Guerrero-Hall Karla Daniela, Muscanell Rebecca, Garg Namrata, Romero Iris L, Chor Julie
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, The University of Chicago, 5841 South Maryland Avenue MC 2050, Chicago, IL 60637 USA.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT USA.
Med Sci Educ. 2021 Feb 23;31(2):599-606. doi: 10.1007/s40670-021-01227-9. eCollection 2021 Apr.
To assess obstetrician-gynecologist (Ob/Gyn) resident experiences with and preferences for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) healthcare training.
A cross-sectional, web-based survey was deployed to residents from accredited Illinois Ob/Gyn training programs. The survey included 32 questions on resident demographics, LGBTQ training, and self-perceived preparedness in providing LGBTQ patient care.
Of 257 eligible Ob/Gyn residents, 105 (41%) responded. Fifty percent of residents felt unprepared to care for lesbian or bisexual patients and 76% felt unprepared to care for transgender patients. Feeling prepared to provide care for lesbian or bisexual patients was associated with attending a university-based program, working in a hospital without religious affiliation, and year of training. Feeling prepared to provide healthcare for transgender patients correlated with grand rounds focused on LGBTQ health and supervised clinical involvement. Regarding training, 62% and 63% of participants stated their programs dedicate 1-5 h per year to lesbian/bisexual healthcare and transgender healthcare training, respectively. Concurrently, 92% desired more education on how to provide healthcare to LGBTQ patients. Perceived barriers to receiving training in LGBTQ healthcare included curricular crowding (85%) and lack of experienced faculty (91%).
Our assessment indicates Illinois Ob/Gyn residents feel inadequately prepared to address healthcare needs of LGBTQ patients. Although barriers exist, residents desire more education and training in providing healthcare to the LGBTQ community. Future work is needed to address this gap through curricular development to ensure that Ob/Gyn residency graduates are prepared care for LGBTQ patients.
评估妇产科住院医师在女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别及酷儿(LGBTQ)医疗保健培训方面的经历和偏好。
对伊利诺伊州经认可的妇产科培训项目的住院医师开展了一项基于网络的横断面调查。该调查包括32个关于住院医师人口统计学、LGBTQ培训以及在提供LGBTQ患者护理方面自我感知的准备情况的问题。
在257名符合条件的妇产科住院医师中,105名(41%)做出了回应。50%的住院医师觉得没有准备好护理女同性恋或双性恋患者,76%的住院医师觉得没有准备好护理跨性别患者。觉得有准备护理女同性恋或双性恋患者与参加基于大学的项目、在无宗教附属关系的医院工作以及培训年份有关。觉得有准备为跨性别患者提供医疗保健与专注于LGBTQ健康的学术大查房以及有监督的临床参与相关。关于培训,62%和63%的参与者表示他们的项目每年分别投入1 - 5小时进行女同性恋/双性恋医疗保健和跨性别医疗保健培训。同时,92%的人希望获得更多关于如何为LGBTQ患者提供医疗保健的教育。LGBTQ医疗保健培训的感知障碍包括课程拥挤(85%)和缺乏经验丰富的教员(91%)。
我们的评估表明伊利诺伊州的妇产科住院医师觉得在满足LGBTQ患者的医疗保健需求方面准备不足。尽管存在障碍,但住院医师希望在为LGBTQ群体提供医疗保健方面获得更多教育和培训。需要通过课程开发来填补这一差距,以确保妇产科住院医师毕业生有能力为LGBTQ患者提供护理。