医护人员对在成人初级医疗机构收集性取向和性别认同信息的看法》(Health Care Workers' Perspectives on Collecting Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in the Adult Primary Care Setting)。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-02 DOI:10.1097/MLR.0000000000002076
Amy M LeClair, Raviv Rose, Olivia Barker, Eilish Carpenter, Thomas W Concannon, Ulrike Boehmer, Deborah Blazey-Martin, Chloe E Bird, Karen M Freund, Stephenie C Lemon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:尽管有许多人呼吁在临床环境中标准化收集性取向和性别认同(SOGI)数据,但这一做法的采用仍然滞后:本研究对美国东北部一个城市学术医疗中心的成人全科医疗实践中员工对性取向和性别认同(SOGI)数据收集的态度进行了实施前评估:研究设计:我们绘制了一张从登记到临床就诊的患者数据流程图,以确定与登记和患者人口统计数据收集相关的所有员工角色。在 2021 年 11 月至 2022 年 2 月期间,我们有目的地抽取了这些角色的工作人员,并进行了半结构化虚拟访谈。研究小组采用了演绎和归纳编码法,并进行了主题分析,以确定实施过程中的障碍和促进因素:九名临床工作人员和十一名非临床工作人员接受了访谈:措施:询问参与者与女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别者和同性恋(LGBTQ)患者打交道的一般经验、他们对收集这些数据的看法,以及将其纳入工作流程的潜在障碍和促进因素:出现的主要议题包括:SOGI 数据与临床实践的相关性;对患者可接受性的担忧;顺性别、异性恋假设的普遍性;以及对语言、文化和代际差异的担忧。临床和非临床工作人员之间也存在差异:需要加强教育,帮助临床和非临床工作人员了解如何利用患者的性别、社会性别和文化特征来提供肯定的、以患者为中心的护理。实施策略可以针对个人、组织和社会层面的具体障碍而量身定制。
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Health Care Workers' Perspectives on Collecting Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in the Adult Primary Care Setting.

Background: Despite numerous calls for standardized collection of sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) data in clinical settings, uptake of this practice still lags.

Objectives: This study conducted a preimplementation assessment of staff attitudes toward SOGI data collection within an adult primary care practice in an urban academic medical center in the northeastern United States.

Research design: We created a process map of the flow of patient data from the point of registration to the clinical encounter to identify all staff roles associated with registration and patient demographic data collection. We purposively sampled staff members across these roles and conducted semistructured virtual interviews between November 2021 and February 2022. The research team used deductive and inductive coding and conducted a thematic analysis to identify barriers and facilitators to implementation.

Subjects: Nine clinical staff and eleven nonclinical staff were interviewed.

Measures: Participants were asked about their general experiences with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) patients, their perspectives on collecting this data, and potential barriers and facilitators to incorporating this into the workflow.

Results: The main themes that emerged were the relevance of SOGI data to the clinical practice; concerns about patient acceptability; the prevalence of cis-gender, heteronormative assumptions; and concerns about linguistic, cultural, and generational differences. Differences were noted between clinical and nonclinical staff.

Conclusions: Greater education is needed to help both clinical and nonclinical staff understand how patients' SOGI demographics can be used to provide affirming, patient-centered care. Implementation strategies can be tailored to address specific barriers at the individual, organizational, and social levels.

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CiteScore
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自引率
4.30%
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567
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