Transgender Women in Dominican Republic: HIV, Stigma, Substances, and Sex Work.

Henna Budhwani, Kristine R Hearld, Seyram A Butame, Sylvie Naar, Leandro Tapia, Robert Paulino-Ramírez
Author Information
  1. Henna Budhwani: University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB), School of Public Health, Department of Health Care Organization and Policy, Birmingham, Alabama, USA. ORCID
  2. Kristine R Hearld: University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB), School of Public Health, Department of Health Care Organization and Policy, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
  3. Seyram A Butame: Florida State University College of Medicine (FSU), Center for Translational Behavioral Science (CTBScience), Tallahassee, Florida, USA.
  4. Sylvie Naar: Florida State University College of Medicine (FSU), Center for Translational Behavioral Science (CTBScience), Tallahassee, Florida, USA.
  5. Leandro Tapia: Instituto de Medicina Tropical & Salud Global, Universidad Iberoamericana (UNIBE), Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.
  6. Robert Paulino-Ramírez: Instituto de Medicina Tropical & Salud Global, Universidad Iberoamericana (UNIBE), Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.

Abstract

Exposure to stigma, violence, sex work, and substance use are associated with increased HIV risk, but relationships between these factors have not been fully elucidated among transgender women whose data are often aggregated with men who have sex with men and other sexual and gender minorities. Considering this gap, we aimed to identify a serologically confirmed HIV estimate for transgender women and examine the relationships between stigma, sex work, substance use, and HIV among a national sample of transgender women in Dominican Republic. We analyzed biomarkers and self-report data from the third wave of Dominican Republic's Encuesta de Vigilancia y Comportamiento con Vinculación Serológica, employing logistic and negative binomial regression to estimate models ( = 307). HIV rate was 35.8%. Nearly 75% of respondents engaged in sex work. Over 20% reported experiencing violence; 61.6% reported being stigmatized. Participation in sex work was associated with higher levels of stigma [incidence rate ratio (IRR): 1.70,  < 0.05]. Respondents who experienced violence had over three times higher odds of living with HIV relative to respondents who had not been victimized [odds ratio (OR): 3.15,  < 0.05]. Marijuana users were less likely to experience stigma compared with cocaine users (IRR: 1.72,  < 0.05), and a higher risk of alcohol dependency was associated with higher odds of experiencing violence (OR: 1.17,  < 0.001). Findings illustrate the importance of disaggregating data collected from transgender women compared with other sexual and gender minorities to ascertain subpopulation-specific estimates and indicate an urgent need to implement structural interventions and policies to protect transgender women's health and their human rights.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. K01 MH116737/NIMH NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Dominican Republic
Female
HIV Infections
Homosexuality, Male
Humans
Male
Sex Work
Sexual and Gender Minorities
Social Stigma
Transgender Persons

Word Cloud

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