Contraceptive use among transgender men and gender diverse individuals in the United States: reasons for use, non-use, and methods used for pregnancy prevention
Obedin-Maliver J, Snow A, Ragosta S, Fix L, Hastings J, Lubensky M, Capriotti M, Dastur Z, Flentje A, Lunn M, Moseson H. Contraception. September 2024. DOI:10.1016/j.contraception.2024.110719
Objectives
To describe contraceptive use for pregnancy prevention among transgender men and gender diverse (TGD) individuals assigned female or intersex at birth (AFIAB) and explore whether contraceptive use differs by testosterone use.
Study Design
We analyzed data from a cross-sectional, online survey of N=1,694 TGD individuals AFIAB recruited in 2019 through a community-facing website and a national community-engaged cohort study of sexual and/or gender minority (SGM) adults in the US. Descriptive and regression analyses characterized the current and ever use of contraceptive methods for pregnancy prevention, stratified by testosterone use, and described reasons for contraceptive use/non-use.
Results
Most respondents (71.0%) had used contraception before with 49.4% using it for pregnancy prevention. The methods for pregnancy prevention that were most frequently ever used for pregnancy prevention included: external condoms (91.8%), combined hormonal contraceptive pills (63.0%), and withdrawal (45.9%). The methods most frequently currently used for pregnancy prevention included: external condoms (35.4%), hormonal IUD (24.8%), and abstinence (19.2%). Some reported formerly (n=55, 6.6%) or currently (n=30, 3.6%) relying on testosterone for pregnancy prevention. Only 4 of the 33 reasons for contraceptive use and non-use differed by testosterone use group. The most reported reasons for never using contraception were not engaging in penis-in-vagina sex (5.7%) or no sex with individuals who produce sperm (4.8%).
Conclusions
Most TGD individuals AFIAB have used contraception, and almost half for pregnancy prevention. The most used methods require minimal and/or non-invasive healthcare system interaction. Some respondents relied on testosterone as birth control, despite a lack of efficacy evidence.