Michał Czapla, Piotr Karniej, Raúl Juárez-Vela, Kamil Kędzierski, Anthony Dissen, Krzysztof Griesmann, Jakub Wojciechowski, Aleksander Mickiewicz, Jacek Smereka, Jan Świtała, Łukasz Lewandowski
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Systemic preparation for the care of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) patients in Poland remains limited, despite the increasing visibility of sexual and gender minorities in clinical settings. Emergency medical services, often the first and sometimes the only point of contact with healthcare, operate without structured guidance on inclusive practice. For paramedics, this gap translates into uncertainty at the bedside and inconsistent quality of care. However, the clinical competence of Polish paramedics in responding to the needs of LGBT patients has never been empirically examined.
Objectives: This study aimed to assess the clinical preparedness, attitudinal awareness, and basic knowledge of Polish paramedics regarding LGBT patients.
Material and methods: In a national cross-sectional survey (n = 465), 289 participants completed the LGBT-Development of Clinical Skills Scale (LGBT-DOCSS) scale. Data were analyzed using beta-inflated generalized additive model for location, scale, and shape (GAMLSS) regression with least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO)-based predictor selection.
Results: Clinical preparedness was low (predicted μ = 2.32/7), particularly among those without prior LGBT-specific training or exposure. Attitudinal awareness was high (μ = 5.82), while basic knowledge scores were moderate (μ = 4.06). Recent LGBT-related training was associated with higher clinical preparedness (β = 0.779, p < 0.001), and prior informal experience also showed a positive association (β = 0.553, p < 0.001). Male sex (β = 0.369, p < 0.001) was associated with higher clinical preparedness, while homosexual orientation (β = 0.349, p = 0.001) was associated with higher overall clinical competence. Lower attitudinal awareness was observed among men (β = -0.545, p < 0.001) and those without LGBT contact (β = -0.688, p < 0.001). Recent training had no significant effect on basic knowledge (β = 0.280, p = 0.295).
Conclusions: Polish paramedics express attitudinal awareness but lack clinical readiness, with a low baseline clinical preparedness score (μ = 2.32/7). Given the frontline role of emergency medical services, these findings highlight an urgent need for structured, practice-oriented LGBT training within paramedic education and continuing professional development.
期刊介绍:
Advances in Clinical and Experimental Medicine has been published by the Wroclaw Medical University since 1992. Establishing the medical journal was the idea of Prof. Bogumił Halawa, Chair of the Department of Cardiology, and was fully supported by the Rector of Wroclaw Medical University, Prof. Zbigniew Knapik. Prof. Halawa was also the first editor-in-chief, between 1992-1997. The journal, then entitled "Postępy Medycyny Klinicznej i Doświadczalnej", appeared quarterly.
Prof. Leszek Paradowski was editor-in-chief from 1997-1999. In 1998 he initiated alterations in the profile and cover design of the journal which were accepted by the Editorial Board. The title was changed to Advances in Clinical and Experimental Medicine. Articles in English were welcomed. A number of outstanding representatives of medical science from Poland and abroad were invited to participate in the newly established International Editorial Staff.
Prof. Antonina Harłozińska-Szmyrka was editor-in-chief in years 2000-2005, in years 2006-2007 once again prof. Leszek Paradowski and prof. Maria Podolak-Dawidziak was editor-in-chief in years 2008-2016. Since 2017 the editor-in chief is prof. Maciej Bagłaj.
Since July 2005, original papers have been published only in English. Case reports are no longer accepted. The manuscripts are reviewed by two independent reviewers and a statistical reviewer, and English texts are proofread by a native speaker.
The journal has been indexed in several databases: Scopus, Ulrich’sTM International Periodicals Directory, Index Copernicus and since 2007 in Thomson Reuters databases: Science Citation Index Expanded i Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition.
In 2010 the journal obtained Impact Factor which is now 1.179 pts. Articles published in the journal are worth 15 points among Polish journals according to the Polish Committee for Scientific Research and 169.43 points according to the Index Copernicus.
Since November 7, 2012, Advances in Clinical and Experimental Medicine has been indexed and included in National Library of Medicine’s MEDLINE database. English abstracts printed in the journal are included and searchable using PubMed http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed.