| Literature DB >> 27465507 |
Elise R Carrotte1, Alyce M Vella2, Anna L Bowring2,3, Caitlin Douglass2,3, Margaret E Hellard2,3, Megan S C Lim2,3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heteronormativity describes a set of norms and assumptions pertaining to heterosexual identities and binary gender. In 2015, we conducted our annual Sex, Drugs and Rock'n'Roll study, an online health survey of over 1000 Victorians aged 15-29 years. Feedback from participants suggested that our survey contained heteronormative language. In response to this, we aimed to make inclusive changes to our survey via consultation with young gender and sexually diverse (GSD) people.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27465507 PMCID: PMC4964098 DOI: 10.1186/s12874-016-0193-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Changes to the Sex, Drugs and Rock’n’Roll (SDRR) survey
| Topic | 2015 questions | Updated questions | Description of changes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | What is your gender? | What is your gender? (Please select all that apply) | Participants now have more flexibility in specifying their gender identity and can choose multiple options that describe them. Transgender participants can specify their gender identity rather than just noting they are transgender. |
| Intersex status | Not asked | Intersex is a term for people born with atypical physical sex characteristics. There are many different intersex traits or variations. Do you have an intersex variation? | Inclusion of intersex status. |
| Sexual identity | How do you identify yourself? | How do you currently identify yourself? (Please select all that apply) | Question reworded to specify current sexual identity. Participants able to choose multiple terms. Additional options included. |
| Sexual behaviour | How old were you when you |
| More options included for each sexual behaviour rather than just age of first experience. |
| STI risk behaviour | In the last 12 months how often did you use a condom with [regular/casual/new] sex partner/s? | In the last 12 months, how often did you use a condom during fellatio (mouth to penis, ‘blow jobs’)? | ‘Sex’ not defined before set of questions; rather, questions are worded more specifically. |
| Contraception use at last penetrative sex | The last time you had sex, which form(s) of contraception did you or the person you had sex with use? (tick all that apply) Options: Condom, oral contraception (the pill), injection (Depo Provera), implant (implanon), emergency/morning after pill, withdrawal/pulling out, none, other [option to specify] | The last time you had vaginal intercourse (penis in vagina), which form(s) of contraception did you or your partner use? (Please select all that apply) | Only asked if reporting vaginal intercourse ever. |
N.B. ‘I don’t wish to say’ is also an option for all questions in the both original and updated surveys
Recommendations for inclusive sexual health research involving general populations
| Topic | Recommendations |
|---|---|
| General | Eliminate question ambiguity by identifying the true aim of each question and the type of data you wish to collect. To achieve this, ensure questions are specific, clear and use defined time periods |
| Avoid language that assumes participants are heterosexual or cisgender, or that certain behaviours are ‘normal’ | |
| Use language that is culturally appropriate | |
| Avoid forced-choice, single option items and binary categorisations where possible | |
| Avoid skip patterns based on participants’ recorded gender or sexual identity; these require assumptions about participants’ attraction, identity, behaviour and genitals | |
| Routinely update questions based on cultural changes, feedback and relevant research while still considering data comparability across time | |
| Consult with GSD people and organisations if unsure of best wording of questions – avoid making assumptions | |
| Check relevancy and appropriateness of questions, particularly if space or your budget is limited, and aim to balance these considerations with making language as inclusive as possible | |
| Be aware of your own biases and knowledge limitations as a researcher | |
| Carefully consider all recommendations within the context of the research (including location and audience) | |
| Gender/sex | Determine whether your research is interested in sex assigned at birth, gender identity, neither, or both |
| If interested in sex | |
| When asking for participants’ gender identities, use open-ended or free text options if possible. If free-text is not an option, ensure options are more diverse than ‘female’ and ‘male’. Include recognition of transgender participants, non-binary/genderqueer participants, and other gender identities. Allow selection of multiple options or be specific with wording | |
| Ensure gender/sex questions are optional | |
| Avoid treating gender as binary (male/female) throughout the survey, including avoiding language implying a binary such as ‘both genders’ or ‘opposite sex’ | |
| Avoid conflating gender and sex and be consistent with terminology | |
| Ask about intersex variations separately from sex and gender | |
| Sexual orientation | Consider sexual orientation in terms of identity, attraction and behaviour, if relevant |
| When asking about sexual identity, use open-ended or free text options where possible. If free-text is not an option, avoid ‘othering’ participants by including a range of sexual identities and options such as ‘I don’t know’ or ‘I don’t label myself’. | |
| Consider selection of multiple identities | |
| Sexual behaviour | Avoid defining ‘sex’; instead, be specific to the sexual behaviour of interest |
| Clearly identify when questions are referring to STI transmission risk, risk of pregnancy, or other objectives | |
| Consider appropriate skip patterns for questions that may be irrelevant to participants based on previous response patterns (this will also help reduce participant fatigue) | |
| Consider respectful and appropriate inclusion of sexual behaviours beyond penetrative sex |