支持 LGBTQ+ 青少年心理健康的 "有效方法":交叉青少年权利方法》。

0 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES International journal of social determinants of health and health services Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-22 DOI:10.1177/27551938241230766
Elizabeth McDermott, Rachael Eastham, Elizabeth Hughes, Katherine Johnson, Stephanie Davis, Steven Pryjmachuk, Ceu Mateus, Felix McNulty, Olu Jenzen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管有大量国际证据表明,LGBTQ+ 青少年的心理健康不良率高于同性异性恋青少年,但我们对针对这一人群的有效心理健康服务却知之甚少。本研究旨在建立首个 "有效 "的早期干预模式,以支持新出现心理健康问题的 LGBTQ+ 青年。我们采用混合方法进行案例研究,收集了英国 12 个心理健康服务案例研究点的数据,其中包括:(a)对青少年、家长和心理健康从业人员的访谈(n = 93);(b)文献分析;(c)非参与观察。数据分析策略采用 "建立解释 "的理论分析技术。我们的分析表明,要提供联合国《儿童权利公约》和世界卫生组织所倡导的良好心理健康服务,就必须制定 13 项原则,其中包括青少年权利的交叉方法。这种方法应解决 LGBTQ+ 青年可能经历的多种形式的边缘化和污名化问题,使他们能够在知情的情况下独立做出决策,并维护安全的自我表达自由权。在为 LGBTQ+ 青年提供心理健康服务时,基于权利的方法并不突出。如果我们要解决这种心理健康不平等的问题并改善全世界 LGBTQ+ 青年的心理健康,就必须改变这种状况。
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"What Works" to Support LGBTQ+ Young People's Mental Health: An Intersectional Youth Rights Approach.

Despite overwhelming international evidence of elevated rates of poor mental health in LGBTQ+ youth compared to their cis-heterosexual peers, we know relatively little about effective mental health services for this population group. This study aims to produce the first early intervention model of "what works" to support LGBTQ+ youth with emerging mental health problems. Utilizing a mixed method case study, we collected data across 12 UK mental health service case study sites that involved: (a) interviews with young people, parents, and mental health practitioners (n = 93); (b) documentary analysis; (c) nonparticipant observation. The data analysis strategy was theoretical using the "explanation-building" analytical technique. Our analysis suggests an intersectional youth rights approach with 13 principles that must be enacted to provide good mental health services as advocated by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and World Health Organization. This approach should address the multiple forms of marginalization and stigmatization that LGBTQ+ youth may experience, enable informed independent decision-making, and uphold the right to freedom of safe self-expression. A rights-based approach to mental health services for LGBTQ+ young people is not prominent. This needs to change if we are to tackle this mental health inequality and improve the mental well-being of LGBTQ+ youth worldwide.

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