Michelle D Sherman1,2,3, Michael R Kauth2,4,5,6,7, Jillian C Shipherd5,8,9,10, Richard L Street6,11,7. 1. 1 Oklahoma City VA Medical Center , Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 2. 2 South Central Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center . 3. 3 University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center , Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 4. 4 Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center , Houston, Texas. 5. 5 VA Central Office, Patient Care Services Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Program, VA Health Services Research & Development Houston Center of Excellence , Houston, Texas. 6. 6 Baylor College of Medicine , Houston, Texas. 7. 10 VA Health Services Research & Development Houston Center of Excellence , Houston, Texas. 8. 7 VA Boston Healthcare System , Boston, Massachusetts. 9. 8 School of Medicine, Boston University , Boston, Massachusetts. 10. 11 National Center for PTSD , Women's Health Sciences Division. 11. 9 Texas A&M University , College Station, Texas.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Despite known health disparities for lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) individuals, research in the civilian sector has documented low rates of patient disclosure and provider assessment of this domain. Very little is known about Veterans Health Affairs (VHA) providers' care of LGB veterans, a population that has been relatively invisible until recently because of the vestiges of the Department of Defense policy of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell." This study examined the attitudes, beliefs, and clinical practices of VHA healthcare providers regarding sexual minority veterans. METHODS: Physical and mental health VHA healthcare providers (n=202) from two southern VHA hospitals completed an anonymous self-report questionnaire. Measures included comfort in providing care to LGB veterans, factors affecting decisions about assessing sexual orientation with veterans, and attitudes toward sexual minority individuals. RESULTS: Although approximately half of VHA providers thought that sexual orientation should be routinely discussed, the providers rarely assessed this issue with their patients. Over half of providers believed that veterans would disclose their sexual orientation if it was important to them, and almost half of providers believed sexual orientation is not relevant to healthcare. CONCLUSION: Many VHA providers may be unaware of the unique health disparities experienced by LGB individuals. Culturally appropriate care cannot be provided to LGB veterans unless providers explicitly assess sexual orientation in healthcare visits. Central to this assessment is providing patients with a clear rationale for the purpose of the assessment and related documentation. Staff training is needed to address providers' beliefs and reservations about discussing sexual orientation that emerged in this investigation.
PURPOSE: Despite known health disparities for lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) individuals, research in the civilian sector has documented low rates of patient disclosure and provider assessment of this domain. Very little is known about Veterans Health Affairs (VHA) providers' care of LGB veterans, a population that has been relatively invisible until recently because of the vestiges of the Department of Defense policy of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell." This study examined the attitudes, beliefs, and clinical practices of VHA healthcare providers regarding sexual minority veterans. METHODS: Physical and mental health VHA healthcare providers (n=202) from two southern VHA hospitals completed an anonymous self-report questionnaire. Measures included comfort in providing care to LGB veterans, factors affecting decisions about assessing sexual orientation with veterans, and attitudes toward sexual minority individuals. RESULTS: Although approximately half of VHA providers thought that sexual orientation should be routinely discussed, the providers rarely assessed this issue with their patients. Over half of providers believed that veterans would disclose their sexual orientation if it was important to them, and almost half of providers believed sexual orientation is not relevant to healthcare. CONCLUSION: Many VHA providers may be unaware of the unique health disparities experienced by LGB individuals. Culturally appropriate care cannot be provided to LGB veterans unless providers explicitly assess sexual orientation in healthcare visits. Central to this assessment is providing patients with a clear rationale for the purpose of the assessment and related documentation. Staff training is needed to address providers' beliefs and reservations about discussing sexual orientation that emerged in this investigation.
Entities:
Keywords:
Veterans Affairs hospital; lesbian/gay; patient–provider communication; sexual orientation; veterans
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