PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Increase in the number of people identifying as transgender in the UK

Peer reviewed | Observational study | People

2023-11-29
(Press-News.org) The number of people identifying as transgender in their GP records in the UK has increased between 2000 and 2018, finds a new study led by UCL researchers.

The research, published in BMJ Medicine, is the first large-scale study in the UK to estimate the number of people whose gender identity is different to their sex assigned at birth.

To do this, the team reviewed anonymised data from 7 million individuals aged 10 to 99 years, from IQVIA Medical Research Data, a UK primary care database, between 2000 and 2018.

Researchers looked for diagnostic codes that suggested patients had spoken to their GP about gender dysphoria (a state of stress or unhappiness that one’s gender does not match their sex at birth).

They found that overall, the number of people whose records suggested they were transgender was very low. However, there was nevertheless an increase over the last two decades – rising from about one in 15,000 in 2000, to just over one in 2,500 in 2018.

The number of individuals with a health record of being transgender increased in all age groups.

Rates were highest amongst people aged 16 to 29. In 2018, around one in every 2,200 people aged 16 to 29 were recorded as transgender.

Leader author, Dr Doug McKechnie (UCL Institute of Epidemiology & Health) said: “The number of people who identify as transgender in electronic primary care health records is small but has increased over time. We do not know why this is the case, but it may be that more transgender people are coming forward to seek relevant care.

“Primary care is often the first point of contact for people with gender dysphoria, but medical treatment is typically initiated by a gender specialist following a detailed assessment. Waiting times for NHS gender identity clinics are long and can run to several years.

“More specialist gender services need to be commissioned to provide care for the growing number of transgender people seeking treatment.”

The research found that people who identified as transgender were more likely to live in areas of high deprivation. Rates were approximately two-and-a-half times higher in the most deprived areas than the least deprived areas.

Dr McKechnie said: “We do not know why more individuals from deprived areas had a transgender code in their records, and if this really means that there are more transgender people in those areas, or if they are simply more likely to be recorded as such in the NHS GP records.

“Transgender people face stigma and discrimination in society, potentially leading to exclusion from employment, education, and family support, which might make them more likely to move to deprived areas. Some areas might also be more ‘trans friendly’ than others.

“Another possibility is that transgender people in affluent areas were more likely to access specialist gender care privately, bypassing their GP and the long NHS gender clinic waiting list entirely.”

The most recent data used in the study is from 2018. Therefore, researchers estimate that the rates of transgender identity in primary care will have changed – and likely increased – in the years since.

Dr McKechnie is supported by funding from the National Institute of Health and Care Research (NIHR).

Study limitations

The main limitation of the study is that it relies on the coding of transgender identity in clinical records.

These codes depend on the person contacting their GP in the first instance.

They also do not fully capture the range of gender identities (such as non-binary or genderqueer identities) and contain various terms that are now outdated or misapplied.

Therefore, the study likely underestimates the true proportion of people with transgender identities in the population.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Flower power on Indian farms helps bees and boosts livelihoods

Flower power on Indian farms helps bees and boosts livelihoods
2023-11-29
Planting flowers beside food crops on farms in India attracts bees, boosts pollination and improves crop yield and quality, researchers have found. The research, the first Indian study of its kind, is published today (Monday, 28 November) in the Journal of Applied Ecology and was carried out in South India by ecologists from the University of Reading, UK, and the M S Swaminathan Research Foundation, India. The scientists focused on the Moringa crop, a nutrient-rich "superfood," and its essential pollinators – bees.  By planting companion marigold flowers and ...

Historical violence in Tasmania: Victorian collector traded human Aboriginal remains for scientific accolades, study reveals

Historical violence in Tasmania: Victorian collector traded human Aboriginal remains for scientific accolades, study reveals
2023-11-29
A Hobart-based solicitor built his reputation as “the foremost scientist in the colony” in the mid-1800’s, despite limited contributions to scientific knowledge. Morton Allport achieved his status by obtaining the bodily remains of Tasmanian Aboriginal people and Tasmanian tigers, also known as thylacines, and sending them to collectors in Europe – specifically asking for scientific accolades in return. This took place in the context of a genocide against the Tasmanian Aboriginal peoples, and persecution of the thylacine that eventually led to its extinction. The new research by Jack Ashby, Assistant Director of the University Museum of Zoology, Cambridge, ...

Network of robots can successfully monitor pipes using acoustic wave sensors

Network of robots can successfully monitor pipes using acoustic wave sensors
2023-11-29
An inspection design method and procedure by which mobile robots can inspect large pipe structures has been demonstrated with the successful inspection of multiple defects on a three-meter long steel pipe using guided acoustic wave sensors. The University of Bristol team, led by Professor Bruce Drinkwater and Professor Anthony Croxford,  developed approach was used to review a long steel pipe with multiple defects, including circular holes with different sizes, a crack-like defect and pits, through a designed inspection path to achieve 100% detection coverage for a defined reference defect. In the study, published today in NDT and E International, ...

How do you make a robot smarter? Program it to know what it doesn’t know

How do you make a robot smarter? Program it to know what it doesn’t know
2023-11-29
Modern robots know how to sense their environment and respond to language, but what they don’t know is often more important than what they do know. Teaching robots to ask for help is key to making them safer and more efficient. Engineers at Princeton University and Google have come up with a new way to teach robots to know when they don’t know. The technique involves quantifying the fuzziness of human language and using that measurement to tell robots when to ask for further directions. Telling a robot to pick ...

