Here’s where we tell you how your participation helps make the world better for LGBTQ+ people. Read on to find out some of what YOUR studies have found!
But first, this brief video talks about research questions and how scientists develop them. Sometimes the answer a study gets to a research question is surprising or things don’t work out the way researchers expect. These kinds of results are also considered important and we think it’s our responsibility to report them to you: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrWeLJZydUU
We're committed to getting our results back to the participants and communities who made the research possible. See our Research Dissemination Plan here:
• Research Dissemination Plan
Our research comes from analysis of various types of studies and analyses.
To learn more about our research and the various collaborations that make it possible, see our Collaborate page.
Below you can learn about our published work. But there is much more in development. A complete listing of approved ancillary studies is available here.
Publication #1: How The PRIDE Study Research Platform was Built
Official Title: A digital health research platform for community engagement, recruitment, and retention of sexual and gender minority adults in a national longitudinal cohort study — The PRIDE Study
What Did We Do?
The PRIDE Study is an online study of LGBTQ+ physical, mental, and social health. In 2015, our team built a secure online website to learn about LGBTQ+ health. This website is one of the ways we interact with participants in The PRIDE Study. We also built a national network of organizations to help engage LGBTQ+ people in health research. This network is called PRIDEnet.
We made the website interactive and fun. We recruited 13,932 people over 2 years. We recruited people of diverse ages, sexual orientations, and gender identities. We recruited people from different geographic locations in the United States. All of the people who joined The PRIDE Study interacted with the website. They completed long annual surveys. The surveys included sensitive topics. About 32% (3,813) of the people who joined were gender minority people.
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
This is the first time an online website and a national network were built for health research with LGBTQ+ communities. We think that this is a cost-effective and empowering way to do research. We think that this type of research will be even better in the future, as technology improves.
What Did We Learn?
We learned that online-only, long-term studies are possible. People engaged with the website and organizations joined our network. We recruited and retained more participants than we thought we would, particularly gender minority people.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
We can use online websites like this one to conduct health research and answer important questions. We can get LGBTQ+ organizations more actively involved in health research. We can answer more diverse questions about subcommunities within the LGBTQ+ community. We can provide better information for health care providers and policymakers so that people in our communities get better health care.
What’s Next?
· We continue to enroll people in The PRIDE Study.
· We engage LGBTQ+ organizations in PRIDEnet.
· We are producing interesting and relevant research.
· We are using the input of many LGBTQ+ people.
· We are disseminating research findings to communities.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Mitchell R Lunn, Micah Lubensky, Carolyn Hunt, Annesa Flentje, Matthew R Capriotti, Chollada Sooksaman, Todd Harnett, Del Currie, Chris Neal, Juno Obedin-Maliver, A digital health research platform for community engagement, recruitment, and retention of sexual and gender minority adults in a national longitudinal cohort study–—The PRIDE Study, Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, ocz082, https://doi.org/10.1093/jamia/ocz082
Publication #2: How The PRIDE Study iPhone App Was Used
Official Title: Using mobile technology to engage sexual and gender minorities in clinical research
What Did We Do?
The PRIDE Study is an online study of LGBTQ+ physical, mental, and social health. Our team recruited 18,099 participants for a pilot phase (also known as a testing phase). The phase lasted from June 2015 to May 2017. This pilot phase used an iPhone app.
Of those who consented to join, 16,394 people provided data. More than 98% identified as sexual minorities (people who are not heterosexual or straight). More than 15% identified as gender minorities (people who are transgender or gender non-binary). Participants completed 24,022 surveys. They provided input on 3,544 health topics. They cast 60,522 votes about those topics.
This article provides details about the app’s features. It also provides information about participants. We wanted to know gender identity, sexual orientation, race, ethnicity, educational level, annual income, and geographic region.
What was New, Innovative, or Notable?
This is the first time a mobile app was used to engage and recruit lots of LGBTQ+ people who aren’t usually included in health research. We think that apps may be useful in other communities that have had negative experiences in health research settings such as hospitals and clinics.
What Did We Learn?
We learned that a lot of LGBTQ+ people joined an online health study. They wanted to talk about health topics. They liked accessing live data via dashboards.
