双性人需要什么样的心理健康支持,什么时候需要?以人为本的创伤知情生命周期护理

Caroline Sanders, Megan Usipuik, Leigh Crawford, Erica Koopmans, N. Todd, Tiffany Jones
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引用次数: 2

摘要

世界各地的几项大规模调查显示,在双性人变异人群中,最常见的心理健康诊断包括抑郁、焦虑和创伤后应激障碍。健康风险也很高,有双性人变异的人在他们的一生中都有自杀的想法或尝试——特别是基于与先天性别变异相关的问题。大多数人将他们的健康风险归因于他人的负面社会反应,经历干预的困难,或性别/身份问题。在加拿大的情况下,缺乏正式的,慈善的加拿大广泛的双性人网络,倡导团体,普遍的精神卫生保健方法,或类似于其他地方发展的服务的省级路标。一组国际研究人员从生命周期的角度出发,在加拿大进行了一项合作研究,以探索双性人在生命的不同阶段可能需要或渴望的医疗保健转变。这项正在进行的研究的一个关键发现是,在心理健康方面,过渡阶段可能特别困难,因此,将以人为本和了解创伤的方法纳入对这一人群的护理是既想要也需要的。本文特别采用了案例研究方法,分析了来自两位参与者的数据,他们确定了有关心理健康影响的三个主要主题:“价值、掌握和充分性”、“孤立和自卑”以及“身份和完整性”。第四个也是最后一个主题利用综合医学来庆祝新兴的“复原力和创造力”;一种积极的经历,在一生中都有解放的好处。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
What mental health supports do people with intersex variations want, and when? Person-centred trauma-informed lifecycle care
Several large-scale surveys around the world show the most frequently reported mental health diagnoses among people with intersex variations include depression, anxiety and PTSD. Wellbeing risks are also high, with individuals with intersex variations citing suicidal thoughts or attempts across their life-course – specifically on the basis of issues related to having congenital sex variations. The population mostly attributed their wellbeing risks to negative social responses from others, difficulties around having undergone interventions, or issues around gender/identity. In the Canadian context, there is a lack of formalised, charitable Canadian wide intersex networks, advocacy groups, universal mental health care approaches, or provincial signposting to services similar to those developed elsewhere. Using a life-cycle lens, a group of international researchers came together in this collaborative Canadian study to explore health care transitions that people with intersex variations might need or desire, at various stages of their life. A key finding from this ongoing study is that transition phases have the capacity to be especially difficult in the context of mental health, such that integrating person-centred and trauma-informed approaches into care with this population is both wanted and needed. This paper specifically takes a case study approach which analyses data from two participants who identified three major themes regarding mental health impacts: ‘worth, mastery, and adequacy’, ‘isolation and inferiority’, and ‘identity and integrity’. The fourth and final theme drew on integrated medicine to celebrate emerging ‘resilience and generativity’; a positive experience that had emancipatory benefits across the lifespan.
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