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Health concerns for transgender people

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Everyone faces certain health risks. But there are specific health concerns that transgender and gender-diverse people need to be aware of.

Some of these health concerns may be due to an experience called gender minority stress, which often involves:

  • Negative attitudes and disapproval toward transgender and gender-diverse people. This is sometimes called social stigma.
  • Discrimination, abuse, harassment, neglect, rejection or unfair treatment of transgender and gender-diverse people.
  • Turning the negative attitudes or behaviors of others into negative attitudes and thoughts about oneself. This is called internalized stigma.

Gender minority stress is linked to transgender and gender-diverse people seeking preventive health care and health screenings less often than do other people. This might be due to a lack of insurance coverage, being refused care, difficulty finding a health care provider with expertise in transgender care or fear of discrimination in a health care setting.

Because of gender minority stress, transgender people may be at higher risk of:

  • Emotional and psychological abuse.
  • Physical and sexual violence.
  • Sexually transmitted infections.
  • Substance misuse.
  • Mental health problems, such as depression, anxiety and thoughts of suicide.