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. 2022 Jan-Dec:18:17455057221083809.
doi: 10.1177/17455057221083809.

"I do the she and her": A qualitative exploration of HIV care providers' considerations of trans women in gender-specific HIV care

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"I do the she and her": A qualitative exploration of HIV care providers' considerations of trans women in gender-specific HIV care

Ashley Lacombe-Duncan et al. Womens Health (Lond). 2022 Jan-Dec.

Abstract

Objectives: Women of all genders, including cisgender (cis) and transgender (trans) women, experience social and structural drivers of HIV inequities and pervasive barriers to HIV care. Yet, little is known about how HIV care providers address gender diversity in health care. Through a critical feminist lens informed by intersectionality theory, medical anthropology, and critical sociology, we explored (1) how do HIV care providers describe women living with HIV's care needs and barriers; (2) what are their perspectives on optimal HIV care for women; and (3) to what extent do these conceptualizations include/exclude trans women.

Methods: Utilizing a community-based exploratory qualitative study design, we conducted 60-90 minute semi-structured individual interviews from March 2019-April 2020 with eight HIV care providers (n = 4 social service providers; n = 4 physicians) practicing across seven counties representative of rural, suburban, and urban Michigan, United States. Data were analyzed utilizing a reflexive thematic approach.

Results: Three overarching themes emerged: (1) Emphasis on (different) clinical needs: key considerations in cis and trans women's HIV care; (2) Recognition of the structural: barriers to HIV care affecting women of all genders; and (3) Proposed solutions: piecing together individual, social, and organizational interventions to increase access to HIV care that may benefit women living with HIV of all genders but are disproportionately framed as being for cis women. While HIV care providers recognized both cis and trans women living with HIV's clinical care needs and structural barriers to care, they rarely envisioned optimal HIV care inclusive of gender affirmation and structural interventions.

Conclusions: Findings suggest that HIV care providers can avoid reducing gender to biology and making assumptions about reproductive care needs, endocrinological care needs, caregiving responsibilities, and other life circumstances; provide gender-affirming medical care; and address structural barriers to HIV care to enhance intersectional and structurally focused gender-affirming-that is, trans-inclusive-women-centered HIV care.

Keywords: HIV primary care; intersectionality; stigma; transgender; women living with HIV.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of conflicting interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

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