Latent Constructs of Economic Marginality Associated with Sexual Behavior, Healthcare Access and HIV Outcomes Among Transgender and Nonbinary People in Three U.S. Cities

被引:0
作者
Emily Allen Paine
Dennis Rivera-Cash
Jasmine M. Lopez
Allen J. LeBlanc
Anneliese A. Singh
Walter O. Bockting
机构
[1] Columbia University,Department of Psychiatry, Division of Gender, Sexuality, and Health
[2] New York State Psychiatric Institute,Health Equity Institute
[3] San Francisco State University,undefined
[4] Tulane University School of Social Work,undefined
来源
AIDS and Behavior | 2024年 / 28卷
关键词
Transgender; HIV; Socioeconomic; Healthcare; Latent factors;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Transgender and nonbinary people (TNB) in the U.S. experience high HIV prevalence and diverse economic hardships. Yet a comprehensive understanding of how multiple, simultaneously occurring hardships—termed economic marginality—are together associated with healthcare and HIV outcomes is needed. Leveraging survey data from a sample of 330 TNB people in three U.S. cities, we conducted an exploratory mixed-source principal component analysis of latent factors of economic experience, then estimated their associations with sexual behavior, access to healthcare, HIV status, and HIV testing frequency. Two factors emerged: a traditional socioeconomic factor related to income, education, and employment (SES), and one related to housing precarity and (lack of) assets (Precarity). Higher Precarity scores were associated with sexual behavior, cost-based healthcare avoidance, discrimination-based healthcare avoidance, and more frequent HIV testing. Findings highlight the importance of understanding profiles of economic marginalization among trans and nonbinary people and can inform efforts to address upstream, structural factors shaping healthcare access and HIV outcomes in this key population.
引用
收藏
页码:1197 / 1209
页数:12
相关论文
共 188 条
  • [1] Becasen JS(2019)Estimating the prevalence of HIV and sexual behaviors among the US transgender population: a systematic review and meta-analysis, 2006– 2017 Am J Public Health 109 e1-e8
  • [2] Denard CL(2017)Current research gaps: a global systematic review of HIV and sexually transmissible infections among transgender populations Sex Health 14 456-68
  • [3] Mullins MM(2016)A global research synthesis of HIV and STI biobehavioural risks in female- to-male transgender adults Glob Public Health 1692 866-87
  • [4] Higa DH(2017)HIV-related sexual risk among transgender men who are gay, bisexual, or have sex with men J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 74 89-96
  • [5] Sipe TA(2014)HIV risk behaviors in the U.S. transgender population: prevalence and predictors in a large internet sample J Homosex 61 1558-88
  • [6] MacCarthy S(2017)Attitudes, beliefs, and barriers to PrEP among trans men AIDS Educ Prev 29 302-14
  • [7] Poteat T(2019)Knowledge about oral PrEP among transgender women in New York City AIDS Behav 23 2779-83
  • [8] Xia Z(2020)HIV testing and PrEP use in a national probability sample of sexually active transgender people in the United States J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr 84 437-42
  • [9] Reisner SL(2019)High risk and low uptake of pre-exposure prophylaxis to prevent HIV acquisition in a national online sample of transgender men who have sex with men in the United States J Int AIDS Soc 22 e25391-81
  • [10] Murchison GR(2016)Medication adherence among transgender women living with HIV AIDS Care 28 976-16