Currier Glenn W, Brown Gregory, Walsh Patrick G, Jager-Hyman Shari, Chaudhury Sadia, Stanley Barbara
University of Rochester Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry, Rochester, New York ; University of Rochester Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Rochester, New York.
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
West J Emerg Med. 2015 Jan;16(1):80-4. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2014.12.22254. Epub 2015 Jan 6.
Our goal was to explore whether emergency department (ED) patients would disclose their sexual orientation in a research evaluation and to examine demographic and clinical characteristics of patients by self-identified sexual orientation.
Participants (n=177) presented for psychiatric treatment at three urban EDs in New York City, Rochester, NY, and Philadelphia, PA. Participants were interviewed in the context of a larger study of a standardized suicide risk assessment. We assessed participants' willingness to answer questions regarding sexual orientation along three dimensions: a self-description of sexual orientation, a self-description of sexual attraction, and the gender of any prior sexual partners.
No participants (0/177) refused to respond to the categorical question about sexual orientation, 168/177 (94.9%) agreed to provide information about prior sexual partners, and 100/109 (91.7%) provided information about current sexual attraction toward either gender. Of all 177 participants, 154 (87.0%) self-identified as heterosexual, 11 (6.2%) as bisexual, 10 (5.6%) as gay or lesbian, and 2 (1.1%) indicated they were not sure. As compared with heterosexual patients, lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) patients were significantly younger and more likely to be non-white, but did not differ significantly in terms of education, income, employment, or religious affiliation or participation. Further, LGB participants did not differ from self-identified heterosexual participants for lifetime suicide attempt rate or lifetime history of any mood, substance-related, psychotic spectrum, or other Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition (DSM-IV) Axis I disorder. Of self-identified heterosexual participants 5.6% (5/89) reported sexual attraction as other than 'only opposite sex,' and 10.3% (15/142) of sexually active 'heterosexual' participants reported previous same-gender sexual partners.
Assessing patients' sexual orientation in the ED by a three-question approach appeared feasible in the ED and acceptable to ED patients. However, since many patients have sexual experiences not suggested by simple labels, self-report of sexual identity alone may not inform clinicians of health risks inherent in same or opposite gender sexual contact.
我们的目标是探究急诊科(ED)患者在研究评估中是否会披露其性取向,并按自我认定的性取向检查患者的人口统计学和临床特征。
参与者(n = 177)在纽约市、纽约州罗切斯特市和宾夕法尼亚州费城的三个城市急诊科接受精神科治疗。参与者是在一项关于标准化自杀风险评估的更大规模研究中接受访谈的。我们从三个维度评估参与者回答有关性取向问题的意愿:性取向的自我描述、性吸引力的自我描述以及任何先前性伴侣的性别。
没有参与者(0/177)拒绝回答关于性取向的分类问题,168/177(94.9%)同意提供有关先前性伴侣的信息,100/109(91.7%)提供了有关当前对任一性别的性吸引力的信息。在所有177名参与者中,154人(87.0%)自我认定为异性恋,11人(6.2%)为双性恋,10人(5.6%)为同性恋,2人(1.1%)表示不确定。与异性恋患者相比,女同性恋、男同性恋和双性恋(LGB)患者明显更年轻,更可能是非白人,但在教育程度、收入、就业、宗教归属或参与方面没有显著差异。此外,LGB参与者在终身自杀未遂率或任何情绪、物质相关、精神病谱系或其他《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第4版(DSM-IV)轴I障碍的终身病史方面与自我认定的异性恋参与者没有差异。在自我认定的异性恋参与者中,5.6%(5/89)报告性吸引力并非“仅对异性”,在有性活动的“异性恋”参与者中,10.3%(15/142)报告有过同性性伴侣。
通过三个问题的方法在急诊科评估患者的性取向似乎是可行的,并且急诊科患者可以接受。然而,由于许多患者有简单标签所未表明的性经历,仅靠性身份的自我报告可能无法让临床医生了解同性或异性性接触中固有的健康风险。