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改善跨性别成人的护理整合:ICTA 混合方法研究。

Improving the integration of care for trans adults: ICTA a mixed-methods study.

机构信息

The Open University Business School, Faculty of Business and Law, Open University, Milton Keynes, UK.

Department of Health and Social Care, Faculty of Wellbeing, Education and Languages, Open University, Milton Keynes, UK.

出版信息

Health Soc Care Deliv Res. 2024 Aug;12(28):1-217. doi: 10.3310/EWTA4502.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

This research concerns improving the National Health Service health services trans adults need. These include the national specialist Gender Identity Clinics that support people making a medical transition. Not all trans people need to make a medical transition, and transition can take many different paths. Waits to be seen by Gender Identity Clinics are, however, several years long, and there may be significant problems of co-ordination between different aspects of transition-related care, and between transition-related care and general health care.

OBJECTIVES

The main objectives were to understand: Which factors make services more or less accessible and acceptable to the variety of trans adults? How initiatives for providing more person-centred and integrated care can be successfully implemented and further improved?

DESIGN, DATA SOURCES AND PARTICIPANTS: An online and paper screening survey was used to gather data on demographics and service use of trans people across the United Kingdom, with 2056 responses. Researchers used survey data to construct five purposive subsamples for individual qualitative interviews, identifying groups of people more likely to experience social exclusion or stigma. There were 65 online interviews. In addition, 23 trans Black people and people of colour attended focus groups. Six case studies were completed: four on initiatives to improve care and two on experiences of particular trans populations. Fifty-five service provider staff and 45 service users were interviewed.

RESULTS

The following undermine person-centred co-ordinated care and can lead to experiences of harm: lack of respectful treatment of trans people by general practitioner practices; inadequate funding of services; lack of support during waiting; the extended and challenging nature of Gender Identity Clinic diagnostic assessments, sometimes experienced as adversarial; breakdowns in collaboration between Gender Identity Clinics and general practitioner practices over hormone therapy; lack of National Health Service psychological support for trans people. Case studies indicated ways to improve care, although each has significant unresolved issues: training in trans health care for general practitioners; third-sector peer-support workers for trans people who come to National Health Services; gender services taking a collaborative approach to assessing what people need, clarifying treatment options, benefits and risks; regional general practitioner-led hormone therapy clinics, bringing trans health care into the mainstream; psychology services that support trans people rather than assess them.

LIMITATIONS

Some contexts of care and experiences of particular groups of trans people were not addressed sufficiently within the scope of the project. While efforts were made to recruit people subject to multiple forms of stigma, there remained gaps in representation.

CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE WORK

The findings have significant implications for commissioners and providers of existing National Health Services gender services, including recently established pilot services in primary care. In particular they point to the need for assessments for access to transition care to be more collaborative and culturally aware, implying the value of exploring informed consent models for accessing transition-related care. Further research is needed to investigate how far the findings apply with particular subpopulations.

STUDY REGISTRATION

This study is registered as Research Registry, no. 5235.

FUNDING

This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: 17/51/08) and is published in full in ; Vol. 12, No. 28. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

摘要

背景

本研究旨在改善国家卫生服务机构为跨性别成年人提供的服务。这些服务包括支持人们进行医学性别转换的国家专科性别认同诊所。并非所有跨性别者都需要进行医学性别转换,而且性别转换可能有多种不同的途径。然而,等待性别认同诊所的就诊时间长达数年,而且在过渡相关护理的不同方面之间,以及过渡相关护理与一般医疗保健之间,可能存在着严重的协调问题。

目的

主要目标是了解:哪些因素使服务对各种跨性别成年人更具可及性和可接受性?如何成功实施和进一步改进提供更以患者为中心和综合护理的举措?

设计、数据来源和参与者:使用在线和纸质筛选调查收集了英国各地跨性别者的人口统计学和服务使用数据,共收到 2056 份回复。研究人员使用调查数据构建了五个有针对性的定性访谈子样本,确定了更有可能经历社会排斥或污名化的人群。共进行了 65 次在线访谈。此外,23 名跨性别黑人及有色人种参加了焦点小组。完成了六项案例研究:四项关于改善护理的举措,两项关于特定跨性别群体的经验。采访了 55 名服务提供者和 45 名服务使用者。

结果

以下因素破坏了以患者为中心的协调护理,并可能导致伤害:全科医生实践中对跨性别者缺乏尊重的治疗;服务资金不足;等待期间缺乏支持;性别认同诊所诊断评估的时间延长且具有挑战性,有时被认为具有对抗性;性别认同诊所和全科医生实践之间在激素治疗方面的合作破裂;缺乏国家卫生服务机构对跨性别者的心理支持。案例研究表明了改善护理的方法,尽管每个案例都存在重大未解决的问题:为全科医生提供跨性别健康护理培训;为寻求国家卫生服务的跨性别者提供第三方支持人员;性别服务机构采取协作方式评估人们的需求,明确治疗方案、获益和风险;由全科医生主导的地区激素治疗诊所将跨性别健康护理纳入主流;为跨性别者提供支持而不是评估他们的心理服务。

局限性

该项目的范围没有充分涉及某些护理背景和特定跨性别群体的经验。尽管努力招募受到多种形式污名化的人,但代表性仍存在差距。

结论和未来工作

研究结果对现有的国家卫生服务机构性别服务的决策者和提供者具有重要意义,包括最近在初级保健中设立的试点服务。特别是,它们指出需要更具协作性和文化意识的过渡护理准入评估,这意味着有必要探索知情同意模型,以获取与过渡相关的护理。需要进一步研究以调查这些发现与特定亚人群的相关性。

研究注册

本研究在 Research Registry 注册,注册号为 5235。

资金

该奖项由英国国家健康与保健卓越研究所(NIHR)健康与社会保健交付研究计划(NIHR 奖 REF:17/51/08)资助,并全文发表于;第 12 卷,第 28 期。欲了解更多奖项信息,请访问 NIHR 资助和奖项网站。

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