| Literature DB >> 31470837 |
Matthew Morris1, Robert Lyle Cooper2, Aramandla Ramesh3, Mohammad Tabatabai4, Thomas A Arcury5, Marybeth Shinn6, Wansoo Im2, Paul Juarez2, Patricia Matthews-Juarez2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning (LGBTQ) individuals experience higher rates of health disparities. These disparities may be driven, in part, by biases of medical providers encountered in health care settings. Little is known about how medical, nursing, or dental students are trained to identify and reduce the effects of their own biases toward LGBTQ individuals. Therefore, a systematic review was conducted to determine the effectiveness of programs to reduce health care student or provider bias towards these LGBTQ patients.Entities:
Keywords: Cultural competence; Implicit bias; LGBTQ; Medical education
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31470837 PMCID: PMC6716913 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-019-1727-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Fig. 1Example of search strategy applied in MEDLINE/PubMed
Fig. 2Flowchart of study selection
Description of Programs Targeting LGBTQ-Related Bias
| Study | Sample | Program Format | Program Target | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medical, Nursing or Dental Students | ||||
| Carabez et al. (2015) [ | Nursing students ( | Readings Lecture ( Scripted interview exercise | Knowledge Comfort level | Increase in knowledge and awareness of LGBT health care needs. Increase in comfort level working with LGBT patients. Qualitative data suggest increase in awareness of unconscious biases. |
| Dixon-Woods et al. (2002) [ | Medical students ( | 3 sessions Lecture Presentation by LGBT individuals Small group discussion and exercises Problem-based case studies | Knowledge Comfort level Attitudes | Increase in knowledge and awareness of LGBT health care needs. Increase comfort level working with LGBT patients. Reduction in anxiety about sexual sexuality. Change in attitudes about human sexuality was not observed. |
| Eriksson & Safer (2016) [ | Medical students ( | Lecture ( | Knowledge Attitudes | Increase in knowledge of gender identity. Change in attitude toward transgender medicine. |
| Isaac & Behar-Horenstein (2016) [ | Dental students ( | Interviews with LGBT individuals Writing exercise | Attitudes | Qualitative evidence of increase in awareness of sexual prejudice. Qualitative evidence of change in attitudes toward LGBT individuals. |
| Johnson et al. (2015) [ | Medical students ( | Sexual health curriculum (1 week) | Knowledge Attitudes | Descriptive statistics suggest increases in knowledge of sexual health issues post-training and at 3-month follow-up. Descriptive statistics suggest changes in attitudes toward sexual health post-training and at 3-month follow-up. |
| Kelley et al. (2008) [ | Medical students ( | LGBT health curriculum (3 sessions) Patient panel with LGBT individuals Small group discussion, led by LGBT individuals, focused on case studies | Knowledge Attitudes | Increases in knowledge of LGBT issues and health care needs. Changes in attitudes toward LGBT patients. Anecdotal evidence that awareness of unconscious prejudices increased. |
| Rosen et al. (2006) [ | Medical residents( | Workshop curriculum (half day) Lectures ( Patient interviews Panel discussion Small group discussion | Knowledge Comfort level Attitudes | Increase in knowledge and awareness of sexual medicine. Increase in comfort level with sexual history taking. Anecdotal evidence of change in attitudes toward sexual medicine. |
| Strong & Folse (2015) [ | Nursing students ( | Lecture (45 min) | Knowledge Attitudes | Increase in knowledge and awareness of LGBT health care needs. Changes in attitudes toward LGBT patients. |
| Thomas & Safer (2015) [ | Medical residents ( | Lecture (60 min) on gender identity and transgender medicine | Knowledge Attitudes | Increase in knowledge of transgender medicine. Changes in attitudes toward transgender patients. |
| Health Care Providers | ||||
| Costa et al. (2016) [ | Health care providers ( | Web-based course (4 weeks) Perspective-taking Videos of LGBT individuals describing discrimination in health care settings LGBT needs assessment exercise Activity to improve LGBT health Tutors included LGBT activists Small group discussion Peer evaluation | Attitudes | Decrease in self-report prejudice toward LGBT individuals. |
| Hardacker et al. (2014) [ | Nurses and health care providers ( | Lectures ( | Knowledge Attitudes | Increases in knowledge of LGBT health care needs. Anecdotal evidence of change in attitudes toward LGBT patients. |
| Reygan & D’Alton (2013) [ | Health care providers ( | Group training module (50 min) involving lecture and discussion | Knowledge Comfort level | Increase in knowledge and awareness of LGBT health care needs. Increase in comfort level working with LGBT patients. |
| Tarasoff et al. (2014) [ | Health care providers ( | Interactive theater workshop involving role-play and perspective-taking (90 min) | Knowledge Comfort level | Increase in knowledge and awareness of LGBT health care needs. No change in comfort level working with LGBT patients. |
Opportunities for LGBT Bias Reduction in Medical, Nursing, and Dental School Training
| Training Target | Training Activity | Training Modality | Competency Domains |
|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge | Understanding sexual orientation, gender identity, LGBTQ terminology | Lecture Conferences or workshops | Knowledge for practice Interpersonal and communication skills Professionalism |
| Understanding transgender medical care | Lecture Conferences or workshops Simulation/standardized patients | Knowledge for practice Patient care Practice-based learning and improvement | |
| Understanding the potential impact of LGBTQ-related discrimination on health disparities | Lecture Conferences or workshops Small group discussion | Patient care Professionalism | |
| Explicit attitudes | Contact with LGBTQ individuals through presentations and patient panels | Conferences or workshops | Knowledge for practice Interpersonal and communication skills |
| Understanding discrimination in health care settings through presentations by LGBTQ patients | Conferences or workshops Case- or problem-based learning | Patient care Practice-based learning and improvement Professionalism | |
| Comfort level | Navigating LGBTQ patient care scenarios | Case- or problem-based learning Simulation/standardized patients | Patient care Practice-based learning and improvement |
| Sexual history taking with LGBTQ patients | Simulation/standardized patients | Patient care Practice-based learning and improvement | |
| Increasing comfort with LGBTQ patient care through role-play and perspective taking exercises | Small group discussion | Practice-based learning and improvement Interpersonal and communication skills Professionalism | |
| Implicit attitudes | Understanding the psychological basis of implicit bias | Lecture Conferences or workshops | Knowledge for practice Personal and professional development |
| Understanding the impact of implicit bias on health care providers | Lecture Conferences or workshops | Knowledge for practice Personal and professional development | |
| Increasing awareness of implicit biases through taking the Implicit Association Test | Small group discussion | Patient care Personal and professional development | |
| Practicing bias reduction (e.g., individuation training, emotion regulation skills) | Conferences or workshops | Practice-based learning and improvement Personal and professional development |