Measuring Geographic Access to Transgender Hormone Therapy in Texas: A Three-step Floating Catchment Area Analysis
•Geographic access to transgender medical care is understudied.•A 3SFCA analysis suggests distinct patterns of access to GAHT.•Metropolitan areas in texas have contrasting access to primary and GAHT care.•Sociopolitical climate at state level may drive disparities in access to trans care.•Known demo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Spatial and spatio-temporal epidemiology 2023-06, Vol.45, p.100585, Article 100585 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Geographic access to transgender medical care is understudied.•A 3SFCA analysis suggests distinct patterns of access to GAHT.•Metropolitan areas in texas have contrasting access to primary and GAHT care.•Sociopolitical climate at state level may drive disparities in access to trans care.•Known demographic and care access patterns do not map neatly onto trans populations.
While the extant literature has established that transgender people face significant barriers to accessing healthcare, no studies to date have offered an explicitly spatial analysis of their access to trans-specific care. This study aims to fill that gap by providing a spatial analysis of access to gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) using Texas as a case study. We used the three-step floating catchment area method, which relies on census tract-level population data and location data for healthcare facilities to quantify spatial access to healthcare within a specific drive-time window, in our case 120 min. For our tract-level population estimates we adapt estimates of the rates of transgender identification from a recent data source, the Household Pulse Survey, and use these in tandem with a spatial database of GAHT providers of the lead author's creation. We then compare results of the 3SFCA with data on urbanicity and rurality, as well as which areas are deemed medically underserved. Finally, we conduct a hot-spot analysis that identifies specific areas where health services could be planned in ways that could improve both access to GAHT for trans people and access to primary care for the general population. Ultimately, we conclude that our results illustrate that patterns of access to trans-specific medical care, like GAHT, do not neatly follow patterns of access to primary care for the general population and that therefore trans communities’ access to healthcare warrants specific, further investigation. |
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ISSN: | 1877-5845 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.sste.2023.100585 |