U.S. transgender people harassed in
public restrooms: landmark survey
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[December 08, 2016]
By Daniel Trotta
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Almost 60 percent of
transgender Americans have avoided using public restrooms for fear of
confrontation, saying they have been harassed and assaulted, according
to the largest survey taken of transgender people in the United States.
The survey of 27,715 respondents reached an estimated 2 percent of the
adult transgender population in 2015, seeking to fill a gap in data
about a severely understudied group whose experiences and challenges
from medicine to law to economics and family relations are poorly
understood.
The findings by the National Center for Transgender Equality on public
restrooms counter the message of mainly conservative politicians and
religious leaders that transgender people are the antagonists preying on
others. It found that 12 percent of transgender people were verbally
harassed in public restrooms within the previous year, 1 percent were
physically attacked and 1 percent were sexually assaulted. Nine percent
said someone denied them access to a bathroom.
To view the survey, click http://tmsnrt.rs/2gmGxsP
Besides the restroom data, the survey turned up new findings, including
that 29 percent of transgender people were living in poverty compared to
14 percent for the U.S. population at large, and that 39 percent
experienced serious psychological distress within the previous month,
nearly eight times the rate for the general population.
Other results reinforced previous findings, for example, showing that 40
percent have attempted suicide in their lifetimes compared with 5
percent for the U.S. population, and 7 seven percent attempted suicide
in the previous year, nearly 12 times the rate for the U.S. population.
The survey was taken before the passage of North Carolina's House Bill
2, which forces transgender people to use the public restroom
corresponding to their gender assigned at birth rather than the one
matching their gender identity. Supporters of the law such as North
Carolina Governor Pat McCrory said it was necessary to protect children
and preserve traditional values.
Backlash to the law, including boycotts by entertainers and sports
organizations who called it hateful and discriminatory, has been widely
cited as a reason Republican McCrory lost in the Nov. 8 election to
Democrat Roy Cooper, who opposed the bill.
Thirty-two percent of transgender people said they limited the amount
they ate or drank at least once in the previous year so they did not
need to use a public restroom. Eight percent reported having a kidney or
urinary tract infection, or another kidney-related medical issue,
because they avoided restrooms.
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A gender-neutral bathroom is seen at the University of California,
Irvine in Irvine, California September 30, 2014. REUTERS/Lucy
Nicholson
"Trans people have been in danger in the bathrooms. These numbers
are just astronomically high. This is what's really happening in
bathrooms. The nonsense of what Governor McCrory was saying is not
what's happening in bathrooms," said Mara Keisling, director of the
National Center for Transgender Equality.
Beyond the immediate impact of contributing to the political debate,
the study dubbed the U.S. Transgender Survey will also provide a
data set to satisfy researchers for years to come, the center's
experts said.
Researchers have been forced to rely on the National Transgender
Discrimination Survey taken in 2008 and 2009 and published in 2011.
For years, that survey has been the only one of its kind, and
academics have been repeatedly picking through its findings because
there were few other resources available.
Unlike the old survey, the new one was tailored to match other
national surveys, enabling like-for-like comparisons to the
population at large on issues such as poverty rates or psychological
distress.
While many results cannot be directly compared to the previous one,
they do reach many of the same conclusions: that transgender people
are among the most marginalized. They are subject to discrimination
in employment, housing and public accommodation while being targeted
for violence by police, family and strangers.
"The findings reveal disturbing patterns of mistreatment and
discrimination and startling disparities between transgender people
in the survey and the U.S. population when it comes to the most
basic elements of life, such as finding a job, having a place to
live, accessing medical care, and enjoying the support of family and
community," the survey's summary said.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; editing by Grant McCool)
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