# The Relationship Between Anti-Transgender Experiences (A Proxy for Minority Stress) and Heavy Alcohol Use Among Transgender Adults

**Authors:** Hugh Klein, Thomas Alex Washington

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/bs15030248 · Behavioral Sciences · 2025-02-21

## TL;DR

This study finds that transgender adults who face more anti-transgender experiences are more likely to become heavy drinkers.

## Contribution

The study establishes a robust link between anti-transgender experiences and heavy alcohol use, controlling for confounding factors.

## Key findings

- 13.8% of participants met criteria for heavy drinking, with higher anti-transgender experiences correlating with increased likelihood.
- Multivariate analyses confirmed the relationship remains significant after controlling for other factors.

## Abstract

Purpose: Although several studies have shown a relationship between anti-transgender experiences and binge drinking and/or hazardous drinking, very little research has examined how these experiences relate to heavy drinking. That is the focus of this study. Methods: This paper uses data from the 2015 National Transgender Survey, and is based on a sample of 17,367 transgender adults residing in the United States. Analyses compare three groups: current “regular” drinkers (drank at least some alcohol during the previous month but no days consuming five or more drinks) (n = 10,496), binge drinkers (consumption of five or more drinks on at least one occasion during the previous month) (n = 4977), and heavy drinkers (five or more drinks per day on five or more days during the previous month) (n = 1894). The paper focuses on how anti-transgender experiences with harassment, discrimination, and/or violence (a 20-item scale measure, Cronbach’s alpha = 0.76) are related to people’s classification as current drinkers versus binge drinkers versus heavy drinkers. Results: 13.8% of the participants met the criteria for heavy drinking; 26.4% more were classified as binge drinkers. The more anti-transgender experiences people had, the more likely they were to engage in heavy drinking. Multivariate analyses revealed that this relationship was a robust one, holding up even when numerous other potentially confounding control measures were included in the analyses. Conclusions: Anti-transgender experiences are a strong predictor of heavy drinking. This type of minority stressor is an important consideration when understanding what leads many transgender individuals to become heavy drinkers.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Heavy (MESH:D008595)
- **Chemicals:** Alcohol (MESH:D000438)

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11939331/full.md

## References

65 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11939331/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11939331