Recognizing and Addressing Health Care Barriers for Transgender and Nonbinary People Living With a Chronic Illness or Disability.

IF 2.6 2区 医学 Q2 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE
Emily J Noonan, Laura A Weingartner, Ryan M Combs, Hallie R Decker, Alex Cowand, Sara Williams, Lesley M Harris
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Abstract

This paper explores the health care experiences of individuals who are transgender and/or nonbinary (TGNB) and live with a chronic illness and/or disability (CI/D). Using an interpretivist epistemological worldview and an intersectional lens, the research team explored the compounded barriers faced by this patient population and propose solutions for improving their care. The study conducted in-depth interviews with TGNB individuals who self-identified as having a CI/D to understand their health and health care experiences. The interdisciplinary research team, which includes individuals with diverse backgrounds and experiences related to gender identity and CI/D, analyzed the data thematically using an iterative interpretive approach. Participants described barriers such as diagnostic overshadowing and provider skepticism that were exacerbated by their dual TGNB-CI/D identities. Participants interacted with health care systems frequently due to ongoing medical needs, which increased the likelihood of negative encounters like misdiagnosis, inappropriate questioning related to their gender identity, and skepticism of their CI/D. Gaslighting experiences further eroded trust in health care providers and contributed to health care inequities. The lack of LGBTQ+ competent care, coupled with discriminatory attitudes, led some participants to forgo seeking essential health care services altogether. Participants identified several strategies to mitigate barriers, including advocating for LGBTQ+ competent care through provider education and training; structural changes to address financial barriers and insurance issues; leveraging telehealth services; and increasing community support networks. By enacting the suggested actionable solutions, which were grounded in participants' voices and experiences, the health care system can reduce disparities and provide better, more affirming health care to this group.

认识和解决慢性疾病或残疾的跨性别和非二元性人群的卫生保健障碍。
本文探讨了患有慢性疾病和/或残疾(CI/D)的跨性别和/或非二元性别(TGNB)个体的医疗保健经历。使用解释主义认识论的世界观和交叉镜头,研究小组探讨了这一患者群体面临的复杂障碍,并提出了改善他们的护理的解决方案。该研究对自认为有CI/D的TGNB个体进行了深入访谈,以了解他们的健康和医疗保健经历。跨学科研究团队包括具有不同背景和与性别认同和CI/D相关经验的个人,他们使用迭代解释方法对数据进行了主题分析。参与者描述了诊断的阴影和提供者的怀疑等障碍,这些障碍因他们的双重TGNB-CI/D身份而加剧。由于持续的医疗需求,参与者经常与卫生保健系统互动,这增加了误诊、与性别认同相关的不适当问题以及对其CI/D的怀疑等负面遭遇的可能性。煤气灯经验进一步侵蚀了对卫生保健提供者的信任,并导致卫生保健不公平。缺乏合格的LGBTQ+护理,再加上歧视态度,导致一些参与者完全放弃寻求基本的医疗保健服务。与会者确定了一些减轻障碍的策略,包括通过提供者教育和培训倡导LGBTQ+合格护理;结构性改革以解决金融障碍和保险问题;利用远程保健服务;增加社区支持网络。通过制定以参与者的声音和经验为基础的建议的可行解决方案,医疗保健系统可以减少差距,并为这一群体提供更好、更肯定的医疗保健。
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
6.80
自引率
6.20%
发文量
109
期刊介绍: QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH is an international, interdisciplinary, refereed journal for the enhancement of health care and to further the development and understanding of qualitative research methods in health care settings. We welcome manuscripts in the following areas: the description and analysis of the illness experience, health and health-seeking behaviors, the experiences of caregivers, the sociocultural organization of health care, health care policy, and related topics. We also seek critical reviews and commentaries addressing conceptual, theoretical, methodological, and ethical issues pertaining to qualitative enquiry.
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