'It feels meaningful': How informal mental health caregivers in an LGBTQ community interpret their work and their role.

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 FAMILY STUDIES
Culture, Health & Sexuality Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2023-09-14 DOI:10.1080/13691058.2023.2256833
Shane Worrell, Andrea Waling, Joel Anderson, Anthony Lyons, Christopher A Pepping, Adam Bourne
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Many members of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and gender diverse, and queer (LGBTQ) communities provide informal mental health support to peers. This type of support is valuable for people who receive it - even helping to prevent suicide. It is also meaningful to those who provide it. In this article, we focus on how LGBTQ people derive meaning from their experiences of supporting peers. In-depth interviews with 25 LGBTQ people in Melbourne, Australia, indicate that those providing informal mental health support to fellow community members recognise their roles as meaningful in three main ways: in terms of self, relationships and communities. Recognising the meanings that LGBTQ caregivers derive from helping fellow community members provides useful information service providers and policymakers seeking to better address mental distress in LGBTQ communities and support caregivers. It is useful to understand this meaningful work in an LGBTQ context as caregiving that challenges gendered and heteronormative assumptions about what care is, and who provides it.

感觉很有意义":男女同性恋、双性恋和变性者社区中的非正式心理健康护理人员如何解释他们的工作和角色。
许多女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、变性人和性别多元化者(LGBTQ)社区的成员为同伴提供非正式的心理健康支持。这种支持对接受支持的人很有价值,甚至有助于防止自杀。对于提供支持的人来说,这种支持也是非常有意义的。在本文中,我们将重点讨论 LGBTQ 群体如何从他们为同伴提供支持的经历中获得意义。我们对澳大利亚墨尔本的 25 名 LGBTQ 群体进行了深入访谈,访谈结果表明,那些为其他群体成员提供非正式心理健康支持的人认为他们的角色意义重大,主要体现在三个方面:自我、人际关系和社区。认识到 LGBTQ 护理者从帮助社区成员中获得的意义,可以为服务提供者和政策制定者提供有用的信息,从而更好地解决 LGBTQ 社区的精神痛苦并为护理者提供支持。在 LGBTQ 的背景下,将这种有意义的工作理解为护理工作是非常有用的,它挑战了关于什么是护理以及由谁来提供护理的性别假设和异性恋假设。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
4.50%
发文量
80
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