Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Reporting in Highly Cited Current Alcohol Research.

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH LGBT health Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-20 DOI:10.1089/lgbt.2023.0085
Dean J Connolly, Santino Coduri-Fulford, Connor Tugulu, Meron Yalew, Elizabeth Moss, Justin C Yang
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Abstract

Purpose: This study aimed to measure the frequency of high-quality and transparent sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) data collection and reporting in highly cited current alcohol use research, using the extant literature to identify community-informed priorities for the measurement of these variables. Methods: A single search to identify alcohol use literature was conducted on PubMed with results restricted to primary research articles published between 2015 and 2022. The 200 most highly cited studies from each year were identified and their titles and abstracts reviewed against inclusion criteria after deduplication. After full-text review, study characteristics and data indicating quality of SOGI reporting were extracted. The fidelity of the results was verified with a random sample before analyses. Results: The final sample comprised 580 records. Few studies reported gender identity (n = 194; 33.4%) and, of these, 7.2% reported the associated gender identity measure. A two-stage approach to measure gender was adopted in 3 studies, one study used an open-ended question with a free-text response option, and 13 studies recorded nonbinary gender identities (reported by 0.9% of the whole sample). Nineteen (3.3%) studies reported sexual orientation and more than half of these provided the sexual orientation measure. Eight of the 20 studies that reported sexual orientation and/or gender identity measures were classified as sexual and gender minority specialist research. Conclusions: Culturally competent SOGI reporting is lacking in highly cited current alcohol research. SOGI measures should be disclosed in future research and should provide free-text response options.

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高引用率的当前酒精研究中的性取向和性别认同报告。
目的:本研究旨在衡量当前被高度引用的酒精使用研究中高质量、透明的性取向和性别认同(SOGI)数据收集和报告的频率,利用现有文献确定社区知情的优先事项,以衡量这些变量。方法:在PubMed上进行单一检索,以确定酒精使用文献,结果仅限于2015年至2022年间发表的主要研究文章。确定了每年被引用率最高的200项研究,并在重复数据消除后根据纳入标准对其标题和摘要进行了审查。全文综述后,提取了研究特征和表明SOGI报告质量的数据。分析前用随机样本验证了结果的保真度。结果:最终样本包括580份记录。很少有研究报告性别认同(n = 194;33.4%),其中7.2%报告了相关的性别认同测量。在3项研究中采用了两阶段的方法来衡量性别,一项研究使用了带有自由文本回答选项的开放式问题,13项研究记录了非二元性别认同(占整个样本的0.9%)。19项(3.3%)研究报告了性取向,其中一半以上提供了性取向测量。在报告性取向和/或性别认同指标的20项研究中,有8项被归类为性和性别少数群体专家研究。结论:在目前被高度引用的酒精研究中,缺乏具有文化能力的SOGI报告。SOGI措施应在未来的研究中披露,并应提供免费文本回复选项。
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来源期刊
LGBT health
LGBT health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH -
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
6.20%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: LGBT Health is the premier peer-reviewed journal dedicated to promoting optimal healthcare for millions of sexual and gender minority persons worldwide by focusing specifically on health while maintaining sufficient breadth to encompass the full range of relevant biopsychosocial and health policy issues. This Journal aims to promote greater awareness of the health concerns particular to each sexual minority population, and to improve availability and delivery of culturally appropriate healthcare services. LGBT Health also encourages further research and increased funding in this critical but currently underserved domain. The Journal provides a much-needed authoritative source and international forum in all areas pertinent to LGBT health and healthcare services. Contributions from all continents are solicited including Asia and Africa which are currently underrepresented in sex research.
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