Project Summary
This cross-sectional study identified and linked health administrative data for transgender individuals (N=2,085) in Ontario, Canada. Transgender individuals were identified through data obtained from four outpatient community and hospital clinics and then linked with ICES to examine the sociodemographic characteristics, health conditions, and health service use among transgender individuals compared with the general population. The degree to which neighbourhood-level marginalization mediates mental health service use among transgender individuals was also examined. Key study results suggest that transgender individuals are more likely to live in lower-income neighbourhoods, experience higher rates of chronic health conditions, and have higher health service use compared with the general population. This study demonstrated the need to improve the capacity to identify transgender individuals in administrative health data to understand the factors underlying their high rates of disease burden and mental health disparities.
Infographics
Publications
Abramovich, A., de Oliveira, C., Kiran, T., Iwajomo, T., Ross, L.E., & Kurdyak, P. (2020). Assessment of Health Conditions and Health Service Use Among Transgender Patients in Canada. JAMA Network Open, 3(8):e2015036. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2769915
Abramovich, A., Gould, W.A., Pang, N., de Oliveira, C., Iwajomo, T., Vigny-Pau, M., MacKinnon, K., Lam, J.S.H., & Kurdyak, P. (2023) Exploring Mediators of Mental Health Service Use Among Transgender Individuals in Ontario, Canada. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry,68(12): 933-948. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/07067437231171541
Media
Study finds that transgender individuals in Canada experience higher rates of chronic illness
The Varsity