We had problems. For example, incomplete app testing resulted in a data storage error. Also, lots of people voting at once resulted in slow loading at times. Software problems kept us from easily providing new surveys to participants.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
We now have an easier and more accessible way to get health information from LGBTQ+ communities. That means we can ask more specific and nuanced questions, especially as peoples’ lives change. We can give this information back to organizations that serve the health of our communities so that they can do their jobs even better.
What’s Next?
We decided that there might be even better ways to enroll people in this type of study. The app model had problems. iPhones cost a lot. Some people can’t afford them. It was hard to develop an app for Android phones at the same time.
As a result of this pilot, we developed a web-based research portal. This portal is accessible from any Internet-connected device regardless of the size of the screen. This allows for more diverse ways to access the study, not just from a mobile phone.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Lunn MR, Capriotti MR, Flentje A, Bibbins-Domingo K, Pletcher MJ, Triano AJ, et al. (2019) Using mobile technology to engage sexual and gender minorities in clinical research. PLoS ONE 14(5): e0216282. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0216282
Publication #3: Eating Disorder Attitudes and Behaviors Among Gay Men
Official Title: Community norms for the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire among cisgender gay men
What Did We Do?
Many researchers who study health use a survey to ask about eating disorder attitudes and behaviors. We asked gay cisgender (people whose gender identity matches the sex they were assigned at birth) participants in The PRIDE Study to fill out this widely used survey. We analyzed the average scores of their answers.
What was New, Innovative, or Notable?
This is the first study to show the average scores of this survey for any gay men.
What Did We Learn?
People in the study engaged in dietary restraint (20%), binge eating (11%), excessive exercise (10%), laxative misuse (1%), and self‐induced vomiting (1%) at least once in the past 28 days.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
These results will help healthcare providers and researchers to use this survey with cisgender gay men.
What’s Next?
We want to understand more about eating disorders in other sexual and gender minority communities.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Nagata JM, Capriotti MR, Murray SB, Compte EJ, Griffiths S, Bibbins-Domingo K, Obedin-Maliver J, Flentje A, Lubensky ME, Lunn MR. Community norms for the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire among cisgender gay men. Eur Eat Disord Rev. 2019 Dec 2. https://doi.org/10.1002/erv.2708
Publication #4 What Mental Health Providers Want to Know About Helping LGBTQ+ People
Official Title: Supporting sexual and gender minority health: Research priorities from mental health professionals
What Did We Do?
An internet survey was emailed to mental health providers asking about 62 different topics. We wanted to know which ones are important in their care of LGBTQ+ people. We also asked if there were any other topics that we should include in the survey.
One hundred and sixty-three mental health providers responded:
˙30% were psychiatrists
˙18.5% were marriage and family therapists
˙18% were psychologists
˙13% were social workers
˙13% were mental health counselors
˙7% belonged to several different professions in mental health
Just over half of these providers gave us new topics that were important to their care of LGBTQ+ people.
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
Directly surveying providers is not common. Asking providers who care for LGBTQ+ people to help guide a study is new. So, it may take less time to bring study results to the providers who need information to improve care if they were involved in choosing the topics.
What Did We Learn?
Mental health providers said that of the 62 topics, the most important to their care of LGBTQ+ people were:
˙stress related to being LGBTQ+
˙lifestyle factors that support emotional strength and health
˙depression
˙intimate relationships
˙suicide
We learned that there are areas that we did not ask the mental health providers about, but that they would like to more research on.
˙24% wanted more research on relationships among LGBTQ+ people:
˙Sexual relationships with many partners
˙Family relationships such as LGBTQ+ children and their families
˙Community relationships such as how LGBTQ+ people fit into their communities
˙22% wanted more research on how LGBTQ+ and other identities (such as race, ethnicity, immigration status, or disability) affect their health and experiences.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
There are opportunities to improve the information that mental health providers have, so that they can better care for LGBTQ+ people. While some topics have been covered in research, they remain important to providers and should continue to be researched.
There are new topics (listed above) we can share with mental health providers that may improve care.
What’s Next?
