虚拟护理导航服务对女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、变性人和酷儿群体成员报告结果的影响:案例研究。

IF 2 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES JMIR Formative Research Pub Date : 2025-01-09 DOI:10.2196/64137
Seul Ki Choi, Jaclyn Marshall, Patrina Sexton Topper, Andrew Pregnall, José Bauermeister
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:虽然护理导航在促进女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别、酷儿和其他(LGBTQ+)群体获得医疗保健方面的重要性已经得到承认,但关于护理导航如何影响个人在现实世界中理解和获得所需护理的能力的研究有限。通过分析私营部门数据,我们可以弥合理论研究成果与实际应用之间的差距,最终为商业战略和公共政策提供基于现实世界有效性的证据。目的:本研究的目的是评估专门的虚拟护理导航服务对LGBTQ+个人理解和获得必要护理的能力的影响。方法:本案例研究基于在2023年1月26日至7月31日期间使用LGBTQ+ Health Care Navigation (LGBTQ+ Navigation)服务的18岁及以上商业保险会员的经验。护理协调员通过将成员与网络内经过审查的身份确认提供者联系起来,帮助他们导航和了解LGBTQ+的健康福利,并为临床和非临床需求提供教育和宣传。我们检查了导航对5个成员报告结果的影响。除了报告同意或非常同意的比例外,我们还计算了一个影响分数,该分数将所有5个问题的回答(1=非常不同意到5=非常同意)的平均数值分配给每个受访者。我们使用方差分析与Tukey事后检验和t检验来探索影响评分与成员特征之间的关系,包括可选的自我报告的人口统计数据。结果:在4703例LGBTQ+导航病例中,7.53% (n=354)有成员报告的结果。绝大多数LGBTQ+成员同意或强烈同意护理导航减少了压力(315/354,89%),减少了护理回避(305/354,86.2%),提高了找到认同认同的提供者的信心(327/354,92.4%),提高了理解医疗信息的能力(312/354,88.1%),提高了与提供者互动的能力(308/354,87%)。平均影响评分为4.44 (SD 0.69),性别认同(P= 0.003)、种族(P= 0.01)、民族(P= 0.008)、代词(P= 0.02)差异有统计学意义。具有多重性别身份的成员得分最高(平均4.56分,标准差0.37),没有提供种族、民族或代词的成员得分最高(平均4.55分,标准差0.64)。跨性别成员的影响评分最低(平均4.11,标准差0.95)。结论:LGBTQ+导航服务通过提高成员对必要护理的理解和使用,展示了潜在的公共卫生效用和价值。对导航服务的持续评估可作为寻求促进健康公平和改善雇员归属感的雇主的补充工具。这一点尤其重要,因为美国对LGBTQ+社区的歧视和污名一直存在。因此,使用导航服务的可扩展和系统级更改对于接触更大比例的LGBTQ+人口至关重要。
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Impact of a Virtual Care Navigation Service on Member-Reported Outcomes Among Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Populations: Case Study.

Background: While the significance of care navigation in facilitating access to health care within the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other (LGBTQ+) communities has been acknowledged, there is limited research examining how care navigation influences an individual's ability to understand and access the care they need in real-world settings. By analyzing private sector data, we can bridge the gap between theoretical research findings and practical applications, ultimately informing both business strategies and public policy with evidence grounded in real-world efficacy.

Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of specialized virtual care navigation services on LGBTQ+ individuals' ability to comprehend and access necessary care within a national cohort of commercially insured members.

Methods: This case study is based on the experience of commercially insured members, aged 18 or older, who used the LGBTQ+ Health Care Navigation (LGBTQ+ Navigation) service by Included Health between January 26 and July 31, 2023. Care coordinators assisted members by connecting them with vetted identity-affirming in-network providers, helping them navigate and understand their LGBTQ+ health benefits, and providing education and advocacy for clinical and nonclinical needs. We examined the impact of navigation on 5 member-reported outcomes. In addition to reporting the proportion who agreed or strongly agreed, we calculated an impact score that averaged assigned numerical values to all 5 question responses (1=strongly disagree to 5=strongly agree) for each respondent. We used ANOVA with Tukey post hoc tests and t tests to explore the relationships between the impact score and member characteristics, including optional self-reported demographics.

Results: Out of 4703 LGBTQ+ Navigation cases, 7.53% (n=354) had member-reported outcomes. A large majority of LGBTQ+ members agreed or strongly agreed that care navigation resulted in less stress (315/354, 89%), less care avoidance (305/354, 86.2%), higher confidence in finding an identity-affirming provider (327/354, 92.4%), improved ability to comprehend health care information (312/354, 88.1%), and improved ability to engage with providers (308/354, 87%). The average impact score was 4.44 (SD 0.69), with statistically significant differences by gender identity (P=.003), race (P=.01), ethnicity (P=.008), and pronouns (P=.02). The scores were highest for members with multiple gender identities (mean 4.56, SD 0.37), and members who did not provide their race, ethnicity, or their pronouns (mean 4.55, SD 0.64). Impact scores were lowest for transgender members (mean 4.11, SD 0.95).

Conclusions: The LGBTQ+ Navigation service, by enhancing members' comprehension and use of necessary care, demonstrates potential public health utility and value. Continuous evaluation of navigation services can serve as a supplementary tool for employers seeking to promote health equity and improve belonging among employees. This is particularly important as discrimination and stigma against LGBTQ+ communities persist in the United States. Therefore, scalable and system-level changes that use navigation services are essential to reach a larger proportion of the LGBTQ+ population.

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来源期刊
JMIR Formative Research
JMIR Formative Research Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
579
审稿时长
12 weeks
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