Abstract
The social contexts of transgender and gender-diverse (TGD) older adults remain under-examined. In this qualitative study, which involved six virtual focus groups with a total of 21 participants inclusive of TGD adults ages 50+, service providers, and community advocates, we sought to examine the healthcare and social service experiences and needs of TGD older adults in Canada. Drawing theoretically on critical gerontology and intersectionality, and methodologically on interpretive description, we examined the perspectives of different participant groups to develop insight into TGD older adults’ issues and priorities in the context of their engagements with systems of care. Our findings revealed the role of histories of marginalization, precarity, contemporary sources of intersectional oppression, and resistance in shaping the experiences of this population, while also highlighting community-driven ground-up activities to address evolving needs. Drawing on this conceptualization, we explored the implications of our research for ongoing inquiry, policy, and practice.
• Historical experiences of structural oppression shape the contemporary healthcare and social service experiences and needs of transgender and gender-diverse (TGD) older adults. • Factors such as racism, ableism, and poverty can complicate the nature of precarity at the nexus of cisnormativity, transphobia, and ageism in the lives of TGD older adults. • TGD older adults have historically mobilized resistance against expressions of intersectional oppression and continue to do so in their engagement with healthcare and social service systems.
• Community-driven ground-up activities, meaning those that are guided by community interests and engagement, should be prioritized as interventions to address the evolving needs of TGD older adults. • Examples of relevant ground-up interventions may include meaningful engagement of TGD older adults in programming and service provider education, the design and delivery of peer-based care, and community development initiatives that reflect the dynamic priorities of TGD older adults.What this paper adds
Applications of study findings
Introduction
With the increase in scholarship on aging in transgender and gender-diverse (TGD) older adults, questions remain about the healthcare and social service experiences and needs of this population across geopolitical contexts. Alongside growing recognition that this group of older adults has historically experienced—and continues to encounter—ubiquitous and pernicious expressions of stigma, violence, and discrimination in formal care settings (Baril & Silverman, 2022; Catlett, 2024), there is continued interest in learning about the specific social contexts, system interactions, and support needs of this population. Though much of the scholarship on aging in TGD populations has been informed by quantitative methodologies (Catlett, 2024), in recent years there has also been a notable growth of qualitative inquiry in this area (Baril & Silverman, 2024; Fabbre, 2014; Pang et al., 2019; Siverskog, 2014). Quantitative studies have contributed critical insights into how the disproportionately poor health outcomes of this population may be related to lifelong experiences of victimization and discrimination, while also revealing the promising role of factors such as social support in attenuating these inequities (Catlett, 2024; Fredriksen-Goldsen et al., 2014). Qualitative studies have, primarily through diligent attention to the narratives of TGD older adults, contributed substantive knowledge of issues such as the realities of living with dementia (Baril & Silverman, 2024), long-term care and end-of-life care planning (Knochel & Flunker, 2021; Pang et al., 2019), interactions with healthcare and social service providers (Fabbre & Gaveras, 2020; Silverman & Baril, 2023; Siverskog, 2014), and experiences of resilience (Fabbre, 2015; Fabbre & Siverskog, 2019) in this population.
Across the literature, several common themes are apparent. First, scholars have consistently pointed to the role of past experiences of stigma, violence, and discrimination in shaping the contemporary lives of TGD older adults across a variety of social contexts (Baril & Silverman, 2024; Pang et al., 2019; Siverskog, 2014). Several others have considered how many in this population construct authentic lives and meaningful social support networks in the process of navigating volatile social conditions marked by forces such as transphobia, ageism, and ableism (Fabbre, 2015; Fabbre & Siverskog, 2019). Finally, researchers have considered the dearth of relevant knowledge and expertise, the limited resources and formal support, and the neglect and lack of care that TGD older adults often face in formal care settings (Knochel & Flunker, 2021; Siverskog, 2014), with some emphasizing the critical role of informal care providers (including partners and friends) in addressing their needs as they age (Silverman & Baril, 2023).
