Arthur Sophie, Jamieson Abigail, Cross Harry, Nambiar Kate, Llewellyn Carrie D
Department of Primary Care and Public Health, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, Watson Building, Village Way, Falmer Campus, Brighton, BN1 9PH, UK.
Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust, Eastern Road, Brighton, BN2 5BE, UK.
BMC Med Educ. 2021 Jan 14;21(1):56. doi: 10.1186/s12909-020-02409-6.
Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) patients have an increased incidence of a range of health problems, and face many barriers to accessing healthcare. Our research aimed to explore the awareness of health issues and attitudes of medical students towards LGBT patients' health including barriers to health services, their attitudes towards inclusion of LGBT content in the curriculum and their confidence with providing care for their LGBT patients in the future.
Medical students were recruited to take part in a cross-sectional survey. We used a 28-item survey to explore views about the undergraduate medical curriculum.
252 surveys were analysed from 776 eligible participants. Attitudes towards LGBT patients were positive but awareness and confidence with respect to LGBT patients were variable. Confidence discussing sexual orientation with a patient significantly increased with year of study but confidence discussing patient gender identity did not. The majority of participants (n = 160; 69%) had not received specific training on LGBT health needs, and 85% (n = 197) wanted to receive more training.
Increasing the amount of LGBT teaching in undergraduate medical curricula could help to increase the quality of doctor-patient interactions, to facilitate patients' disclosure of sexual orientation and gender identity in healthcare and increase the quality of healthcare.
女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋和跨性别(LGBT)患者出现一系列健康问题的发生率更高,并且在获得医疗保健方面面临诸多障碍。我们的研究旨在探讨医学生对LGBT患者健康问题的认知以及态度,包括获得医疗服务的障碍、他们对在课程中纳入LGBT内容的态度,以及他们未来为LGBT患者提供护理的信心。
招募医学生参与一项横断面调查。我们使用一份包含28个条目的调查问卷来探究对本科医学课程的看法。
从776名符合条件的参与者中分析了252份调查问卷。对LGBT患者的态度是积极的,但对LGBT患者的认知和信心存在差异。与患者讨论性取向的信心随学习年份显著增加,但讨论患者性别认同的信心则不然。大多数参与者(n = 160;69%)未接受过关于LGBT健康需求的专门培训,85%(n = 197)希望接受更多培训。
增加本科医学课程中LGBT教学的数量有助于提高医患互动质量,促进患者在医疗保健中披露性取向和性别认同,并提高医疗保健质量。