Witney Tom, Rait Greta, Saunders John, Hobbs Lorna, Mitchell Laura, Stewart Jay, McDonagh Lorraine K
Institute for Global Health, UCL, London, UK
The National Institute for Health Research Health Protection Research Unit in Blood Borne and Sexually Transmitted Infections at University College London in Partnership with the UK Health Security Agency, London, UK.
Sex Transm Infect. 2025 Jul 17;101(5):287-293. doi: 10.1136/sextrans-2024-056231.
Trans and/or gender diverse (T/GD) people in the UK are less likely to access sexual health services (SHS) than cisgender people and are more likely to report negative experiences. The British Association for Sexual Health and HIV (BASHH) developed expert recommendations for T/GD-inclusive SHS, but these lack service user perspectives. This study addressed this gap by asking T/GD people how SHS could be T/GD-inclusive.
Semistructured interviews (n=33) and focus groups (n=26) were conducted with T/GD people aged 17-71 years old recruited through community organisations and social media, exploring experiences of SHS and inclusivity. Study design, materials and analysis were informed by T/GD people and an advisory committee of charities and sexual health clinicians. Data were analysed using thematic analysis, managed using NVivo.
Participants often expected that SHS were not set up for T/GD people. This was reinforced by poor experiences in other healthcare settings and the lack of information on NHS websites. Some participants had been denied care because they were 'too complex'. Participants wanted to know that SHS had engaged with the needs of T/GD people and looked for hallmarks of inclusivity, such as Trans Pride flags in reception areas. Some participants wanted specialist T/GD services, but others preferred to access general SHS. Staff attitudes were a key factor underpinning inclusivity. Anticipating having their identity questioned or needs dismissed, participants sought kindness and openness. Although the needs of T/GD people are diverse and different from cisgender service users, participants stressed that SHS staff already had the skills to deliver sensitive person-centred care and emphasised the value of inclusive SHS.
These findings provide insight into what a sample of T/GD people in the UK consider important for T/GD-inclusive SHS. Participants' suggestions align with and reinforce BASHH expert recommendations. Importantly, they highlight the need for ongoing engagement to deliver T/GD-inclusive SHS.
在英国,跨性别者和/或性别多样化者(T/GD)比顺性别者获得性健康服务(SHS)的可能性更低,且更有可能报告负面经历。英国性健康与艾滋病协会(BASHH)制定了针对包容T/GD者的性健康服务的专家建议,但这些建议缺乏服务使用者的观点。本研究通过询问T/GD者如何使性健康服务具有包容性来填补这一空白。
对通过社区组织和社交媒体招募的17至71岁的T/GD者进行了半结构化访谈(n = 33)和焦点小组讨论(n = 26),探讨性健康服务和包容性方面的经历。研究设计、材料和分析由T/GD者以及慈善机构和性健康临床医生组成的咨询委员会提供信息。使用主题分析法对数据进行分析,并使用NVivo进行管理。
参与者常常认为性健康服务并非为T/GD者设立。其他医疗环境中的糟糕经历以及英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)网站上缺乏相关信息强化了这一观点。一些参与者因“情况太复杂”而被拒绝治疗。参与者希望了解性健康服务机构是否关注到了T/GD者的需求,并寻找包容性的标志,比如候诊区的跨性别骄傲旗帜。一些参与者希望获得专门针对T/GD者的服务,但另一些人则更倾向于使用一般性的性健康服务。工作人员的态度是实现包容性的关键因素。由于预计自己的身份会受到质疑或需求被忽视,参与者寻求友善和开放的态度。尽管T/GD者的需求多种多样,且与顺性别服务使用者不同,但参与者强调性健康服务工作人员已经具备提供贴心的以人为本护理的技能,并强调了包容性性健康服务的价值。
这些研究结果深入了解了英国的一部分T/GD者认为对于包容性性健康服务而言重要的因素。参与者的建议与BASHH专家建议一致并予以强化。重要的是,它们凸显了持续参与以提供包容性性健康服务的必要性。