To date, we are unaware of studies that have examined the combined perspectives of service users and formal (professional) care providers as a foundation for triangulating and thus strengthening the knowledge needed to address TGD older adults’ healthcare and social service needs. Our study, which is based on focus groups with TGD older adults, community advocates, and service providers, seeks to contribute multi-party insight into the healthcare and social service experiences and needs of TGD older adults. This objective represents the primary aim of our study. Accounts from multiple parties—including (but not limited to) those of service users—can both enhance knowledge of policy and practice gaps (Leyerzapf et al., 2018) and result in concrete recommendations to effect change (Vargas et al., 2022). This notion especially substantiates the importance of incorporating perspectives that straddle professional practice and lived experience, including those of self-identified community advocates (Leyerzapf et al., 2018). Based on our inclusion of different participant groups, our study aims to enrich the knowledge needed to transform care systems and address TGD older adults’ experiences and needs.
Conceptual Framework
Our study is grounded theoretically in critical gerontology and intersectionality. Critical gerontology is a lens that interrogates “old age” as a marginalized category of the life course whose parameters are often socially constructed as a function of political and economic context (Doheny & Jones, 2021; Marshall & Bengtson, 2011). Notably, the use of this framework also commonly entails historicizing the life course, and thus accounting for the role of historical conditions in shaping aging processes in individuals and populations (Doheny & Jones, 2021). In this study, we drew on critical gerontology—particularly in the context of data analysis—to both examine the contemporary structural context of TGD older adults’ marginalization in healthcare and social services, and to consider potential relationships between historical and present-day experiences of this population across formal care systems.
Intersectionality draws attention to the ways in which systems of power intersect to shape the distinctive social contexts and experiences of multiply marginalized people (Cho et al., 2013; Wesp et al., 2019). In this study, we relied on an intersectional lens to attend to the role of various forms of oppression, including transphobia, cisnormativity, ageism, racism, and poverty, in structuring TGD older adults’ experiences and needs in the context of healthcare and social services. Given the heterogeneity of the social contexts of TGD older adults (Catlett, 2024), we adopted this approach in (1) aiming for a sample that could represent some of the rich diversity of this population, and (2) refining our analytic process to purposefully foreground the variable range of issues that are likely to characterize this population’s interactions within formal systems of care.
Methods
This study, which was a partnership between researchers and Egale, a national 2SLGBTQI human rights organization in Canada, was methodologically anchored in interpretive description (ID) (Thorne, 2016). ID is an iterative approach to the collection and analysis of qualitative data that typically results in a conceptually rich account of a particular phenomenon or experience, which in turn can be used for pragmatic ends. Indeed, ID is frequently used to generate actionable knowledge for practice-based disciplines (Thorne, 2016). Given the multi-party design of this study as a means of enhancing insight into the healthcare and social service experiences and needs of TGD older adults—ultimately with the goal of developing pragmatic insight in this area—ID was aligned particularly well with the objectives of our study.
Statement on Ethics
This study underwent approval by The University of British Columbia’s Behavioural Research Ethics Board in Vancouver, BC, Canada, and all participants provided informed consent to participate.
Recruitment and Sampling
Drawing on a purposive sampling approach, we invited two categories of participants to take part in our study: (1) TGD older adults, which we defined as TGD-identified individuals ages 50 and older, and (2) self-identified service providers or community advocates involved in supporting or caring for TGD older adults in any capacity. Within the TGD umbrella, we included people who self-identified as Two-Spirit, transgender, transsexual, nonbinary, genderqueer and/or gender-diverse. In alignment with other research in the area of TGD aging, we chose the age threshold of ≥50 to account for barriers to recruiting members of this marginalized and often difficult-to-reach population (Catlett, 2024; Fredriksen-Goldsen et al., 2014). All participants were required to be residents of Canada to be eligible to participate. The partner organization supporting the study, together with a number of community organizations serving TGD people across Canada, helped disseminate the recruitment materials. Additionally, the research team used virtual peer networks on platforms such as Reddit and Facebook to recruit participants. Finally, to complement our direct recruitment strategies, we drew on a snowball sampling approach by inviting participants to circulate information on the study across their personal and professional networks.
