Skip to Main Content
School of Public Health

​
  • Admissions
  • Research
  • Education
  • Practice
​
Search
  • Newsroom
    • School News
    • SPH This Week Newsletter
    • SPH in the Media
    • SPH This Year Magazine
    • News Categories
    • Contact Us
  • Research
    • Centers and Groups
  • Academic Departments
    • Biostatistics
    • Community Health Sciences
    • Environmental Health
    • Epidemiology
    • Global Health
    • Health Law, Policy & Management
  • Education
    • Degrees & Programs
    • Public Health Writing
    • Workforce Development Training Centers
    • Partnerships
    • Apply Now
  • Admissions
    • Applying to BUSPH
    • Request Information
    • Degrees and Programs
    • Why Study at BUSPH?
    • Tuition and Funding
    • SPH by the Numbers
    • Events and Campus Visits
    • Admissions Team
    • Student Ambassadors
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Events
    • Public Health Conversations
    • Full Events Calendar
    • Alumni and Friends Events
    • Commencement Ceremony
    • SPH Awards
  • Practice
    • Activist Lab
  • Careers & Practicum
    • For Students
    • For Employers
    • For Faculty & Staff
    • For Alumni
    • Graduate Employment & Practicum Data
  • Public Health Post
    • Public Health Post Fellowship
  • About
    • SPH at a Glance
    • Advisory Committees
    • Strategy Map
    • Senior Leadership
    • Accreditation
    • Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Justice
    • Directory
    • Contact SPH
  • Support SPH
    • Big Ideas: Strategic Directions
    • Faculty Research and Development
    • Future of Public Health Fund
    • Generation Health
    • idea hub
    • Public Health Conversations
    • Public Health Post
    • Student Scholarship
    • How to Give
    • Contact Development and Alumni Relations
  • Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Directory
Read More News
Featured

Hospitalized Patients Who Receive Alcohol Use Disorder Treatment Can Substantially Reduce Heavy Drinking

2025 Legislative briefing of faculty with state senators and representatives
Featured

SPH Faculty Brief Massachusetts Legislators on State’s Public Health Priorities

Transgender Patients, Bisexual Women Less Likely to Have Mammograms.

November 2, 2015
Twitter Facebook

Transgender patients are less likely than cisgender (or non-transgender) women to adhere to mammography screening guidelines, and bisexual women are less likely than heterosexuals or lesbians to utilize mammography, a study led by a School of Public Health researcher shows.

In the study, published online in the American Journal of Public Health, Angela Robertson Bazzi, assistant professor of community health sciences, and co-authors found that among 1,263 patients at an urban community health center in Boston, male-to-female trans women and preoperative trans men (those who had not undergone gender affirmation surgery) were about half as likely as cisgender women to adhere to mammography guidelines. The finding “is of particular concern for trans men without bilateral mastectomy who remain at risk for breast cancer,” the authors said.

Recommendations for trans women are less clear, but some experts recommend that this group follow the same mammography guidelines as cisgender women, particularly if they are older than 50 and have used estrogen for five years or more.

The finding that bisexual women were less likely than heterosexual women or lesbians to get mammograms points to a need to better understand cancer disparities relating to sexual orientation, the researchers said. Elevated rates of breast cancer among sexual minority women have been reported and are not fully explained by differences in insurance coverage, they noted.

“The specifics of breast cancer screening continue to be clarified, as evidenced by recent changes in the American Cancer Society’s mammography screening recommendations,” Bazzi said. “Regardless of the exact guidelines followed, it is important to understand mammography utilization among sexual and gender minority populations. Additional investigation is needed to elucidate why mammography services are underutilized in these populations.”

Overall, 72 percent of the study population, ages 40 to 67, adhered to mammography screening guidelines. Data were collected from 2012 through 2013—before the release of the new American Cancer Society recommendations.

Besides Bazzi, authors on the study were Debra Whorms, Dana King, and Jennifer Potter, all of Fenway Health.

—Lisa Chedekel

Explore Related Topics:

  • Community Health Sciences
  • LGBT health
  • mammography
  • Share this story

Share

Transgender Patients, Bisexual Women Less Likely to Have Mammograms

  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Print
  • More
  • Twitter

More about SPH

Sign up for our newsletter

Get the latest from Boston University School of Public Health

Subscribe

Also See

  • About
  • Newsroom
  • Contact
  • Support SPH

Resources

  • Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Directory
  • Boston University School of Public Health
  • 715 Albany Street, Boston, MA 02118
  • © 2021 Trustees of Boston University
  • DMCA
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
© Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
Boston University Masterplate
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.