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Patient Empowerment Among Transgender and Gender Diverse Youth.

Chaya Mangel PflugeisenAnna BoomgaardenAytch A DenaroDanielle KonicekEmily Robinson
Published in: LGBT health (2023)
Purpose: Patient empowerment is becoming increasingly important as health care moves toward more collaborative models of care. The goal of this study was to evaluate and characterize patient empowerment in a sample of transgender/gender-diverse/nonbinary (TGDNB) youth aged 14-24 who have had at least one conversation with a medical health care provider about gender-affirming care. Methods: We adapted a health care empowerment scale for use with TGDNB young people and collected patient empowerment and sociodemographic data among TGDNB youth in the United States over an 8-week period in the spring of 2022. Overall and domain-specific empowerment (including knowledge and understanding, control, identity, decision-making, and supporting others) were assessed on a four-point scale from a low of 1 to a high of 4. Results: A total of 177 youth completed the survey. Mean age was 18.4 ± 3.0 years, the sample was 39.5% gender-diverse/nonbinary, 16.4% transfemme, 44.1% transmasc, and 81.9% White. Average empowerment was 0.22 points higher in youth with supportive caregivers than those without (99% confidence interval [CI] 0.05-0.38, p  < 0.001) and 0.20 points higher in youth who sought gender-affirming mental health support (99% CI 0.04-0.36, p  = 0.001). Caregiver support increased youths' sense of control over their health/health care (estimated increase 0.29, 99% CI 0.09-0.50, p  < 0.001), and mental health support increased youths' decision-making agency by 0.30 points (99% CI 0.06-0.53, p  = 0.001). Conclusions: This is the first study to assess patient empowerment in TGDNB youth. Several sociodemographic factors were significantly associated with overall and domain-level empowerment. Further work in this area, both longitudinal and in larger samples, is warranted.
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