Transgender persons are at high risk for HIV infection, but prevention
efforts specifically targeting these people have been minimal. Part of the
challenge of HIV prevention for transgender populations is that numerous
individual, interpersonal, social, and structural factors contribute to their
risk.
By combining HIV prevention services with complementary medical, legal,
and psychosocial services, transgender persons’ HIV risk behaviors, risk
determinants, and overall health can be affected simultaneously. For maximum
health impact, comprehensive HIV prevention for transgender persons warrants
efforts targeted to various impact levels—socioeconomic factors,
decision-making contexts, long-lasting protections, clinical interventions, and
counseling and education.
We present current HIV prevention efforts that reach transgender persons
and present others for future consideration.
Purpose
HIV prevalence estimates among transgender women in the United States are high, particularly among racial/ethnic minorities. Despite increased HIV risk and evidence of racial disparities in HIV prevalence among transgender women, few data are available to inform HIV prevention efforts.
Methods
A transgender HIV-related behavioral survey conducted in 2009 in 3 US metropolitan areas (Chicago, Houston, and Los Angeles County), used respondent-driven sampling to recruit 227 black (n = 139) and Latina (n = 88) transgender women. We present descriptive statistics on sociodemographic, health care, and HIV-risk behaviors.
Results
Of 227 transgender women enrolled, most were economically and socially disadvantaged: 73% had an annual income of less than $15,000; 62% lacked health insurance; 61% were unemployed; and 46% reported being homeless in the past 12 months. Most (80%) had visited a health care provider and over half (58%) had tested for HIV in the past 12 months. Twenty-nine percent of those who reported having an HIV test in the past 24 months self-reported being HIV positive. Most of the sample reported hormone use (67%) in the past 12 months and most hormone use was under clinical supervision (70%). Forty-nine percent reported condomless anal sex in the past 12 months and 16% reported ever injecting drugs.
Conclusion
These findings reveal the socioeconomic challenges and behavioral risks often associated with high HIV risk reported by black and Latina transgender women. Despite low health insurance coverage, the results suggest opportunities to engage transgender women in HIV prevention and care given their high reported frequency of accessing health care providers.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.