In total, we recruited 21 participants, 10 of whom were TGD older adults (age range: 51–73, mean age: 58.9), and 11 service providers and community advocates (two of whom also identified as TGD older adults). Older adults in our sample were predominantly white (n = 8) and most commonly identified as trans women (n = 6) or reported using feminine pronouns (n = 8). One was a man and another was nonbinary. Service providers and community advocates described serving TGD older adults in a variety of capacities, including as paid social service and healthcare providers, support workers, activists, counsellors, and volunteers. Their ages ranged from 23–72 (mean age: 38.3). Supplemental Table 1 contains an overview of the sample’s demographic composition.
Data Collection
The lead author facilitated a total of six virtual focus groups, which ranged in length from 96–118 minutes. Three of the focus groups were with TGD older adults (each comprising two, four, and four participants), and the remaining sessions (involving three, three, and five participants) were with service providers and community advocates. We asked both groups of participants about their perceptions of existing gaps in services for TGD older adults and their understanding of what would be needed to improve systems of care for this population. We also asked each category of participants distinct questions. For example, in sessions designated for TGD older adults, we asked them about their experiences of seeking and receiving services across systems of care, both historically and in the present. We include the focus group guides we used to collect data as supplemental material (Appendix A). We compensated all participants with $50 CAD, which they could accept either as an e-transfer, or in the form of a gift card for a major retailer. Focus groups were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim by professional transcriptionists.
Data Analysis
Consistent with an ID approach (Thorne, 2016), the aim of our analytical process was to produce a conceptually rich, yet descriptive and pragmatic account of the healthcare and social service experiences and needs of TGD older adults involved in our study. To this end, the lead author (HK) and another primary analyst (CP) developed a preliminary codebook based on initial readings of the transcripts, which contained descriptive units of meaning corresponding to the data. As data were coded, the lead author collaborated with the team to develop increasingly consolidated, higher-order themes from the preliminary codes to construct an intelligible account of the healthcare and social service experiences and needs of TGD older adults. While the transcripts of the two categories of focus groups were analyzed in the aggregate, the team maintained a record of the source for each segment of coded text and drew on this information to contextualize the data. In this process, we relied on critical gerontology (Doheny & Jones, 2021; Marshall & Bengtson, 2011) to pay particular attention to historical and contemporary structural conditions that appeared to underlie TGD older adults’ experiences and needs, and integrated an intersectional lens (Collins, 2019; Wesp et al., 2019) to attend to potential variability in these conditions on the basis of service users’ differential exposure to factors such as racism, ableism, and poverty. Our process was characteristic of an ID-informed approach to iteratively coding data, gradually constructing themes based on recurrent patterns, and drawing on critical gerontological and intersectional scholarship as disciplinary frameworks against which to situate our data and consider pragmatic implications of our analysis (Thorne et al., 2004). To enhance the trustworthiness and confirmability of our findings, we incorporated a process of member checking (Thorne, 2016) by compensating two participants (both of whom identified simultaneously as TGD older adults and service providers) to review and provide feedback on our interpretations of the data.
Findings
Our findings comprise five themes, which we present below. These include: (1) historical context in experiences of structural oppression, (2) (in)visible precarity at the nexus of transness and older age, (3) intersectional expressions of contemporary state and institutionally sanctioned oppression, (4) resistance of TGD older adults and their allies across service settings, and (5) closing current gaps: ground-up activities to build space for TGD older adults.
Historical Context in Experiences of Structural Oppression
TGD older adults consistently described the impact of historical trans antagonism, particularly at the hands of the state and its institutions, in shaping their contemporary experiences across systems of care. Some, for example, discussed having been criminalized or pathologized by entities such as the police, psychiatry, and social welfare systems, and indicated that because of these experiences, they regarded public healthcare and social service systems with (at best) great skepticism. One Métis participant in her mid-60s, who identified both as a trans woman and as Two-Spirit, recalled having been arrested at a pride event during her early youth and then being brought into contact with child welfare workers, which tarnished her future interactions with agents of the state: And in that parade in 1972, I got arrested for wearing a dress and they charged me with disturbing the peace because I wore a dress. And my experience with social services from day one became a living nightmare. I didn’t want to see those social workers. I didn’t want to see that child advocacy worker. I didn’t want to see any more police officers. It damaged me, by me being arrested.