Study results will be used to help inform the topics covered in The PRIDE Study. Some of the topics, such as depression and suicide, have been researched many times. This study shows there may be more ways to help care for LGBTQ+ people.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Clark, Kristen D., Matthew R. Capriotti, Juno Obedin-Maliver, Mitchell R. Lunn, Micah E. Lubensky, and Annesa Flentje. “Supporting Sexual and Gender Minority Health: Research Priorities from Mental Health Professionals.” Journal of Gay & Lesbian Mental Health, December 17, 2019, 1-17. https://doi.org/10.1080/19359705.2019.1700865
Publication #5: Substance use among underrepresented LGBTQ+ communities
Official Title: Characterization of substance use among underrepresented sexual and gender minority participants in The Population Research in Identity and Disparities for Equality (PRIDE) Study
What Did We Do?
Substance use can have a dramatic impact on peoples’ personal and professional lives. Over time, substance use can put people at risk of certain types of cancer and cause heart and liver problems. LGBTQ+ community members may be at higher risk of using substances due to increased discrimination and stressful experiences like coming out to unsupportive family and friends. This study looked at substance use among 1,790 LGBTQ+ adults. About 40% (691) of these folks may not have been able to take part in previous research due to having non-LGB sexual orientations such as asexual, pansexual, or queer, and/or identify as genderqueer, transmasculine, or transfeminine. We looked for difference among these groups in the use of alcohol, marijuana, and other illegal or non-prescribed drugs.
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
This is the first study to look at substance use among diverse LGBTQ+ community members, such as people who identify as pansexual, asexual, queer, transmasculine, transfeminine, and genderqueer, and not just lesbian, gay or bisexual.
What Did We Learn?
Over half (51%) of the LGBTQ+ people in this study reported binge drinking within the last year, almost 40% reported marijuana used within the past year, and nearly 20% reported illegal or non-prescribed use of other drugs. Additionally, 30% reported feeling that alcohol, marijuana or other drug use had been an issue in their life. This study found that alcohol, marijuana, and other drug use was different among different groups of LGBTQ+ people who have not been part of research on substance use in the past, including transmasculine, transfeminine, and genderqueer people who identify as asexual and queer.
What Does This Mean For Our Communities?
This work shows that more research is needed to better understand the effects of substance use in our diverse LGBTQ+ communities. Not all members of this community use the same substances in the same way. So, we need to create better screening guidelines and treatment programs by including diverse people from all sexual orientations and genders to better understand substance use in LGBTQ+ communities.
What’s Next?
Alcohol use screening helps healthcare providers to identify and treat patients for possible alcohol use problems. However, current screening guidelines are based on gender and don’t include transgender and gender expansive people. We have already started to look at screening guidelines for possible harmful alcohol use among these groups.
Action Step:
Share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Branden T. Barger, Juno Obedin-Maliver, Matthew R. Capriotti, Mitchell R. Lunn & Annesa Flentje (2020): Characterization of substance use among underrepresented sexual and gender minority participants in The Population Research in Identity and Disparities for Equality (PRIDE) Study, Substance Abuse, DOI: 10.1080/08897077.2019.1702610
Publication #7: Eating Attitudes and Behaviors in Transgender Men and Women
Official Title: Community Norms for the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE-Q) among Transgender Men and Women
What Did We Do?
We asked transgender men and women participants in The PRIDE Study to fill out a widely used survey about eating disorder attitudes and behaviors. We looked at the average scores of their answers.
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
This is the first study to show the average scores of this specific survey for transgender men or women.
What Did We Learn?
Study participants engaged in following behaviors at least once in past 28 days:
Dieting
Transgender Men 25%
Transgender Women 28%
Eating large amounts of food in a short period of time
Transgender Men 11%
Transgender Women 13%
Exercising a lot
Transgender Men 8%
Transgender Women 8%
Forcing themselves to vomit
Transgender Men 2%
Transgender Women 2%
Using laxatives (medicines for constipation to encourage bowel movements) for weight loss
Transgender Men 0.3%
Transgender Women 0.6%
Transgender men reported higher rates of eating large amounts of food in a short period of time and exercising a lot compared to the general population. Transgender women reported higher rates of dieting and exercising a lot compared to the general population.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
These results will help healthcare providers and researchers to understand how their transgender patients’ or participants’ scores compare to the average transgender man or woman’s score for this survey.
