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      Gender-Related Victimization, Perceived Social Support, and Predictors of Depression Among Transgender Australians

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      International Journal of Transgenderism
      Informa UK Limited

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          "I don't think this is theoretical; this is our lives": how erasure impacts health care for transgender people.

          For people who are transgender, transsexual, or transitioned (trans), access to primary, emergency, and transition-related health care is often problematic. Results from Phase I of the Trans PULSE Project, a community-based research project in Ontario, Canada, are presented. Based on qualitative data from focus groups with 85 trans community members, a theoretical framework describing how erasure functions to impact experiences interacting with the health care system was developed. Two key sites of erasure were identified: informational erasure and institutional erasure. How these processes work in a mutually reinforcing manner to erase trans individuals and communities and produce a system in which a trans patient or client is seen as an anomaly is shown. Thus, the impetus often falls on trans individuals to attempt to remedy systematic deficiencies. The concept of cisnormativity is introduced to aid in explaining the pervasiveness of trans erasure. Strategies for change are identified.
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            Gender Violence

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              Social support, exposure to violence and transphobia, and correlates of depression among male-to-female transgender women with a history of sex work.

              We determined racial/ethnic differences in social support and exposure to violence and transphobia, and explored correlates of depression among male-to-female transgender women with a history of sex work (THSW). A total of 573 THSW who worked or resided in San Francisco or Oakland, California, were recruited through street outreach and referrals and completed individual interviews using a structured questionnaire. More than half of Latina and White participants were depressed on the basis of Center For Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale scores. About three quarters of White participants reported ever having suicidal ideation, of whom 64% reported suicide attempts. Half of the participants reported being physically assaulted, and 38% reported being raped or sexually assaulted before age 18 years. White and African American participants reported transphobia experiences more frequently than did others. Social support, transphobia, suicidal ideation, and levels of income and education were significantly and independently correlated with depression. For THSW, psychological vulnerability must be addressed in counseling, support groups, and health promotion programs specifically tailored to race/ethnicity.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Transgenderism
                International Journal of Transgenderism
                Informa UK Limited
                1553-2739
                1434-4599
                April 30 2014
                April 30 2014
                January 02 2014
                : 15
                : 1
                : 35-52
                Article
                10.1080/15532739.2014.890558
                63f8a7d3-be34-4367-ad27-a94274a60ef6
                © 2014
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