Assessing access to care for transgender and gender nonconforming people: A consideration of diversity in combating discrimination Taylor M. Cruz Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, 3333 California St,Suite #455, San Francisco, CA 94118, United States article info Article history: Received 28 September 2013 Received in revised form 26 March 2014 Accepted 28 March 2014 Available online 29 March 2014 Keywords: United States Access to care Transgender Gender nonconforming Stigma abstract Transgender and gender nonconforming people face stigma and discrimination from a wide variety of sources and through numerous social realms. Stigma and discrimination originating from biomedicine and health care provision may impact this groups access to primary care. Such stigma and discrimination may originate not only from direct events and past negative experiences, but also through medicines role in providing treatments of transitioning, the development of formal diagnoses to provide access to such treatments, and the medical language used to describe this diverse group. This paper examines the postponement of primary curative care among this marginalized group of people by drawing from the National Transgender Discrimination Survey, one of the largest available datasets for this underserved group. This paper also proposes an innovate categorization system to account for differences in self- conceptualization and identity, which has been of considerable concern for transgender and gender nonconforming communities but remains underexplored in social and health research. Results suggest that experience, identity, state of transition, and disclosure of transgender or gender nonconforming status are associated with postponement due to discrimination. Other ndings suggest that post- ponement associated with primary place of seeking care and health insurance has ties to both discrimination and affordability. These ndings highlight the importance of combating stigma and discrimination generated from within or experienced at sites of biomedicine or health care provision in improving access to care for this group of people. Improving access to care for all gender variant people requires a critical evaluation of existing research practices and health care provision to ensure that care is tailored as needed to each persons perspective in relation to larger social processes. Ó 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. 1. Introduction This paper seeks to explore access to care among transgender and gender nonconforming (trans and GNC) people through a quantitative analysis of primary care postponement. Trans and GNC people face stigma and discrimination across numerous areas of life, which shapes their social experiences and realities (Bradford et al., 2013; Bauer et al., 2009). Real or perceived stigma and discrimination originating from within biomedicine and health care provision may impact this marginalized group of peoples access to care (Bockting et al., 2004; Cobos and Jones, 2009). Additionally, stigma and discrimination may be experienced differently among this diverse group of people along the lines of identity, experience, and social positioning (Lombardi, 2009; Lombardi et al., 2002). Given trans and GNC peoples historically uneasy relationship with biomedicine due to social stigma originating from formal diagnoses and the barriers encountered in receiving hormones, surgeries, and other treatments of transition (Drescher et al., 2012), this group of people faces unique consid- erations in addressing access to primary care issues. However, newer forms of identication and organization among this group of people potentially pose new and different social relations toward health care providers and treatments of transitioning than those often described in existing medical discourse and research. The purpose of this study is two-fold: rst, to dene and incorporate what diversity means in this population in an adequate and comprehensive manner by introducing a new categorization scheme of difference, and second, to determine how such diversity impacts the postponement of care. I begin by reviewing the literature on stigma, discrimination, and access to care for this group of people, and follow by describing differences among trans and GNC people along the lines of identity and experience. I then conduct regression analyses using data from the National Transgender Discrimination Survey to explore asso- ciations between these and other points of difference and E-mail address: Taylor.Cruz@ucsf.edu. Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Social Science & Medicine journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/socscimed http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.03.032 0277-9536/Ó 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Social Science & Medicine 110 (2014) 65e73