What’s Next?
We want to understand more about body image and eating disorders in other sexual and gender minority communities.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Nagata JM, Murray SB, Compte EJ, Pak EH, Schauer R, Flentje A, Capriotti MR, Lubensky ME, Lunn MR, Obedin-Maliver J. Community norms for the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE-Q) among transgender men and women. Eating Behaviors.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eatbeh.2020.101381
Publication #8: Including transgender and gender non-binary people in online sexual and reproductive health surveys
Official Title: Development of an affirming and customizable electronic survey of sexual and reproductive health experiences for transgender and gender non-binary people
What Did We Do?
Participants in most research studies about contraception, pregnancy, and abortion are cisgender and heterosexual. “Cisgender” means that the participant’s gender is the same as their birth sex. We wanted to know more about the reproductive experiences of transgender, non-binary, and gender-expansive people who were assigned female or intersex at birth. We also wanted to know more about the reproductive experiences of cisgender sexual minority women. We created an online survey to ask about people’s experiences with contraceptive use, pregnancy, and abortion.
We asked about many things in this survey. Examples of types of questions include gender identity, language used for sexual and reproductive body parts, and medical or surgical steps people have taken to affirm their gender. We also asked about sexual attraction and sexual activity, contraceptive use and preferences, and pregnancy history and desires. This study shows how questions in the survey were changed with participants’ input to create a more inclusive and positive survey experience.
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
We measured people’s sexual and reproductive health experiences without assuming their gender identity, sexual orientation, or the gender identity or sexual orientation of their partners. Also, we allowed participants to choose words in the survey for different sexual and reproductive body parts and experiences. We hoped that they would feel comfortable participating if their gender identity was different from their birth sex.
What Did We Learn?
We learned new things about how participant input can be used in different ways to improve research. Specifically, we learned that participant input can make the survey a more positive experience for participants, and can potentially improve the quality and accuracy of the data collected. For example, we used participant input in the initial design and in the implementation of the survey. We learned that it takes a lot of time to create a survey experience that is truly participant-centered, but we think this time is well spent if it results in a more positive research experience.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
Creating more inclusive and positive surveys for broader groups of sexual and gender minority people will improve their survey experience. Creating surveys with language that people normally use to describe their bodies and bodily activities helps people feel good. We hope researchers can use this survey to understand the sexual and reproductive health experiences of ALL people, regardless of gender identity. Such results can better reflect the gender and sexual diversity that exists in our communities.
What’s Next?
We hope future researchers will offer participants the opportunity to substitute words in order to develop surveys that affirm participants’ beliefs. We hope that future research can find out if using language selected by participants in a survey leads to higher response rates compared to surveys that do not include language selected by participants. We hope that this method will inspire others and will advance the field of survey research for people who have been treated as insignificant in society.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Moseson H, Lunn MR, Katz A, Fix L, Durden M, Stoeffler A, Hastings J, Cudlitz L, Goldberg E, Lesser-Lee B, Letcher La, Reyes A, Flentje A, et al. (2020) Development of an affirming and customizable electronic survey of sexual and reproductive health experiences for transgender and gender nonbinary people. PLoS ONE. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0232154
Publication #9: Changes in depression and anxiety levels among LGBTQ+ people coinciding with onset of the COVID-19 pandemic
Official Title: Depression and anxiety changes among sexual and gender minority people coinciding with onset of COVID-19 pandemic
What Did We Do?
We wanted to understand how the COVID-19 pandemic might be impacting the mental health of LGBTQ+ community members. We compared responses to questions on anxiety and depression from The PRIDE Study 2019 Annual Questionnaire with responses to the same questions collected just after the pandemic began.
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
This is one of the first studies to look at mental health and changes in mental health related to the COVID-19 pandemic among LGBTQ+ people.
What Did We Learn?
