39 (52.7%) |
| ** Surgery abroad ( | |
| Yes | 2 (7.4%) |
| No | 25 (92.6%) |
| * Speech therapy ( | |
| No | 52 (74.3%) |
| Yes | 15 (21.4%) |
| * Epilation ( | |
| No | 53 (79.1%) |
| Yes | 14 (20.9%) |
| * Psychotherapy (beyond the scope for referrals) ( | |
| No | 22 (32.8%) |
| Yes | 45 (67.2%) |
| Further medical steps desired ( | |
| No | 37 (41.6%) |
| Yes | 52 (58.4%) |
| Location of potential further medical steps ( | |
| Austria | 48 (73.8%) |
| Abroad | 17 (26.2%) |
| Legal name change ( | |
| Yes | 69 (75.8%) |
| No, but planned | 19 (20.9%) |
| No, not planned | 3 (3.3%) |
| Legal gender change ( | |
| Yes | 59 (64.8%) |
| No, but planned | 27 (29.7%) |
| No, not planned | 5 (5.5%) |
| Chronic somatic illness ( | |
| Yes | 32 (35.2%) |
| No | 59 (64.8%) |
| Mental illness (n, %) | |
| Yes | 52 (57.1%) |
| No | 39 (42.9%) |
| Smoking status ( | |
| Yes | 11 (12.1%) |
| No, ex-smoker | 33 (36.3%) |
| Never smoked | 47 (51.6%) |
| Alcohol consumption ( | |
| Never | 19 (20.9%) |
| Occasionally | 58 (63.7%) |
| Weekly | 9 (9.9%) |
| Daily | 5 (5.5%) |
* Considering only participants who were medically transitioning (n = 75). ** Considering only participants who underwent gender-affirming surgery (n = 35).
Experiences in healthcare settings.
| Variable | Participants ( |
|---|---|
| Consulted a physician in the past year ( | |
| Yes | 69 (75.8%) |
| No | 22 (24.2%) |
| Planned somatic healthcare utilization, if needed ( | |
| Definitely not | 0 (0.0%) |
| Probably not | 4 (4.4%) |
| Maybe | 14 (15.4%) |
| Probably yes | 37 (40.7%) |
| Definitely yes | 36 (39.6%) |
| Planned mental healthcare utilization, if needed ( | |
| Definitely not | 3 (3.3%) |
| Probably not | 4 (4.4%) |
| Maybe | 12 (13.2%) |
| Probably yes | 18 (19.8%) |
| Definitely yes | 54 (59.3%) |
| Taken seriously in healthcare setting | |
| Never | 34 (37.4%) |
| Rarely | 21 (23.1%) |
| Sometimes | 19 (20.9%) |
| Often | 11 (12.1%) |
| Very often | 6 (6.6%) |
| Misgendered by healthcare workers (HCW) | |
| Never | 37 (41.1%) |
| Rarely | 17 (18.9%) |
| Sometimes | 17 (18.9%) |
| Often | 10 (11.1%) |
| Very often | 9 (10.0%) |
| Violence by HCW | |
| Yes | 7 (7.7%) |
| No | 84 (92.3%) |
| Denial by HCW | |
| Yes | 12 (13.2%) |
| No | 79 (86.8%) |
| Reported incident with HCW | |
| Yes | 2 (4.9%) |
| No | 39 (95.1%) |
| Subjectively most problematic HCW | |
| Physicians | 36 (58.1%) |
| Nurses | 6 (9.7%) |
| Medical–technical personnel | 3 (4.8%) |
| Psychologists | 11 (17.7%) |
| Speech therapists | 0 (0.0%) |
| Other | 6 (9.7%) |
Tukey HSD post-hoc correction of ANOVA comparing mean PDRQ-9 scores of different gender identity categories.
| Gender Identity Group (A) | Gender Identity Group (B) | Mean Difference (A − B) |
| Cohen’s d (SMD *) | 95% Confidence Interval (Lower Bound, Upper Bound) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trans men | Trans women | 1.32 | 0.85 | 0.15 | −4.36, 7.00 |
| Non-binary | 5.31 | 0.04 | 0.60 | 0.31, 10.32 | |
| Trans women | Trans men | −1.32 | 0.85 | −0.15 | −7.00, 4.36 |
| Non-binary | 3.99 | 0.19 | 0.45 | −1.42, 9.41 | |
| Non-binary | Trans men | −5.31 | 0.04 | −0.60 | −10.32, −0.31 |
| Trans women | −3.99 | 0.19 | −0.45 | −9.41, 1.42 |
* SMD = standardized mean difference.