Another participant, a Latina trans woman in her early 70s, who additionally supported the needs of other older TGD people as a healthcare service provider, discussed the critical role of historical context in influencing contemporary expectations of healthcare and social services, and in sustaining internalized forms of oppression: The baby boomer generation, we’re the ones that straddle the lines between being pathologized and not being pathologized, between being criminalized and not being criminalized for our sexual orientation or gender identity … So, there’s a lot of internalized oppression and repression. And we’re just beginning to appreciate the impact of that kind of physical, emotionally draining cognitive process of … always being careful, being ultra vigilant, not being able to express your identity, not being able to approach a partner in public.
Emphasizing the impacts of historical (and subsequently internalized) expressions of structural oppression, TGD older adults most frequently emphasized the need for designing systems of care that could account for the impacts of this history on the social, physical, and mental health of this population.
(In)visible Precarity at the Nexus of Transness and Older Age
Both TGD older adults, as well as service providers and community advocates, discussed the distinctive precarity that individuals experience at the nexus of being TGD and aging, particularly in the context of accessing healthcare and social services. Across both sets of focus groups, participants regularly highlighted overt forms of mistreatment, such as stigmatizing language and discriminatory behavior, that older TGD service users appeared to encounter frequently across care settings, particularly when they became intelligible or (hyper)visible as TGD. For example, one white trans woman in her early 50s described being “fired” by her family doctor soon after starting to transition medically, and indicated this decision (which the participant attributed to the provider’s “discomfort”) had impacted her access to mental health and other critical services attached to this medical clinic: I ended up fired by my family doctor who was a devout religious person. And I had been receiving, in connection with that family practice, counselling … And when they kind of boot you out for their own reasons you lose access to everything. So, I think that it’s imperative to recognize that, that certain aspects of your care … can be quite tied to the medical aspect, and if you find that somebody is not comfortable you lose all of that.
Additionally, some drew attention to implicit expressions of cisnormativity, including (among those who sought gender-affirming medical interventions) a lack of knowledge among healthcare providers regarding how to medically support gender transitions in older age. Several older adults and service providers contextualized this experience by describing the invisibility—or lack of consideration—of TGD older adults as a relevant population in policy and practice across formal systems of care, in some cases even within mainstream LGBTQ+ social service organizations.
Some participants alluded to the small and sometimes tenuous networks of social support among TGD older adults as markers of precarity for those whose support needs grow with age. A service provider in their late 50s, who also identified as a white gender nonconforming nonbinary person, provided a particularly insightful account. They explained that as many TGD older adults lack access to informal, kin-based care, support structures that could help these adults navigate their growing healthcare needs—and even help them age in place to avoid potentially antagonistic institutional settings—are often missing: [One older adult I’m supporting is] resigning themselves to [not finding a partner, but] then how do you at that age access – how do you access services; how do you stay in your own home? All of the aging mechanisms that are in place for a heteronormative couple who may have children etc., aren’t [necessarily] accessible to someone who’s a trans elder, a single trans elder, right? And we can grab our community around us, but how sustainable is that care for us?
Intersectional Expressions of Contemporary State and Institutionally Sanctioned Oppression
Notwithstanding conditions of precarity that participants agreed were common for TGD older adults as a whole, a number of individuals described the particularly prominent contexts of oppression shaping the lives of TGD older adults who were also racialized, living with disabilities, and/or experiencing poverty. One participant, a feminine-identified South Asian trans person in her late 50s, explicitly discussed the compounding effects of transphobia, together with racism, xenophobia, and homophobia, in producing “layered” challenges in her health and well-being, and thus a level of precarity she likened to Humpty Dumpty’s shell: A Caucasian don’t have to go through what I go through [in] that I feel racism. Then [my] being a Muslim [is a target] … then my sexuality, then my gender, then being immigrant. So you can see the layers I have to go through for small, small steps … So already when you are going through traumas and challenges … you are falling apart like a Humpty – that’s what I call my Humpty Dumpty.