We learned that people overall had more symptoms of anxiety and depression after the pandemic began (with some interesting exceptions):
• People who weren’t very anxious and depressed before COVID-19 were overall more anxious and depressed after COVID-19 began.
• People who were very anxious before COVID-19 overall felt about the same after COVID-19 began.
• People who were depressed before COVID-19 were overall slightly less depressed after COVID-19 began, though probably not in a noticeable way, as they already were experiencing a lot of depression.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
We need to care for ourselves and other people in our communities. We need to check in on how people are feeling and take extra steps to care for ourselves and our loved ones. People within our communities should reach out for professional help to cope with anxiety and depression. Our finding might also mean that we have much to learn about coping in stressful situations from people who are diagnosed with depression.
What’s Next?
We are going to learn more about the impact of COVID-19 on the health of our LGBTQ+ communities by doing more studies on the impact of COVID-19.
Action Step:
See pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Flentje, A. Obedin-Maliver, J., Lubensky, M.E., Dastur, Z., Neilands, T., Lunn, M. R. (In press). Depression and anxiety changes among sexual and gender minority people coinciding with onset of COVID-19 pandemic. Journal of General Internal Medicine. (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-020-05970-4
Publication #11: What do sexual and gender minority people want researchers to know about sexual orientation and gender identity questions?
Official Title: What sexual and gender minority people want researchers to know about sexual orientation and gender identity questions: a qualitative study
What Did We Do?
Questions about sexual orientation and gender identity are important but aren’t asked enough in research studies. Current questions don’t meet the needs of LGBTQ+ people. Researchers from The PRIDE Study held 9 focus groups in the San Francisco Bay Area and 19 one-on-one interviews all over the country to ask LGBTQ+ people: how are current sexual orientation and gender identity questions not meeting your needs and how could they be improved?
What Was New/Innovative/Novel?
This is the first time such a large group of LGBTQ+ people have been asked for their views on questions about sexual orientation and gender identity and how these questions could be improved.
What Did We Learn?
We learned that current questions often didn’t allow for fluidity in sexual orientation and gender identities, and questions often didn’t capture various identities. We also learned that questions also weren’t specific enough. For example:
-When researchers ask about sexual orientation, are they asking about our identity, who we are sleeping with, or who we are attracted to?
- When researchers ask about gender, are they asking about gender identity, gender expression (clothing, hair, makeup, etc.), or sex assigned at birth?
The article suggests ways in which sexual orientation and gender identity questions could be improved based on feedback from focus groups and interviews.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
Understanding these views could improve how current sexual orientation and gender identity questions are designed, improve the experience of LGBTQ+ people in research, and make sure LGBTQ+ people are more accurately represented in research studies.
What’s Next?
We now need to find out how LGBTQ+ people actually respond to these updated questions and support their use in research studies.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Suen, L.W., Lunn, M.R., Katuzny, K. et al. What Sexual and Gender Minority People Want Researchers to Know About Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Questions: A Qualitative Study. Arch Sex Behav (2020).
Publication Title #17: Attempts by transgender, nonbinary and gender-expansive people to end pregnancies without a healthcare provider
Official Title: Abortion attempts without clinical supervision among transgender, nonbinary and gender-expansive people in the United States
What Did We Do?
We asked 1,694 transgender, nonbinary, and gender-expansive (TGE) people from across the United States about their sexual and reproductive health history, including if they had tried to end a pregnancy on their own, without information or support from a healthcare provider. Transgender describes someone who identifies as a gender different from that most commonly associated with their sex assigned at birth. Nonbinary is a term for someone who does not identify as only a man or a woman, but may identify as both or neither. Gender-expansive is an umbrella term for someone who may identify with and express their gender in many ways outside of what is expected of them.
What Was New, Innovative, or Novel?
These results are based on a large number of TGE people’s experiences and can help make abortion safer and more easily available.
What Did We Learn?
Of 1,694 TGE participants, 210 had ever been pregnant. More than 1 in every 3 TGE people who were ever pregnant said they had considered trying to end a pregnancy on their own. Nearly 1 in 5 of those ever pregnant tried to end a pregnancy on their own. Fifteen participants reported using herbs (38%), 10 reported physical trauma (25%), eight used vitamin C (20%), and seven used other substances (18%). Some reasons for trying to end a pregnancy on their own included cost, legal barriers, and discrimination. Participants also wanted more privacy.
