Waikato Times

Transgende­r research gets funding

- KELSEY WILKIE

A Waikato University lecturer has been awarded $238,000 to uncover the extent that transgende­r people experience stigma, discrimina­tion, violence and barriers to healthcare in New Zealand.

University psychology lecturer Dr Jaimie Veale has been awarded Health Research Council funding to complete the survey.

Her project will also explore the extent to which affirming healthcare and social support – including family/whanau, transgende­r community, and wider community support – buffer them from the stigma and related negative experience­s.

The project will include a transgende­r community advisory group and researcher­s will work closely with health profession­als who work with transgende­r people in New Zealand.

Overseas research has uncovered notable health inequaliti­es faced by transgende­r people, but little research has been conducted in New Zealand, Veale said.

Veale, who herself is transgende­r, says the goal is to get a comprehens­ive overview of transgende­r people’s emotional and physical health.

‘‘People are starting to talk about the overall wellbeing of transgende­r people and what the costs are of not covering healthcare.

‘‘I do know a lot of people can be struggling – not all of us, some of us are really successful.

‘‘But a lot of us are coming up against difficulti­es related to being able to access healthcare and experience­s of stigma and discrimina­tion and challenges with mental health and other health topics as well.’’

Veale completed a postdoctor­al fellowship at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada, researchin­g sexually active transgende­r youth.

She used data from the 2014 Canadian Transgende­r Youth Health Survey, focusing on a subset of 540 youth aged 14-25.

They found that 5 per cent (26) had been involved in a pregnancy at least once – comparable to British Columbia’s pregnancy rate of about 5 per cent among sexually active young people.

Veale said it’s often assumed that trans youth don’t get pregnant or get someone pregnant, perhaps because they’re receiving hormones that tend to reduce fertility, or because people assume they aren’t sexually active, but this study shows otherwise.

 ?? PHOTO: MARK TAYLOR/FAIRFAX NZ ?? University of Waikato psychology lecturer Dr Jaimie Veale has been awarded Health Research Council funding.
PHOTO: MARK TAYLOR/FAIRFAX NZ University of Waikato psychology lecturer Dr Jaimie Veale has been awarded Health Research Council funding.

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