One participant, a nonbinary South Asian service provider in their late 30s, independently elaborated on this idea by highlighting that TGD older adults who are affected by axes of oppression beyond those related to gender may be disproportionately vulnerable to the shortcomings of care systems that are already overburdened and affected by regimes of austerity: It is the fact that the health care system is overburdened and bursting at the seams, but it’s also the fact that these individuals are more vulnerable and more marginalized to begin with. So whatever shortcomings the system has, even for the more privileged among us, affect these vulnerable and marginalized folks disproportionately. They’re sort of the canaries in the coal mine in that sense.
Indeed, participants frequently highlighted their perceptions that the state and its institutions (particularly public healthcare and social service systems) were complicit in reinforcing intersectional forms of oppression among diverse aging TGD people, often by way of an austere rationing of services that came at the expense of those furthest at the margins. For example, several indicated that subsidized housing programs often favor specific older TGD service users who are white, able-bodied, and do not report challenges in their mental health, and thus exacerbate insecure living conditions (and, in turn, exposure to stigma and discrimination) among those outside these categories. Racism, ableism, sanism/cogniticism (forms of ableism targeting people with cognitive and mental health disabilities [Baril & Silverman, 2022]), and poverty were most saliently discussed, though specific manifestations of oppression among TGD older adults often varied based on the distinctive constellation of systemic factors operating in their lived experiences.
Resistance of TGD Older Adults and Their Allies Across Service Settings
In spite of the many challenges that appeared to characterize TGD older adults’ experiences, several individuals across both participant categories—including service providers and community advocates positioning themselves as “allies”—described the historical and ongoing resistance of older TGD service users to conditions of oppression. Accounts of challenging institutional and relational forms of cisnormativity, often with little to no historical precedent, were not uncommon in focus groups with TGD older adults. For example, one TGD older adult in his mid-50s, who described himself as a white man of trans experience, indicated that at the start of his transition, he began asking staff at a trauma therapy program he was using at the time to use his name and pronouns, and explicitly noted that he may have been among the first service users to do so: I transitioned with [the trauma therapy program], but it was – I just had to change – first I made them start calling me “he” and whatever … I was like, “I’m doing this trans thing.” You know and they never asked me how I [identified] – they just didn’t until I had to be like, you know, “Call me he” … I was their first …
Other participants indicated drawing on their historically negative experiences with healthcare and social services to become activists and advocates within their communities. For example, one of the participants quoted earlier, a Métis, Two-Spirit trans woman in her mid-60s, recounted how her difficult encounters with social services had eventually inspired her to become an advocate and community educator to effect change in her local context, often against currents of ongoing stigma: [My past negative experiences with social services not] only set up the expectations for me but it also set up my understanding of what I need to do in society. That I needed to be that advocate. That I needed to be that voice … The unfortunate part is that there is [still] a lot of stigma, [but] those complexities … really kind of shaped me into the person that I needed to be to do the work that I do.
Indeed, participants frequently discussed the critical role that TGD older adults themselves have played in not only making healthcare and social services more responsive to TGD people of all age categories, but also in enhancing these systems of care for TGD older adults specifically. While some described pursuing such change with formal advocacy, others indicated putting pressure on systems by simply making themselves known to service providers as being part of a relevant client population and demanding appropriate, respectful care.
Closing Current Gaps: Ground-up Activities to Build Space for TGD Older Adults
Focus groups with TGD older adults, along with sessions involving service providers and community advocates, surfaced a broad range of ideas for strengthening the capacity of care systems to address the issues and needs of service users located at the intersection of aging and TGD identities. Most commonly, however, participants described the relevance of engaging TGD older adults in consultation and service provider education, the development of peer-based programming, and the use of community development initiatives to resource and fund appropriate systems of psychosocial support for this population. All of these interventions, at their core, appeared to be “ground-up” in that they involved working directly with TGD older adults to build care that would authentically represent their needs and interests. One TGD older adult, a white trans woman in her mid-50s, described her exceptionally positive experience with a peer-led program for queer and trans older adults (calling it her “second home”) to highlight the importance of such work: They listen first of all, and they try to really help, and they’re like part of the family right now and it’s – and actually the community center is sort of like a second home to me … So, I’m kind of learning slowly, and just being given the chance to, you know, tell them what’s really been going on with me. And they sit and they listen. And they have little strategy projects. It’s not like they would brush you away and just say, “Oh, come back next week and we’ll look after you”.
