Social relationship experiences of transgender people and their relational partners: A meta-synthesis
Lewis, T; Doyle, DM; Barreto, M; et al.Jackson, D
Date: 17 June 2021
Journal
Social Science and Medicine
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Rationale: Social relationships are important in bolstering health and well-being for
everyone in the general population. For transgender people, strong supportive social
relationships may be paramount to their overall health and well-being due to their
marginalised status in society.
Objective: This review aimed to investigate ...
Rationale: Social relationships are important in bolstering health and well-being for
everyone in the general population. For transgender people, strong supportive social
relationships may be paramount to their overall health and well-being due to their
marginalised status in society.
Objective: This review aimed to investigate what is currently known about social
relationship experiences of transgender people and their relational partners (e.g., family
members, romantic partners).
Method: Thirty-nine qualitative papers were extracted from Web of Science, Scopus,
Cochrane, and PubMed that related to social relationships of transgender people. These
papers were analysed via a qualitative meta-synthesis.
Results: Forty-nine second order themes were identified, initially organised into
relational partner clusters (e.g., family, friends, work colleagues) for specific phenomena,
then these were synthesized into five overarching conceptual themes: (1) Development of
relationships through transition and beyond, (2) Coping strategies of transgender people and
their relational partners, (3) Reciprocal support in social relationships, (4) Stigma enacted
and ameliorated interpersonally, and (5) Influence of stigma on social health and well-being.
Discussion and conclusions: These overarching themes show the potential
characteristics that assist in the health-buffering role of social relationships for transgender
people and their relational partners. Of particular note, stigma was reported as a common
negative experience by transgender people and their relational partners, and open
communicative social relationships had positive effects on self-conceptualisations of identity,
which were inferred to protect against the damaging effects of stigma. We discuss the various
implications and applications of this meta-synthesis to future research and clinical settings as
well as how it can inform healthcare policy to support transgender people.
Psychology - old structure
Collections of Former Colleges
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).