Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, 60611, USA.
Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Alabama, Birmingham School of Medicine, Birmingham, AL, 35294, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2024 Aug;39(11):2023-2032. doi: 10.1007/s11606-024-08635-8. Epub 2024 Feb 2.
Sexual minority men (SMM) face severe health inequities alongside negative experiences that drive avoidance of medical care. Understanding how SMM experience healthcare is paramount to improving this population's health. Patient-centered care, which emphasizes mutual respect and collaboration between patients and providers, may alleviate the disparaging effects of the homophobia that SMM face in healthcare settings.
To explore how SMM perceive their experiences with healthcare providers and how care can most effectively meet their needs.
Semi-structured qualitative interviews focused on healthcare experiences, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), and HIV-related beliefs were conducted between July and November 2018.
The study included a sample of 43 young adult SMM (ages 25-27), representing diverse socioeconomic, racial, and ethnic backgrounds, in New York City.
Researchers utilized a multiphase, systematic coding method to identify salient themes in the interview transcripts.
Analyses revealed three main themes: (1) SMM perceived that their clinicians often lack adequate skills and knowledge required to provide care that considers participants' identities and behaviors; (2) SMM desired patient-centered care as a way to regain agency and actively participate in making decisions about their health; and (3) SMM felt that patient-centered care was more common with providers who were LGBTQ-affirming, including many who felt that this was especially true for LGBTQ-identified providers.
SMM expressed a clear and strong desire for patient-centered approaches to care, often informed by experiences with healthcare providers who were unable to adequately meet their needs. However, widespread adoption of patient-centered care will require improving education and training for clinicians, with a focus on LGBTQ-specific clinical care and cultural humility. Through centering patients' preferences and experiences in the construction of care, patient-centered care can reduce health inequities among SMM and empower healthcare utilization in a population burdened by historic and ongoing stigmatization.
性少数群体男性(SMM)面临严重的健康不平等,同时也经历着导致他们回避医疗保健的负面体验。了解 SMM 如何体验医疗保健对于改善这一人群的健康至关重要。以患者为中心的护理强调患者和提供者之间的相互尊重和合作,可能会减轻 SMM 在医疗保健环境中所面临的恐同现象的负面影响。
探讨 SMM 如何看待他们与医疗保健提供者的互动经历,以及如何最有效地满足他们的需求。
2018 年 7 月至 11 月期间,进行了重点关注医疗保健体验、暴露前预防(PrEP)和与 HIV 相关信念的半结构式定性访谈。
该研究包括来自纽约市的 43 名年轻成年 SMM(年龄 25-27 岁),代表了不同的社会经济、种族和族裔背景。
研究人员采用了一种多阶段、系统的编码方法,以确定访谈记录中的突出主题。
分析揭示了三个主要主题:(1)SMM 认为他们的临床医生通常缺乏提供考虑到参与者身份和行为的护理所需的足够技能和知识;(2)SMM 渴望以患者为中心的护理方式来重新获得主动权,并积极参与做出有关自身健康的决策;(3)SMM 认为以患者为中心的护理在 LGBTQ 认同的提供者中更为常见,其中许多人认为这对于 LGBTQ 认同的提供者来说尤其如此。
SMM 明确而强烈地表达了对以患者为中心的护理方法的需求,这通常是基于他们与无法充分满足他们需求的医疗保健提供者的互动经历。然而,广泛采用以患者为中心的护理方法将需要改善临床医生的教育和培训,重点是 LGBTQ 特定的临床护理和文化谦逊。通过将患者的偏好和体验纳入护理的构建中,以患者为中心的护理可以减少 SMM 中的健康不平等现象,并增强在一个深受历史和持续污名化困扰的人群中利用医疗保健的能力。