Kokay William, Power Emma, McGrath Margaret
Sydney School of Health Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney.
Graduate School of Health, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2023 Jan;104(1):108-118. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2022.07.018. Epub 2022 Aug 13.
To systematically review how sexuality is experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer or questioning, intersex plus (other gender identifies and sexual orientations) (LGBTQI+) persons living with chronic disease.
PsycINFO, Embase, MEDLINE, Scopus, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health, and Web of Science were searched from date of inception to November 2021 for English language publications. Reference lists of relevant publications were also searched.
Eligible studies reported on sexuality among LGBTQI+ persons living with chronic disease. The search yielded 12,626 records; 665 full texts were assessed for eligibility and 63 documents included (59 unique studies). Study quality was rated using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool.
Characteristics of included studies were recorded independently by 2 authors. Differences were resolved through discussion or with a third author.
A sequential, exploratory mixed-studies approach was used for synthesis. Pooled analysis indicated that among gay and bisexual men living with prostate cancer, 68.3% experienced erectile dysfunction and 62.9% had insufficient quality of erection to engage in anal sex. Among gay and bisexual men living with HIV or AIDS, 29.3% experienced loss of libido and 25.3% experienced erectile dysfunction. Although sexual dysfunction was common, LGBTQI+ persons had difficulty accessing appropriate sexual counseling and identified negative attitudes and heteronormative assumptions by health care providers as significant barriers to sexual health. Interventions to address sexuality focused entirely on reduction of risky sexual behavior among men living with HIV or AIDS. Women, transgender persons, and intersex persons were largely excluded from the research studies.
Current understandings of the effect of chronic disease on LGBTQI+ sexuality are limited and mostly focus on the male sexual response. LGBTQI+ persons who experience difficulty with sexuality struggle to identify appropriate services, and there is an absence of evidence-based interventions to promote sexual health and well-being in this population.
系统评价患有慢性病的女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别者、酷儿或疑问者、双性人及其他性别认同和性取向者(LGBTQI+)的性体验。
检索了PsycINFO、Embase、MEDLINE、Scopus、护理及相关健康累积索引和科学网,以获取从创刊至2021年11月的英文出版物。还检索了相关出版物的参考文献列表。
符合条件的研究报告了患有慢性病的LGBTQI+人群的性情况。检索共获得12626条记录;对665篇全文进行了资格评估,纳入了63份文献(59项独立研究)。使用混合方法评估工具对研究质量进行评级。
由两名作者独立记录纳入研究的特征。通过讨论或与第三位作者解决分歧。
采用序贯、探索性混合研究方法进行综合。汇总分析表明,患有前列腺癌的男同性恋和双性恋男性中,68.3%经历过勃起功能障碍,62.9%的勃起质量不足以进行肛交。患有艾滋病毒或艾滋病的男同性恋和双性恋男性中,29.3%经历过性欲减退,25.3%经历过勃起功能障碍。虽然性功能障碍很常见,但LGBTQI+人群在获得适当的性咨询方面存在困难,并认为医疗保健提供者的负面态度和异性恋规范假设是性健康的重大障碍。解决性问题的干预措施完全集中在减少艾滋病毒或艾滋病感染者中的危险性行为。女性、跨性别者和双性人在很大程度上被排除在研究之外。
目前对慢性病对LGBTQI+性取向影响的理解有限,且大多集中在男性性反应上。在性方面有困难的LGBTQI+人群难以找到合适的服务,并且缺乏促进该人群性健康和幸福的循证干预措施。