Physical and Mental Health of Transgender Older Adults: An At-Risk and Underserved Population
University of Washington · University of Washington Tacoma · +1 more institution
Abstract
Transgender older adults were at significantly higher risk of poor physical health, disability, depressive symptomatology, and perceived stress compared with nontransgender participants. We found significant indirect effects of gender identity on the health outcomes via fear of accessing health services, lack of physical activity, internalized stigma, victimization, and lack of social support; other mediators included obesity for physical health and disability, identity concealment for perceived stress, and community belonging for depressive symptomatology and perceived stress. Further analyses revealed that risk factors (victimization and stigma) explained the highest proportion of the total effect of gender identity on health outcomes.
The study identifies important modifiable factors (stigma, victimization, health-related behaviors, and social support) associated with health among transgender older adults. Reducing stigma and victimization and including gender identity in nondiscrimination and hate crime statutes are important steps to reduce health risks. Attention to bolstering individual and community-level social support must be considered when developing tailored interventions to address transgender older adults' distinct health and aging needs.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 53
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Transgender
- Mental health
- Gerontology
- Population
- Medicine
- Physical health
- Psychology
- Psychiatry