Researchers working to develop next-generation polymer membranes for sustainable materials science

Researchers working to develop next-generation polymer membranes for sustainable materials science
2023-11-28
Michele Galizia, a President’s Associates Presidential Professor in the School of Sustainable Chemical, Biological and Materials Engineering at the University of Oklahoma, is leading a research team that recently received a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy that will develop improved polymer membranes to advance molecular separation and related materials science. “We currently separate chemicals, gases and liquids using a thermal-based distillation technology that is very expensive to operate and consumes the equivalent of eight GJ of electricity per person on the planet per year,” ...

Researchers have applied the theory of semantic information to a realistic model capturing attributes of living systems—and found the critical point where information matters for survival

Researchers have applied the theory of semantic information to a realistic model capturing attributes of living systems—and found the critical point where information matters for survival
2023-11-28
Living systems—unlike non-living or inanimate objects—use information about their surrounding environment to survive. But not all information from the environment is meaningful or relevant for survival. The subset of information that is meaningful, and perhaps necessary for being alive, is called semantic information. In a new paper published in PRX Life, University of Rochester physicists and their coauthors have, for the first time, applied this theory of semantic information to a well-known ...

Growing microtumors in a dish helps rapidly identify genes that drive tumor growth

2023-11-28
Researchers have identified a new way to screen genes that cause several different types of cancers to grow, identifying particularly promising targets for precision oncology in oral and esophageal squamous cancers.  The study, published in this month’s issue of Cell Reports, used 3-dimensional models of organ tissues called organoids to identify and test potential gene targets from The Cancer Genome Atlas. “There’s a tremendous amount of data in The Cancer Genome Atlas, ...

New research compares five retinoids for anti-photoaging therapy

2023-11-28
Over the past decades, increasing evidences have demonstrated that five retinoids, including retinol (ROL), retinol acetate (RAc), retinol propionate (RP), retinol palmitate (RPalm), and hydroxypinacolone retinoate (HPR), can be potential therapeutic agents for skin photoaging. However, therapeutic efficacies and biosafety have never been compared to these compounds. This study aimed to determine the optimal retinoid type(s) for anti-photoaging therapy both in vitro and in vivo. The data demonstrated that four retinoids (RPalm, RP, HPR and ROL) but not RAc were effective for anti-photoaging treatment at 5 μg/mL in vitro, with action mechanisms associated with antioxidative, ...

Can health, lifestyle changes protect elders from Alzheimer's?

2023-11-28
As more medications move toward federal approval for Alzheimer’s disease, a new study led by researchers at UC San Francisco and Kaiser Permanente Washington has found that personalized health and lifestyle changes can delay or even prevent memory loss for higher-risk older adults.  The two-year study compared cognitive scores, risk factors and quality of life among 172 participants, of whom half had received personalized coaching to improve their health and lifestyle in areas believed to raise the risk of Alzheimer’s, such as uncontrolled diabetes and physical inactivity. These participants were ...

Millions of kids in U.S. have inadequate health care coverage

2023-11-28
November 28, 2023-- Inadequate health coverage is a particular problem for commercially insured children, according to a new study released by Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. The research shows that coverage gaps are affecting publicly insured children as well. Until now, prior research had focused on documenting rates and trends in insurance consistency for children covered by all insurance types. The findings are published in JAMA Health Forum. “While uninsurance among children has generally been declining in the U.S., our results highlight the need for a renewed focus on making sure that children’s ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Norbert Holtkamp appointed director of Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory

New agentic AI platform accelerates advanced optics design

Biologists discover neurons use physical signals — not electricity — to stabilize communication

Researchers discover that a hormone can access the brain by hitchhiking

University of Oklahoma researcher awarded funding to pursue AI-powered material design

Exploring how the visual system recovers following injury

Support for parents with infants at pediatric check-ups leads to better reading and math skills in elementary school

Kids’ behavioral health is a growing share of family health costs

Day & night: Cancer disrupts the brain’s natural rhythm

COVID-19 vaccination significantly reduces risk to pregnant women and baby

The role of vaccination in maternal and perinatal outcomes associated with COVID-19 in pregnancy

Mayo Clinic smartwatch system helps parents shorten and defuse children's severe tantrums early

Behavioral health spending spikes to 40% of all children’s health expenditures, nearly doubling in a decade

Digital cognitive behavioral treatment for generalized anxiety disorder

Expenditures for pediatric behavioral health care over time and estimated family financial burden

Air conditioning in nursing homes and mortality during extreme heat

The Alps to lose a record number of glaciers in the next decade

What makes a good proton conductor?

New science reporting guide published for journalists in Bulgaria

New international study reveals major survival gaps among children with cancer

New science reporting guide published for journalists in Turkey

Scientists develop a smarter mRNA therapy that knows which cells to target

Neuroanatomy-informed brain–machine hybrid intelligence for robust acoustic target detection

Eight SwRI hydrogen projects funded by ENERGYWERX

The Lundquist Institute and its start-up company Vitalex Biosciences Announces Strategic Advancement of Second-Generation fungal Vaccine VXV-01 through Phase 1 Trials under $40 Million Competitive Con

Fine particles in pollution are associated with early signs of autoimmune disease

Review article | Towards a Global Ground-Based Earth Observatory (GGBEO): Leveraging existing systems and networks

Penn and UMich create world’s smallest programmable, autonomous robots

Cleveland researchers launch first major study to address ‘hidden performance killer’ in athletes

To connect across politics, try saying what you oppose

[Press-News.org] Increase in the number of people identifying as transgender in the UK
Peer reviewed | Observational study | People