Maggi A. Price, Marina Rakhilin, Kara Johansen, Lisa Collins, John E. Pachankis, Aaron R. Lyon, Marissa Allen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective:
Transgender youths are more likely than cisgender youths to need mental health care because of their high exposure to discrimination and victimization, including within health care systems. Accordingly, transgender youths have low care satisfaction and high rates of treatment dropout, further exacerbating existing mental health inequities. To reduce these inequities, mental health providers need knowledge and skills to enhance transgender youths’ treatment engagement and benefits. However, a comprehensive set of practices addressing the needs of transgender youth patients and their providers does not exist. The authors developed gender-affirming psychotherapy (GAP), an evidence-informed set of skills and principles to augment mental health treatments for transgender youths.
Methods:
GAP was developed by using a human-centered design, a methodological approach for creating interventions that prioritize the needs of key stakeholders, which in this study included mental health providers and transgender youths and their parents (N=36). A scoping review of the literature and stakeholder focus groups were conducted to create GAP, which encompasses core principles and skills to enhance mental health services for transgender youths.
Results:
GAP encompasses 27 principles and 38 skills, organized within 10 domains. All principles and skills were designed to be relevant for various provider types (e.g., psychiatrists and social workers) and to be flexibly adapted to meet diverse patient needs.
Conclusions:
GAP offers a scalable and flexible approach to addressing the growing mental health care needs of transgender youths. The findings of this study suggest that a human-centered design is a feasible and efficient method for developing interventions to address health inequities.
期刊介绍:
Psychiatric Services, established in 1950, is published monthly by the American Psychiatric Association. The peer-reviewed journal features research reports on issues related to the delivery of mental health services, especially for people with serious mental illness in community-based treatment programs. Long known as an interdisciplinary journal, Psychiatric Services recognizes that provision of high-quality care involves collaboration among a variety of professionals, frequently working as a team. Authors of research reports published in the journal include psychiatrists, psychologists, pharmacists, nurses, social workers, drug and alcohol treatment counselors, economists, policy analysts, and professionals in related systems such as criminal justice and welfare systems. In the mental health field, the current focus on patient-centered, recovery-oriented care and on dissemination of evidence-based practices is transforming service delivery systems at all levels. Research published in Psychiatric Services contributes to this transformation.