Rhodes Scott D
Wake Forest University School of Medicine.
Health Behav Res. 2024;7(2). doi: 10.4148/2572-1836.1277. Epub 2024 Jul 24.
Sexual and gender minorities (SGM), including lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+), communities, continue to face profound health disparities in the United States and globally. Although the terms SGM and LGBTQ+ are used as umbrella terms, the populations they describe are highly diverse. Currently, SGM persons are increasingly open and visible in the United States and many other parts of the world, and a modest body of knowledge on the health and well-being of some SGM subgroups currently exists. However, significant gaps exist in the emerging knowledge base, and there remains a profound need to promote health equity and reduce disparities. I am committed to advancing health behavior research to promote health equity and reduce disparities using community-based participatory research (CBPR) approaches. In this paper, based on the address I gave at the Scientific Meeting of the American Academy of Health Behavior (AAHB) on April 14, 2024, I describe what inspires me, a few things I have learned so far, and my future directions as I continue to partner with SGM communities to address health equity and reduce health disparities.
性与性别少数群体(SGM),包括女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别者和酷儿(LGBTQ+)群体,在美国乃至全球范围内仍面临着严重的健康差异。尽管SGM和LGBTQ+这两个术语被用作统称,但它们所描述的人群高度多样化。目前,SGM群体在美国和世界其他许多地方越来越公开且为人所见,并且目前已经存在关于一些SGM亚群体健康与福祉的少量知识。然而,在新出现的知识基础方面仍存在重大差距,而且仍然迫切需要促进健康公平并减少差异。我致力于推进健康行为研究,以通过基于社区的参与性研究(CBPR)方法促进健康公平并减少差异。在本文中,基于我于2024年4月14日在美国健康行为学会(AAHB)科学会议上发表的演讲,我描述了激励我的因素、我目前学到的一些东西,以及在我继续与SGM群体合作以解决健康公平问题和减少健康差异时我的未来方向。