Some participants reflected on the complexities of facilitating “ground-up” change in certain contexts such as rural settings, where bringing TGD older adults together in a shared physical space would be challenging. However, some service providers, in particular, remarked on the promise of using technology—including videoconferencing or simply the use of the phone—to connect TGD older adults located in remote regions with one another. For example, one rurally located service provider in their late 20s, who described themself as an Inuit and Innu gender-diverse person, reflected on feedback they had received (in response to system gaps) to develop a phone line for trans older adults situated in a geographically large, but sparsely populated region of northern Canada: So yes, there’s a gap there where, you know, the feedback I received from [an older trans adult] was they would love to have even a line where there could be a peer on the other end, you know, a trans senior would be great.
Indeed, regardless of geographic context, participants across both categories of focus groups consistently recognized the importance of incorporating TGD older adults in every aspect of program design and execution in healthcare and social services intended to meet their needs.
Discussion
Our findings reveal that the historical context of structural oppression characterizing the lives of TGD older adults, together with ongoing (in)visible manifestations of precarity, and contemporary intersectional expressions of state and institutionally sanctioned forms of oppression, may be significant in constructing the experiences of this population across healthcare and social service settings in Canada. They also highlight the historical and ongoing resistance of TGD older adults in healthcare and social services, with some participants describing smaller-scale, interpersonal experiences of creating affirming spaces for themselves and their peers, and others recounting more public-facing forms of trans advocacy and service provider education. With respect to the needs of TGD older adults in systems of care, individuals across both participant categories consistently emphasized the need for ground-up activities, meaning those that are driven by community interests and engagement, to make healthcare and social services more responsive to the needs of those at the nexus of transness and aging.
Perhaps most critically, our work substantiates the profound historical impacts of structural oppression on TGD older adults’ expectations and actual experiences of healthcare and social services (Baril & Silverman, 2024; Knochel & Flunker, 2021; Pang et al., 2019; Silverman & Baril, 2023; Siverskog, 2014). Our study also draws attention to the remarkable expressions of resistance that typify TGD older adults’ engagement with such care systems, and draws attention to the need for approaches to healthcare and social services that build on the existing strengths and capacities of this population. For example, our work aligns with that of other scholars who have pointed out how TGD older adults—often by necessity—have developed creative interpersonal strategies to challenge stigma and discrimination rooted in cisnormativity, transphobia, ageism, and other systems of oppression (Baril & Silverman, 2024; Pang et al., 2019). Similarly, our findings align with those of others in foregrounding the important role that peer networks of TGD older adults have played in establishing communities of care and support that serve to attenuate the historical and ongoing impacts of institutionalized cisnormativity (Fabbre, 2014, 2015; Fabbre & Siverskog, 2019).
