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Clinical Trial Summary

This study seeks to explore the effects for transgender people undergoing surgical interventions of participating in pre/post-surgical therapeutic support groups in order to assess the value of adding these programs to hospital systems that are offering gender-affirming surgeries. Participation in either therapeutic support group is expected to increase subjective well-being, increase perceived social support, and decrease clinically significant mental health symptoms compared to participants' baseline scores. It is expected that perceived social support will mediate the relation between group participation and improved subject well-being and mental health scores. In addition, participation in the post-surgical therapeutic support group is expected to reduce the average number of emergency department visits for participants in the group compared with transgender patients, post-gender-affirming surgery, in the hospital as a whole.


Clinical Trial Description

At present, in the scientific literature, there are no known studies of the effectiveness of therapeutic support groups for supporting mental and physical health in transgender or gender nonconforming (TGNC)-identified individuals who are undergoing gender-affirming surgical interventions. Gender affirmation surgeries have been shown to decrease anxiety and depression, and increase well-being for TGNC individuals compared to the well-being of TGNC individuals who do not access surgery. In spite of this, surgery is inherently stressful for people undergoing it, and there are a plethora of medical and psychological complications that may be faced by people undergoing these surgeries. Denver Health has greatly expanded gender-affirming interventions in the past three years due to the creation of the Center of Excellence; however, mental health services are still catching up. While support from other TGNC individuals has proven to be effective in general for reducing anxiety and depression, and community support groups have begun to be offered more regularly to support TGNC individuals, surgical support groups appear to largely not be offered. However, a high proportion of TGNC individuals express a desire for post-surgical support around surgery results (84.6% in a sample of 415 people), and over 90% of people are in favor of peer support around medical interventions more broadly. In other areas, specifically bariatric surgery, peer therapeutic support groups have been found to help with continued post-operative weight loss and mental health, likely due to the additional opportunities for support and connection with others undergoing similar things, group provision of ideas, and additional therapeutic support. While individual therapy is, and should continue to be, offered for this population, the addition of a group attended by individuals going through similar situations is likely to be helpful above and beyond individual therapy due to the provision of peer support, as well as the opportunity for participants to offer support to their peers. Seeing oneself as a help provider, rather than simply a help recipient (helper-therapy principle) has been demonstrated to have a powerful impact on the helper's own well-being across a host of medical and psychological situations. Currently, therapeutic support groups are being developed to be offered to TGNC patients at Denver Health who are undergoing gender-affirming surgeries. Investigators will systematically collect data on well-being and mental health, as well as the mediating effect of feelings of cohesion on well-being, as well as the number of emergency department visits for participants in the groups as compared to the average number of emergency department visits across all TGNC patients in the Denver Health system for patients involved in these groups. Given the deficit of groups of this nature, as well as information on the helpfulness of therapeutic support groups for people undergoing gender-affirming surgeries, the investigators expect that this may be the first study on this topic. The study hypothesis is that participants in pre- and post-surgical support groups will experience increased well-being and mental health over a six month period, and that these increases will be mediated by group cohesion. Investigators also expect that attendance at these groups will lead to lower utilization of emergency services due to decreased anxiety and distress. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04217707
Study type Interventional
Source Denver Health and Hospital Authority
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase N/A
Start date January 2023
Completion date December 2023