Socioeconomic inequality, health inequity and well-being of transgender people during the COVID-19 pandemic in Nigeria

被引:0
|
作者
Folayan, Morenike Oluwatoyin [1 ,2 ]
Yakusik, Anna [3 ]
Enemo, Amaka [4 ]
Sunday, Aaron [5 ]
Muhammad, Amira [6 ]
Nyako, Hasiya Yunusa [7 ]
Abdullah, Rilwan Mohammed [8 ]
Okiwu, Henry [9 ]
Lamontagne, Erik [3 ,10 ]
机构
[1] Obafemi Awolowo Univ, Dept Child Dent Hlth, Ife, Nigeria
[2] Nigeria Inst Med Res, Yaba, Lagos State, Nigeria
[3] Joint United Nations Programme HIV AIDS, Geneva, Switzerland
[4] Nigeria Sex Workers Assoc, Kubwa, Nigeria
[5] African Network Adolescent & Young Persons Dev, Barnawa, Nigeria
[6] Northern Nigerian Transgender Initiat, Abuja, Nigeria
[7] Jami Al Hakeem Fdn Jimeta Yola, Jimeta, Nigeria
[8] Natl Assoc Persons Phys Disabil, Abuja, Nigeria
[9] YouthRise, Abuja, Nigeria
[10] Aix Marseille Univ, Sch Econ, Marseille, France
关键词
LGBT; Transgender; Public health; Risk-taking; HIV; COVID-19; Vulnerability; Inequality; Socioeconomic; Well-being; SEXUAL RISK-TAKING; FUTURE CONSEQUENCES; GENDER IDENTITY; WOMEN; HIV; PREVALENCE; NEEDS; BEHAVIORS; SERVICES; BARRIERS;
D O I
10.1186/s12889-023-16482-1
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
BackgroundWe aimed to explore socioeconomic inequality, health inequity, and the well-being of transgender people during the COVID-19 crisis in Nigeria.MethodsBetween June and December 2021, a cross-sectional survey was conducted collaboratively with community-based organisations in Nigeria. Participants living with or at risk of HIV were recruited voluntarily, online and face-to-face, using a combination of venue-based and snowball sampling. We assessed the association between gender identity (transgender and vulnerable cisgender women), and (i) socioeconomic inequality measured with socioeconomic status, social status, economic vulnerability, macrosocial vulnerability; (ii) health inequity measured with self-assessment of health, recency of HIV test, access to HIV and sexual and reproductive health services, gender-affirming care, financial and non-financial barriers to accessing health services; and (iii) well-being, measured with gender-based violence, mental health, psychoeconomic preferences. We used multivariable logistic regressions and controlled for interactions and confounders.ResultsThere were 4072 participants; 62% were under 30, and 47% reported living with HIV. One in ten (11.9%; n = 485) was transgender, and 56.5% reported living with HIV. Compared to vulnerable cisgender women, the results showed significantly higher odds (aOR:3.80) of disruption in accessing HIV services in transgender participants; gender-based violence (aOR:2.63); severe (aOR:2.28) symptoms of anxiety and depression. Among the barriers to accessing health and HIV services, transgender had three-time higher odds of reporting additional non-official fees compared to vulnerable cisgender women. The disclosure of their gender identity or sexual orientation was the most important non-financial barrier to accessing health services (aOR:3.16). Transgender participants faced higher housing insecurity (aOR: 1.35) and lower odds of using drugs (aOR:0.48). Importantly, they are more likely to have performed a recent HIV test and less likely to not know their HIV status (aOR:0.38) compared to vulnerable cisgender women.ConclusionsSocioeconomic inequality, health and well-being inequity in transgender people appear to be exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic in Nigeria. Interventions are necessary to mitigate socioeconomic challenges, address structural inequality, and ensure equitable access to health services to meet the Sustainable Development Goals for transgender people.
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页数:20
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