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Study examines factors linked to nonprescription hormone use among transgender women

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Study examines factors linked to nonprescription hormone use among transgender women
Photo by Dmytro Vynohradov / Unsplash

A recent surveillance report examined factors related to nonprescription hormone use among transgender women. The study was conducted in seven urban areas across the United States. It looked at demographic information, healthcare access, and economic factors that might be connected to this practice. The goal was to better understand the circumstances surrounding hormone use outside of formal medical care.

The report did not include specific findings about how many people use nonprescription hormones or what health outcomes they experienced. No safety information, side effects, or health risks were reported in this summary. The study was observational, meaning it collected information but did not test or compare treatments.

Because this is a surveillance report without published results, readers should be cautious about drawing conclusions. The report does not provide evidence about whether nonprescription hormone use is safe or effective. It also cannot tell us what causes people to use hormones without a prescription. The main value of this type of report is to help researchers understand what questions need further study through more complete research.

What this means for you:
A report examined factors linked to nonprescription hormone use, but did not publish findings about safety or how common it is.
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