Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health, USA; Center for Health Promotion and Health Equity, Brown University School of Public Health, USA.
Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health, USA; Center for Health Promotion and Health Equity, Brown University School of Public Health, USA; Department of Epidemiology, Brown University School of Public Health, USA; The Fenway Institute, Fenway Health, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2024 Mar;344:116634. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.116634. Epub 2024 Feb 1.
People assigned female at birth (AFAB) with minoritized racial/ethnic, sexual orientation, and gender identities experience notable barriers to high-quality sexual healthcare. In confronting these barriers, patient-provider communication can be a crucial factor, influencing patients' experiences and access to relevant sexual health information and services by determining the quality of care. However, research that investigates this communication among AFAB patients with minoritized social positions is scarce, indicating a research gap regarding the perspectives and roles of healthcare providers in addressing such barriers to care for minoritized patients. Thus, we conducted a qualitative research study, using individual in-depth interviews, to explore the multi-level factors that influence providers' attitudes, knowledge, and skills regarding sexual health communication with AFAB patients with minoritized racial/ethnic, sexual orientation, and gender identities. Interpreting study findings within frameworks of person-centered care, intersectionality, and structural competency, we identified three cross-cutting themes. We found that providers frequently drew on their prior professional training, personal lived experiences, and population-level health disparities data when engaging in sexual health communication with minoritized AFAB patients. Participants reported minimal explicit training in anti-racist and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+)-competent care as a significant barrier to engaging in equitable sexual health communication with minoritized AFAB patients, which was exacerbated by many providers' lack of shared social positions and lived experiences with these patients. Providers also frequently applied population-level data to individual patients when formulating counseling and recommendations, which may undermine person-centered sexual health communication. Our findings suggest that critical anti-racist and LGBTQ+-competent provider training is urgently needed, and that health professional education and institutions must be transformed to better reflect and consider the experiences of patients with minoritized racial/ethnic, sexual orientation, and gender identities.
出生时被指定为女性(AFAB)的人,如果存在少数种族/族裔、性取向和性别认同问题,他们在获得高质量的性健康护理方面会遇到显著的障碍。在应对这些障碍时,医患沟通可能是一个关键因素,通过确定护理质量,影响患者的体验以及获得相关性健康信息和服务的机会。然而,针对少数族裔 AFAB 患者的这种沟通进行研究的工作还很少,这表明在解决少数患者的这些护理障碍方面,关于医疗保健提供者的观点和角色的研究还存在空白。因此,我们进行了一项定性研究,使用个人深入访谈,探讨了影响提供者对少数族裔 AFAB 患者的性健康沟通的态度、知识和技能的多层次因素。在以患者为中心的护理、交叉性和结构性能力的框架内解释研究结果,我们确定了三个交叉主题。我们发现,提供者在与少数族裔 AFAB 患者进行性健康沟通时,经常利用他们以前的专业培训、个人生活经历和人口健康差异数据。参与者报告说,缺乏明确的反种族主义和同性恋、双性恋、跨性别和 queer(LGBTQ+)能力培训是与少数族裔 AFAB 患者进行公平性性健康沟通的一个重大障碍,而许多提供者缺乏与这些患者的共同社会地位和生活经历,这进一步加剧了这一障碍。提供者在制定咨询和建议时,也经常将人口水平的数据应用于个别患者,这可能会破坏以患者为中心的性健康沟通。我们的研究结果表明,迫切需要进行批判性的反种族主义和 LGBTQ+能力培训,并且卫生专业教育和机构必须进行转型,以更好地反映和考虑少数族裔、性取向和性别认同患者的经验。