What Does This Mean For Our Communities?
About 1 in every 5 TGE people (19%) who had been pregnant tried to end a pregnancy on their own, without support from a health care provider. Reasons people gave included not being able to access care through a health care provider and/or because they wanted more privacy and control over the abortion than a clinic could provide. Many of the methods people used were either ineffective (not likely to work), or unsafe, or both. People need access to information on how to safely end a pregnancy without support from a health care provider. This information can be found through websites including www.AbortionOnOurOwnTerms.org, Plan C, Aid Access, and mobile apps such as Euki.
What’s Next?
More work is needed to ensure cost, legal restrictions, information barriers, and discrimination do not keep TGE people from having safe and effective abortions, with or without a health care provider. Health care providers and advocates should provide TGE people with information to safely and effectively manage their abortions with or without clinical support. Making these changes, may allow TGE people to access safe and effective abortion options that are welcoming and respectful of their identities.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Moseson H, Fix L, Gerdts C, Ragosta S, Hastings J, Stoeffler A, Goldberg EA, Lunn MR, Flentje A, Capriotti MR, Lubensky ME, Obedin-Maliver J. (2021) Abortion attempts without clinical supervision among transgender, nonbinary and gender-expansive people in the United States. BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health.
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsrh-2020-200966.
Publication Title #21: Community Norms of the Muscle Dysmorphic Disorder Inventory (MDDI) among Gender Minority Populations
Community-Friendly Summary Title:
Muscularity concerns in transgender men, transgender women, and gender-expansive people
What Did We Do?
Muscle dysmorphia means that someone is concerned about not being muscular enough. We asked transgender men, transgender women, and gender-expansive people (people who have genders that are not just binary – meaning not just woman or man, for example, and people who are genderqueer or gender non-binary) in The PRIDE Study to fill out a widely used survey about this issue.
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
This is the first study to show the average scores of this survey in transgender men, transgender women, and gender-expansive people.
What Did We Learn?
This study helps us understand the experience of people seeing themselves as ‘not muscular enough’. Transgender men had the highest muscle dysmorphia symptoms, followed by gender-expansive people, then transgender women.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
These findings can help providers and researchers understand the muscle-related problems that transgender and gender-expansive people experience to care for them better.
What’s Next?
We will study if transgender and gender-expansive people use muscle-building supplements and drugs, such as steroids or creatine.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
Citation:
Nagata JM, Compte EJ, McGuire FH, Lavender JM, Brown TA, Murray SB, Flentje A, Capriotti MR, Lubensky ME, Obedin-Maliver J, Lunn MR. Community norms of the Muscle Dysmorphic Disorder Inventory (MDDI) among gender minority populations. Journal of Eating Disorders 9, 87 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40337-021-00442-4
Publication #25:
Do Ask, Tell, and Show: Contextual Factors Affecting Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Disclosure for Sexual and Gender Minority People
Community Title:
Do Ask, Tell, and Show: How Researchers Can Create More Inclusive and Inviting Research Environments for LGBTQ+ People
What Did We Do?
Questions about sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) are important but aren’t asked frequently enough in research studies. Contextual factors, like how the questions are asked or the situation (e.g., being asked at a doctor’s visit or during research study related to health) can affect how sexual and gender minority (SGM)/LGBTQ+ people respond to SOGI questions. Researchers from The PRIDE Study held 9 focus groups in the San Francisco Bay Area and 19 one-on-one interviews all over the country to ask LGBTQ+ people: what are some ways that context can affect how you respond to SOGI questions?
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
This is one of the few studies to examine how situations and contexts can affect how LGBTQ+ people respond to SOGI questions in health and research settings.
What Did We Learn?
We learned that for LGBTQ+ participants, it was important to understand why SOGI questions were being asked, and why they were relevant to the situation. Our findings suggest that researchers could increase comfort with answering SOGI questions by including information on why SOGI information was being collected and how this information would be used.
