Research & Development Service, Tuscaloosa VA Medical Center.
Mindoula Health Inc.
Psychol Serv. 2023 Aug;20(3):596-608. doi: 10.1037/ser0000604. Epub 2022 Feb 3.
Access to effective, replicable services is critical to reduce known mental health disparities for sexual and gender minority or LGBTQ+ veterans (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, questioning, and related identities). This paper examines the impact of a manualized 10-week health education group, called PRIDE in All Who Served on veteran patient experience, protective factors (e.g., identity acceptance), and mental health outcomes (e.g., suicide risk) at 10 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities. Implementation facilitation strategies (e.g., consultation, staff training) supported adoption at new sites and initial facilitators and barriers are described. Forty-four veterans ( = 47.21 years old) completed outcome surveys before and after the group. Significant improvement in acceptance concerns, identity uncertainty, community involvement, and likelihood of future suicide attempts were observed; other changes in mental health symptoms were not replicated in this sample (e.g., depression, anxiety). Open-ended veteran feedback reflected improved as the most frequent themes. At the facility level, Healthcare Equality Index scores (a Human Rights Campaign measure of affirmative care climate) improved from 30% to 90% achieving top-performer/leader status from pre- to postimplementation. Manualized approaches, like PRIDE in All Who Served, that are based on established minority stress models and can be spread for use with diverse LGBTQ+ veterans (e.g., age, race, gender identity, sexual orientation, rurality, housing) are needed. The PRIDE in All Who Served program is an increasingly available resource to VA clinicians advocating for greater health equity within a national healthcare setting. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
为减少性少数和跨性别或 LGBTQ+退伍军人(女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别、酷儿、疑问者和相关身份)已知的心理健康差距,提供有效、可复制的服务至关重要。本文探讨了一种名为“PRIDE in All Who Served”的 10 周健康教育小组对退伍军人患者体验、保护因素(如身份认同)和心理健康结果(如自杀风险)的影响,该小组在 10 个退伍军人事务部(VA)设施中实施。实施促进策略(如咨询、员工培训)支持在新地点采用,并描述了最初的促进因素和障碍。44 名退伍军人(=47.21 岁)在小组前后完成了结果调查。接受关注、身份不确定性、社区参与和未来自杀企图的可能性显著改善;其他心理健康症状的变化在本样本中没有得到复制(例如,抑郁、焦虑)。退伍军人的开放式反馈反映了改善的态度是最常见的主题。在设施层面,医疗保健平等指数(人权运动衡量肯定护理环境的指标)从实施前的 30%提高到实施后的 90%,达到了前到后的最高表现/领导者地位。需要基于既定的少数群体压力模型并可推广用于不同 LGBTQ+退伍军人(例如,年龄、种族、性别认同、性取向、农村、住房)的标准化方法,如“PRIDE in All Who Served”。“PRIDE in All Who Served”计划是 VA 临床医生在全国医疗保健环境中倡导更大健康公平的一个日益可用的资源。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。