Willging Cathleen E, Sklar Marisa, Eckstrand Kristen, Sturm Robert, Davies Sonnie, Kano Miria
Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Southwest Center, Albuquerque, NM, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, United States.
Front Health Serv. 2022 Aug 24;2:901440. doi: 10.3389/frhs.2022.901440. eCollection 2022.
Access and utilization barriers in primary care clinics contribute to health disparities that disproportionately affect lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) people. Implementing inclusive practice guidelines in these settings may decrease disparities. The purpose of this exploratory/developmental study is to identify key issues affecting the readiness of primary care clinics to implement such guidelines.
Using a concurrent mixed-method research design, we conducted surveys, interviews, and focus groups with 36 primary care personnel in clinics in New Mexico, USA, to examine readiness to implement LGBTQ+ inclusive guidelines, analyzing factors affecting motivation, general organizational capacity, and innovation-specific capacity. We supplemented these data by documenting LGBTQ+ inclusive policies and practices at each clinic. We undertook descriptive analyses and between-subscale comparisons controlling for within-rater agreement of the survey data and iterative coding and thematic analysis of the qualitative data.
Quantitatively, participants reported significantly more openness toward adopting guidelines and attitudinal awareness for developing LGBTQ+ clinical skills than clinical preparedness, basic knowledge, and resources to facilitate implementation. Six themes derived from the qualitative findings corroborate and expand on these results: (1) treating all patients the same; (2) addressing diversity in and across LGBTQ+ populations; (3) clinic climates; (4) patient access concerns; (5) insufficient implementation support; and (6) leadership considerations.
This study demonstrates that personnel in primary care clinics support initiatives to enhance service environments, policies, and practices for LGBTQ+ patients. However, drawing on Iris Young's theory of structural injustice, we found that neutralizing discourses that construct all patients as the same and time/resource constraints may diminish motivation and capacity in busy, understaffed clinics serving a diverse clientele and reinforce inequities in primary care for LGBTQ+ people. Efforts are needed to build general and innovation-specific capacities for LGBTQ+ initiatives. Such efforts should leverage implementation teams, organizational assessments, education, leadership support, community engagement, and top-down incentives.
基层医疗诊所中的就医机会和利用障碍导致了健康差异,对女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别者和酷儿(LGBTQ+)群体产生了不成比例的影响。在这些环境中实施包容性实践指南可能会减少差异。这项探索性/发展性研究的目的是确定影响基层医疗诊所准备实施此类指南的关键问题。
我们采用同步混合方法研究设计,对美国新墨西哥州诊所的36名基层医疗人员进行了调查、访谈和焦点小组讨论,以检查实施LGBTQ+包容性指南的准备情况,分析影响动机、一般组织能力和特定创新能力的因素。我们通过记录每个诊所的LGBTQ+包容性政策和实践来补充这些数据。我们进行了描述性分析,并在控制调查数据评分者内部一致性的情况下进行了子量表间比较,对定性数据进行了迭代编码和主题分析。
在定量方面,与临床准备、基础知识和促进实施的资源相比,参与者报告在采用指南方面明显更开放,对培养LGBTQ+临床技能的态度意识更强。定性研究结果得出的六个主题证实并扩展了这些结果:(1)平等对待所有患者;(2)解决LGBTQ+群体内部和之间的多样性问题;(3)诊所氛围;(4)患者就医问题;(5)实施支持不足;(6)领导方面的考虑。
本研究表明,基层医疗诊所的人员支持为LGBTQ+患者改善服务环境、政策和实践的举措。然而,借鉴艾丽斯·扬的结构性不公正理论,我们发现,将所有患者都视为相同的中和性话语以及时间/资源限制可能会削弱繁忙、人员不足且服务多样化客户群体的诊所的动机和能力,并加剧LGBTQ+人群在基层医疗中的不平等。需要努力建设针对LGBTQ+举措的一般能力和特定创新能力。此类努力应利用实施团队、组织评估、教育、领导支持、社区参与和自上而下的激励措施。