We also learned that when LGBTQ+ participants answer questions about their sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI), environmental cues (like posters & magazines that feature LGBTQ+ people, gender neutral bathrooms, rainbows in clinics) can communicate that it’s a safe context where their answers won’t be used to discriminate against them. So, researchers can create more inclusive and welcoming research environments by partnering with LGBTQ+ community organizations; ensuring recruitment materials feature LGBTQ+ people of various backgrounds and use inclusive language; hiring and valuing LGBTQ+ staff; and talking about and sharing pronouns.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
Recommending ways in which researchers can create more inclusive and welcoming research environments can help increase LGBTQ+ community participation in research studies. Developing these best practices can also help us to accurately collect SOGI data.
What’s Next?
Exploring what researchers are currently doing when collecting data and what they can do to improve study participation among LGBTQ+ individuals.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/research for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
If you’re interested in conducting research related to LGBTQ+ health, apply to collaborate with The PRIDE Study at http://pridestudy.org/collaborate.
Citation:
Suen LW, Lunn MR, Sevelius JM, Flentje A, Capriotti MR, Lubensky ME, Hunt C, Weber S, Bahati M, Rescate A, Dastur Z, Obedin-Maliver J. Do Ask, Tell, and Show: Contextual Factors Affecting Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Disclosure for Sexual and Gender Minority People. LGBT Health. 2022,
Publication #27: Appearance and performance-enhancing drugs and supplements (APEDS), eating disorders, and muscle dysmorphia among gender minority people
Community Title:
Use of Muscle-building Supplements by Transgender and Gender-expansive People
What Did We Do?
We studied use of muscle-building supplements among transgender men, transgender women, and gender-expansive people (those who do not identify as being exclusively a man or a woman) in The PRIDE Study. We asked about supplements such as protein, creatine, and steroids, which can be used to build muscle.
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
This is one of the first studies to examine how the use of muscle-building supplements is related to eating disorders and muscle dysmorphia (when someone is worried about not being muscular enough) in transgender and gender-expansive people.
What Did We Learn?
Muscle-building supplement use was common among transgender men (45%), transgender women (15%), and gender-expansive people (31%). Muscle-building supplement use was linked to symptoms of eating disorders and muscle dysmorphia in transgender men and gender-expansive people.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
Muscle-building supplement use is common in transgender men, transgender women, and gender-expansive people. Discussions about muscle-building supplement use could further explain potential reasons for using these supplements in these communities. Future research could look at how using muscle-building supplements among transgender men, transgender women, and gender-expansive people may affect their health.
What’s Next?
We will study the use of muscle-building supplements over time and across age groups.
Action Step:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
If you’re interested in conducting research related to LGBTQ+ health, please learn more about collaborating with The PRIDE Study at http://pridestudy.org/collaborate.
Citation:
Nagata JM, McGuire FH, Lavender JM, Brown TA, Murray SB, Greene R, Compte EJ, Flentje A, Lubensky ME, Obedin-Maliver J, Lunn MR. Appearance and performance-enhancing drugs and supplements (APEDS), eating disorders, and muscle dysmorphia among gender minority people. Int J Eat Disord. 2022 Mar 30: 1-10. doi: http://doi.org/10.1002/eat.23708
Publication #31: State Anti-Discrimination Policies, Poor Treatment, and Healthcare Use Among Transgender and Non-binary People
Official Title: Healthcare Mistreatment, State-Level Policy Protections, and Healthcare Avoidance Among Gender Minority People
What Did We Do?
We combined data from The PRIDE Study’s 2018 Annual Questionnaire and state healthcare policy protections from the Movement Advancement Project to understand whether state policies are related to decisions to avoiding healthcare among transgender and non-binary people.
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
This is the first study to look at the role of healthcare anti-discrimination policies in a state and whether the presence of those policies is related to the choice to avoid seeking healthcare among transgender and non-binary people.
What Did We Learn?
We found that experiencing poor treatment in healthcare related to one’s gender identity or expression was related to avoiding healthcare services in the past year. We found that the presence of state healthcare anti-discrimination policies did not change the relationship between poor treatment in healthcare and someone avoiding healthcare services in the past year.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
Transgender and non-binary people who live in states with healthcare anti-discrimination policies still avoid seeking healthcare. This is concerning because it increases the risk of poor health because illnesses may go untreated and health concerns may go un-diagnosed.
