Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2024 Oct 12;24(1):666. doi: 10.1186/s12884-024-06813-4.
Evidence suggests sexual and gender minoritized (SGM) childbearing individuals and their infants experience more adverse obstetric and perinatal outcomes compared to their cisgender, heterosexual counterparts. This study aimed to comprehensively map obstetric and perinatal physical health literature among SGM populations and their infants and identify knowledge gaps.
PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, and Web of Science Core Collection were systematically searched to identify published studies reporting obstetric and perinatal outcomes in SGM individuals or their infants. Study characteristics, sample characteristics, and outcome findings were systematically extracted and analyzed.
Our search yielded 8,740 records; 55 studies (1981-2023) were included. Sexual orientation was measured by self-identification (72%), behavior (55%), and attraction (9%). Only one study captured all three dimensions. Inconsistent measures of sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) were common, and 68% conflated sex and gender. Most (85%) focused on sexual minorities, while 31% addressed gender minorities. Demographic measures employed varied widely and were inconsistent; 35% lacked race/ethnicity data, and 44% lacked socioeconomic data. Most studies (78%) examined outcomes among SGM individuals, primarily focusing on morbidity and pregnancy outcomes. Pregnancy termination was most frequently studied, while pregnancy and childbirth complications (e.g., gestational hypertension, postpartum hemorrhage) were rarely examined. Evidence of disparities were mixed. Infant outcomes were investigated in 60% of the studies, focusing on preterm birth and low birthweight. Disparities were noted among different sexual orientation and racial/ethnic groups. Qualitative insights highlighted how stigma and discriminatory care settings can lead to adverse pregnancy and birth outcomes.
Frequent conflation of sex and gender and a lack of standardized SOGI measures hinder the comparison and synthesis of existing evidence. Nuanced sociodemographic data should be collected to understand the implications of intersecting identities. Findings on perinatal health disparities were mixed, highlighting the need for standardized SOGI measures and comprehensive sociodemographic data. The impact of stigma and discriminatory care on adverse outcomes underscores the need for inclusive healthcare environments. Future research should address these gaps; research on SGM perinatal outcomes remains urgently lacking.
The review protocol was developed a priori in February 2023, registered on Open Science Framework ( https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/5DQV4 ) and published in BMJ Open ( https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/13/11/e075443 ).
有证据表明,性少数群体和跨性别群体(SGM)的生育个体及其婴儿在产科和围产期的结局比顺性别、异性恋群体更差。本研究旨在全面绘制 SGM 人群及其婴儿的产科和围产期健康文献,并确定知识空白。
系统检索 PubMed、Embase、CINAHL 和 Web of Science 核心合集,以确定报告 SGM 个体或其婴儿产科和围产期结局的已发表研究。系统提取和分析研究特征、样本特征和结果发现。
我们的搜索产生了 8740 条记录;纳入了 55 项研究(1981-2023 年)。性取向通过自我认同(72%)、行为(55%)和吸引力(9%)来衡量。只有一项研究同时捕捉到了所有三个维度。性取向和性别认同(SOGI)的测量方法不一致很常见,68%的研究将性别和性别混淆。大多数(85%)研究集中在性少数群体,而 31%的研究涉及性别少数群体。所采用的人口统计学测量方法差异很大且不一致;35%的研究缺乏种族/族裔数据,44%的研究缺乏社会经济数据。大多数研究(78%)主要关注发病率和妊娠结局,研究了 SGM 个体的结局。终止妊娠是最常研究的内容,而妊娠和分娩并发症(如妊娠期高血压、产后出血)很少被研究。差异的证据参差不齐。60%的研究调查了婴儿结局,主要关注早产和低出生体重。不同的性取向和种族/族裔群体之间存在差异。定性见解强调了耻辱感和歧视性的护理环境如何导致不良的妊娠和分娩结局。
性和性别经常混淆,缺乏标准化的 SOGI 测量方法,这阻碍了现有证据的比较和综合。应该收集细致的社会人口统计学数据,以了解交叉身份的影响。关于围产期健康差异的研究结果参差不齐,突出了需要标准化的 SOGI 测量方法和全面的社会人口统计学数据。耻辱感和歧视性护理对不良结局的影响突显了需要包容的医疗保健环境。未来的研究应该解决这些差距;关于 SGM 围产期结局的研究仍然非常缺乏。
审查方案于 2023 年 2 月预先制定,在开放科学框架(https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/5DQV4)上注册,并发表在《英国医学杂志开放》(https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/13/11/e075443)上。