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"脂肪断骨综合征": 在 LGBTQ 医疗保健中协商风险、污名和体重偏见。

"Fat broken arm syndrome": Negotiating risk, stigma, and weight bias in LGBTQ healthcare.

机构信息

HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies, Division of Gender, Sexuality, and Health, Columbia University and New York State Psychiatric Institute, 722 W 168th Street, Office R342, New York, NY, 10032, USA.

出版信息

Soc Sci Med. 2021 Feb;270:113609. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113609. Epub 2020 Dec 14.

Abstract

In the U.S., the weight of LGBTQ people-and sexual minority women in particular-is a key focus for those addressing sexual and gender minority health disparities. Sociomedical stigma related to both fat and sexuality, however, complicates patient-provider perceptions and discussions about weight and health. I analyzed data from interviews with LGBTQ patients, healthcare employees, and observations at a LGBTQ healthcare organization to reveal how weight bias becomes a barrier to care for LBQ cisgender women, transgender men, and nonbinary people assigned female. Understood by patients as similar to "trans broken arm syndrome,"-wherein providers attribute health concerns of trans people to minority gender identities and gender affirming care-patients report "fat broken arm syndrome," wherein providers are perceived to attribute patient health concerns to weight. Patients interpret weight bias as intersectional stigma-related to multiple marginalized identities and embodiments-that puts their health at risk. Healthcare professionals make sense of risk, however, through competing fat frames. Although patient narratives suggest the promise of utilizing stigma-reduction approaches, many providers-typically those who do not share patient standpoints-emphasize the importance of framing fat as an urgent health risk in order to "do no harm." This case advances knowledge by demonstrating the relational process through which interventions designed to ameliorate health disparities may inadvertently discourage marginalized, "at-risk" patients from healthcare access and adherence.

摘要

在美国,关注性少数群体和跨性别女性等 LGBTQ 人群的体重问题,是解决性与性别少数群体健康差异的关键。然而,与肥胖和性相关的社会医学污名,使医患双方对体重和健康的看法和讨论变得复杂。我分析了来自 LGBTQ 患者、医疗保健员工的访谈数据以及在 LGBTQ 医疗保健组织的观察结果,揭示了体重偏见如何成为阻碍 LBQC 顺性别女性、跨性别男性和被指定为女性的非二元性别人群获得护理的障碍。患者将这种偏见理解为类似于“跨性别人士断臂综合征”——提供者将跨性别人士的健康问题归因于少数性别认同和性别肯定护理——患者报告“肥胖断臂综合征”,提供者被认为将患者的健康问题归因于体重。患者将体重偏见解释为与多个边缘化身份和体现相关的交叉污名,这使他们的健康处于危险之中。然而,医疗保健专业人员通过竞争的肥胖框架来理解风险。尽管患者的叙述表明利用减少污名的方法具有一定的前景,但许多提供者——通常是那些不认同患者观点的人——强调将肥胖视为紧急健康风险的重要性,以“不造成伤害”。这一案例通过展示旨在缓解健康差异的干预措施可能无意中阻碍边缘化的“高危”患者获得医疗保健和坚持治疗的关系过程,推进了相关知识的发展。

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