What’s Next?
We need to look at how healthcare anti-discrimination policies are put in place and how individuals and healthcare organizations are held accountable when poor experiences are reported. There is also an opportunity to look at ways to communicate with transgender and non-binary communities about what the policies in their state are and what their options are when poor treatment happens. We also need to look at how healthcare decisions are made by sub-communities within trans communities, such as trans people of color and trans people who may be undocumented.
Action Steps:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
If you are interested in conducting research related to LGBTQ+ health, please learn more about collaborating with The PRIDE Study at http://pridestudy.org/collaborate.
Citation:
Clark, K.D., Luong, S., Lunn, M.R., Flowers, E., Bahalkeh, E., Lubensky, M.E., et al. Healthcare Mistreatment, State-Level Policy Protections, and Healthcare Avoidance Among Gender Minority People. Sex Res Social Policy. 2022. Epub 2022, July 15. doi: 10.1007/s13178-022-00748-1
Publication #43: Testosterone, Sexual Health, and Experiences of Pain During Sex among Transgender Men, Nonbinary, and Gender Diverse People
Official Title: Testosterone Use and Sexual Function among Transgender Men and Gender Diverse People Assigned Female at Birth
What Did We Do?
We looked at sexual health experiences data from The PRIDE Study’s Annual Questionnaires from 2019-2021 provided by transgender men, nonbinary, and gender diverse people who were assigned female sex at birth (AFAB). We also looked at how these sexual health experiences were different or similar among people who were currently using testosterone and those who were not.
What Was New, Innovative, or Notable?
Our study is one of the largest to look at the relationship between testosterone use, sexual health, and experiences of genital pain during sex among transgender men, nonbinary, and gender expansive people AFAB.
What Did We Learn?
There were 1,219 participants in this study. 49% of participants were using testosterone and 42% had never used testosterone. Many (65%) reported having any genital pain during sex in the past 30 days (from when they completed the survey). Compared to people who never used testosterone, individuals who were using testosterone had a higher interest in sexual activity and a higher ability to orgasm. People who were using testosterone were also more likely to report genital pain during sex. We did not see a relationship between current testosterone use and satisfaction with sex life, ability for genitals to produce their own lubrication, or orgasm pleasure.
What Does This Mean for Our Communities?
Testosterone usage for the purpose of affirming one’s gender can be associated with both positive and negative sexual health experiences. Testosterone likely impacts sexual health experiences in complex ways. For example, testosterone may play a role in genital pain during sex for some individuals. At the same time, testosterone may play a role in increased gender affirmation and improved mental health that may be related to more positive sexual experiences.
It is important that a high percentage of participants reported experiencing genital pain during sex because it can have an impact on their well-being and quality of life. However, there are not any treatments for genital pain during sex that have been evaluated specifically for transgender men or nonbinary and gender diverse people AFAB.
What’s Next?
Our long-term goal is to identify effective and acceptable ways to treat or prevent genital pain during sex among transgender, nonbinary, and gender diverse people and to make treatments accessible. Future studies will focus on: learning more about people’s preferences for potential treatments, the ways that people using testosterone address genital pain symptoms, and what they find to be most effective. Lastly, we plan to look at how genital pain during sex impacts the overall quality of life, well-being, and relationships for transgender men, nonbinary, and gender diverse people AFAB.
Action Steps:
See http://www.pridestudy.org/study for more information and to share this study with your friends and family.
If you are interested in conducting research related to LGBTQIA+ health, please learn more about collaborating with The PRIDE Study at http://pridestudy.org/collaborate.
Citation:
Tordoff DM, Lunn MR, Chen B, Flentje A, Dastur Z, Lubensky ME, Capriotti M, Obedin-Maliver J. Testosterone Use and Sexual Function among Transgender Men and Gender Diverse People Assigned Female at Birth. American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology. 2023 September 9; doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2023.08.035 (article will be live in the near future)
View the full PDF at: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6bz2x0j6