Our study enriches existing knowledge in the area of TGD aging and simultaneously contributes new insights. For example, although the precarity that TGD older adults face in domains such as housing (Pang et al., 2019), social support (Baril & Silverman, 2024; Knochel & Flunker, 2021; Pang et al., 2019; Siverskog, 2014), and healthcare and service provider knowledge specific to the needs of TGD older adults (Baril & Silverman, 2022, 2024; Knochel & Flunker, 2021; Siverskog, 2014) is well established, our findings deepen these understandings by revealing that the intersectionality of factors such as racism, ableism, and poverty can complicate the nature of precarity at the nexus of cisnormativity, transphobia, and ageism. For example, a service provider alluded to the context of neoliberal austerity as one that may most prominently affect TGD older adults affected by axes of oppression beyond cisnormativity, transphobia, and ageism, referring to this group as “canaries in the coal mine” for other TGD older adults. This latter point is particularly significant, given ongoing trends of austerity in the care of older adults (Grenier et al., 2020), which combine with troubling global trends in right-wing populism (Stein, 2023) to produce a frightening structural climate for multiply marginalized TGD older adults, particularly those without informal social supports they could incorporate as “buffers” against the need for institutionalized care (Baril & Silverman, 2024; Silverman & Baril, 2023). Indeed, our findings substantiate the importance of incorporating intersectional thinking to continue accounting for and refining understandings of how marginalized forms of invisibility and hypervisibility (Baril & Silverman, 2024) present in the lives TGD people as they age and, consistent with a critical gerontological lens (Doheny & Jones, 2021; Marshall & Bengtson, 2011), to consider what may be needed to rectify structural harms at marginalized intersections of the life course.
By virtue of its multi-party design, our study is rich in its implications for policy and practice. Most commonly, participants discussed the need for consulting TGD older adults in programming and service provider education, the relevance of peer-based care, and the importance of community development initiatives as “ground-up” activities to sustain systems of psychosocial support for this population. Given the alignment of these recommendations with existing empirical research (Fabbre & Siverskog, 2019; Silverman & Baril, 2023) and conceptual literature (Witten, 2014) in TGD aging, we believe these ideas should be prioritized as key policy and practice implications of our work. Specifically, we recommend community representatives, service providers, and policymakers work collaboratively to center TGD older adults themselves as decision-makers, consultants, and valued carers who hold the expertise and experience needed to improve knowledge of this population’s issues across healthcare and social service systems. TGD older adults are well qualified to lead programs of peer care and to develop communities of support and solidarity against threats of austerity and populism.
We would like to acknowledge a number of limitations. Accounts from trans men, as well as transmasculine and nonbinary people, along with racially minoritized participants, were underrepresented in our dataset. Accordingly, we call on researchers to challenge and expand on our work by contributing scholarship that addresses important gaps reflected in our study. Relatedly, given some of the rich insights we came across regarding the complexities of service provision for TGD older adults located in rural regions, we believe more research on the issues of this population in rural contexts is warranted. Notwithstanding these limitations, our work contributes to the growth of an area of aging research that we believe continues to be in its infancy and requires greater intersectional depth, and we hope our paper can catalyze contributions that strengthen this area. Indeed, given the austere and politically volatile conditions that affect TGD older adults, our work highlights the importance of continued growth in this literature.
Supplemental Material
Supplemental Material - “I Needed to be That Voice”: A Multi-party Study of the Healthcare and Social Service Experiences and Needs of Transgender and Gender-diverse Older Adults in Canada
Supplemental Material for “I Needed to be That Voice”: A Multi-party Study of the Healthcare and Social Service Experiences and Needs of Transgender and Gender-diverse Older Adults in Canada by Hannah Kia, Celeste Pang, Kaan Göncü, Brittany Jakubiec, Kinnon Ross MacKinnon, Ingrid Handlovsky, and Lori E. Ross in Journal of Applied Gerontology
Supplemental Material
Supplemental Material - “I Needed to be That Voice”: A Multi-party Study of the Healthcare and Social Service Experiences and Needs of Transgender and Gender-diverse Older Adults in Canada
Supplemental Material for “I Needed to be That Voice”: A Multi-party Study of the Healthcare and Social Service Experiences and Needs of Transgender and Gender-diverse Older Adults in Canada by Hannah Kia, Celeste Pang, Kaan Göncü, Brittany Jakubiec, Kinnon Ross MacKinnon, Ingrid Handlovsky, and Lori E. Ross in Journal of Applied Gerontology
Footnotes
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Hannah Kia, in partnership with Egale Canada, was awarded a Partnership Engage Grant by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) to conduct this study (892-2022-2002).
IRB Protocol
The study underwent review and approval by the University of British Columbia’s Behavioural Research Ethics Board (BREB) (H22-03749).
Supplemental Material
Supplemental material for this article is available online.
References
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