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The aim of this project is to get a better understanding of transgender and gender non-conforming (TGNC) people's experiences of minority joy and minority stress over time. Further, the project explores how these experiences covary with psychiatric and physical ill health and quality of life before, during and after a TGNC affirmative intervention in adult and adolescent participants over 15 years of age. The intervention consists of three parts, given in randomized order: 1. Psychoeducation and behavioral interventions about external minority stress, 2. Cognitive interventions targeting worry, and 3. Self-compassion aiming to relieve internalized transphobia.
This project uses a mixed methods data collection consisting of interviews as well as a replicated single case design (SCED). More detailed pre- and post measurements will also be collected. The interviews enable us to explore minority joy in detail, as well as getting feedback about the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention. The SCED enables us to visualize the interplay between everyday experiences and health, while testing the affirmative program. The project will provide much needed knowledge, which in turn will improve health in TGNC people.
Full description
The aim of this project is to exploratively investigate TGNC people's experiences of minority joy, and to get a better understanding of their experiences of minority joy and minority stress over time. Further, the project aims to explore how these experiences covary with psychiatric and physical ill health and quality of life before, during and after a TGNC affirmative intervention in adult and adolescent participants over 15 years of age. The intervention targets minority stress and consists of three parts, given in randomized order: 1. Psychoeducation about external minority stress including behavioral interventions, 2. Cognitive interventions targeting worry, and 3. Self-compassion interventions aiming to relieve internalized transphobia.
This project is designed to collect data on external minority stress and minority joy over time and at the same time to test an intervention based on the minority stress model, targeting internal minority stress, worry, and self-compassion. This is done using a replicated single case design, which makes it possible to visualize the interplay between everyday experiences and health in a number of individuals. It also tests an affirmative program targeting factors that have been suggested as important in the development of ill health in minority populations. This is done in a way that allows visualizing change directly, giving an opportunity for direct feedback and adaptation, providing an understanding of the interplay between minority stress, minority joy and health. It will also allow us to visualize the potential of the separate parts of the intervention, as well as the intervention as a whole, including feasibility and how it is experienced by participants.
To allow us to tap into a variability of experiences, both TGNC people doing well and TGNC people reporting some health problems will be recruited (about 35 each). The preventative effect of the intervention will therefore also be investigated, mainly qualitatively as part of the evaluation of the intervention.
Research questions:
The project consists of a mixed methods data-collection. Data-collection for aims one, two, three and four will consist of a single case experimental design with repeated weekly measurements, including longer pre- and post measurements. Research question five will use answers from the post-measurements as well as semi-structured interviews held with participants after the intervention.
Data collection
Before baseline and after the intervention, longer questionnaires will be filled in to get detailed information about our participants, and to enable us to relate validated questionnaires to the questions used for the weekly repeated measurements. It also allows the use of some more standard statistical analyses. The single case experimental design study (SCED) has several aims and is collecting weekly data over a period of 22-24 weeks.
The weekly questionnaire that will be developed specifically for the data collection includes two to three items about each area (depression, anxiety, musculoskeletal pain, self-compassion, worry, quality of life, minority joy, minority stress). This will result in 20 questions that focus on:
There will also be a weekly open question where participants can describe a specific experience of minority stress or joy or comment on the intervention.
The baseline, breaks and follow-up period enable us to separate the intervention modules more clearly from each other, which makes it possible to relate changes to the start or end of an intervention module, strengthening the external validity of the study. The different sequences of modules result in six different arms that participants will be randomized to (in blocks of six) and enable us to see if outcome seems to be more dependent on time or on content. Here, the first B-phase will be the most informative, since the intervention given first is the least influenced by content in the other modules.
Pre- and post-measurements (collected at the start of baseline and just after the last intervention module) enable us to collect full measurements on self-compassion, worry, and outcome variables, which enables us to relate validated measurements to the scores on the items on our weekly measurements and do simple pre-post comparisons (more advanced analyses will likely not be possible due to power issues). Also, detailed demographic information will be collected before the intervention to be able to describe participants' living conditions. After the intervention, questions about feasibility and agreeableness of the intervention are added.
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70 participants in 6 patient groups
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Matilda Wurm, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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