| Literature DB >> 34831556 |
Jorge Medina-Martínez1, Carlos Saus-Ortega1,2, María Montserrat Sánchez-Lorente1,2, Eva María Sosa-Palanca1,2, Pedro García-Martínez1,2, María Isabel Mármol-López1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people present poorer mental and physical health results compared to the heterosexual and cisgender population. There are barriers in the healthcare system that increase these health inequities.Entities:
Keywords: LGBT; minority stress; nurses; nursing; sexual and gender minorities; social determinants of health; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34831556 PMCID: PMC8624572 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182211801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Database search strategy.
| Database/Metasearch Engine | Search String | Obtained Records | Selected Records | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cuiden | Spanish: | ((LGBT) OR (minorías sexuales y de género)) AND ((enfermería) OR (enfermeras)) | 9 | 0 |
| LILACS | 17 | 0 | ||
| SciELO | 1 | 0 | ||
| Dialnet | 3 | 0 | ||
| PubMed | English: | ((LGBT) OR (sexual and gender minorities)) AND ((nursing) OR (nurses])) | 106 | 7 |
| Trip Database | 125 | 3 | ||
| Web of Science | 120 | 7 | ||
Figure 1Flow chart of research [21].
The results of quasi-experimental pre-test-post-test studies selected for the review.
| Authors and Year | Sample | Scale | Total Score | Knowledge/Skills Score | Support/Beliefs Score | Oppression/Awareness Score | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Test Mean (SD) | Post-Test Mean (SD) | Significant Change | Pre-Test Mean (SD) | Post-Test Mean (SD) | Significant Change | Pre-Test Mean (SD) | Post-Test Mean (SD) | Significant Change | Pre-Test Mean (SD) | Post-Test Mean (SD) | Significant Change | |||
| Bristol et al. (2018) [ | 135 | AIM | 64.1 (9.5) | 72.5 (8.7) | Yes | 23.6 (5.3) | 29.2 (4.6) | Yes | 24.9 (4.3) | 26.6 (4.1) | No | 15.5 (2.4) | 16.8 (2.6) | Yes |
| Maruca et al. (2018) [ | 48 | GAP | 112 (25.99) | 117 (29.85) | Yes | 50 (15.66) | 54 (15.9) | Yes | 61 (13.77) | 61 (17.28) | No | - | - | - |
| Wyckoff (2019) [ | 30 | GAP | 111.7 (19.99) | 124.93 (21.14) | Yes | 47.6 (15.75) | 58.07 (16.71) | Yes | 64.1 (8.42) | 66.87 (8.15) | No | - | - | - |
| Du Mont et al. (2020) [ | 47 | Likert | 3.79 (0.63) | 4.7 (0.31) | Yes | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Vance et al. (2016) [ | 20 | Likert | 2.45 | 4.175 | Yes | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Note. Source: Prepared by the authors based on data from the bibliography [39,40,41,42,43]. Abbreviations: GAP, Gay Affirmative Practice Scale; AIM, Ally Identity Measure Scale.
Synthesis of the results of the studies included in this review.
| Authors, Year, and Country | Study Type and Sample | Intervention/Variables | Results/Conclusions | Methodological Quality | Level of Evidence and Grade of Recommendation (SIGN) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Van Gerwen et al. (2020) | Meta-analysis and systematic review. 25 selected articles on trans women and trans men. | The specific health needs of LGBT people. | The prevalence of HIV in trans women was 0–49.6%, and in trans men it was 0–8.3%. The most vulnerable LGBT sub-group was trans women in prostitution. Limitations: the results were difficult to generalise because of wide variability between the studies, and in several cases, only trans women in prostitution were included; there was a lack of studies on trans men and on STIs other than HIV. | PRISMA: 25/27 | 1+ |
| Hossain and Ferreira (2019) | Systematic review. 20 selected articles on LGBT youth. | The specific health needs of LGBT people. | The social context strongly influences the self-conception and self-esteem of LGBT youth. A negative social context favours the appearance of MH problems. | PRISMA: 20/27 | 2++ |
| Raynor et al. (2019) | Systematic review. 10 selected articles on trans youth. | The specific health needs of LGBT people. Nursing interventions. | Factors such as socioeconomic vulnerability, stigma, MH problems, etc., are related to substance abuse and risky behaviours in trans youth. Health professionals must adopt a gender-affirming approach to trans people. | PRISMA: 17/27 | 2++ |
| Wilson and Cariola (2020) | Systematic review. 34 selected articles on LGBT youth. | The specific health needs of LGBT people. Nursing interventions. | Isolation, rejection, anti-LGBT attitudes, and marginalisation, etc., can lead to MH problems such as depression, self-harm, and suicide in LGBT youth. Connectedness to others and implementing specific education programmes in schools can enhance the MH of LGBT youth. | PRISMA: 19/27 | 2++ |
| Yıldız (2018) | Systematic review. 14 selected articles on LGBT youth. | The specific health needs of LGBT people. Nursing interventions. | LGBT youth presented more suicidal ideations and suicide attempts than cis-heterosexual youth. Family-centred care should be one of the principles of practice, and nurses could carry out programmes to prevent suicide and discrimination. | PRISMA: 17/27 | 2++ |
| Kittiteera-sack et al. (2020) Thailand | Descriptive cross-sectional study. 411 LGBT people. | The specific health needs of LGBT people. | Lifetime suicidal ideations were associated with more social discrimination, stress, loneliness, and chronic illnesses. Suicide attempts were associated with internalised anti-LGBT prejudice, poverty, chronic illness, alcohol use, and poor physical health. | STROBE: 20/22 | 3 |
| Logie et al. (2018) Canada | Qualitative study. 51 participants: 16 LGBT teenagers, 21 LGBT adults, and 14 key informants. | The experiences and perceptions of LGBT people. | Cis-heteronormativity and stigma influenced the care provided to LGBT people, who reported negative experiences with health professionals that in turn limited their access to the healthcare system. Non-judgmental care, knowledge of LGBT health, and gender inclusiveness was recommended. | CASPe: 9/10 | Q |
| McCann and Brown (2019) Ireland | Qualitative study. 20 LGBT people. | The experiences and perceptions of LGBT people. | LGBT people reported negative experiences with MH professionals. They expected respectful, empathetic, culturally competent, and person-centred care. | CASPe: 9/10 | Q |
| Karakaya and Kutlu (2020) Turkey | Qualitative study. 18 LGBT people. | The experiences and perceptions of LGBT people. | LGBT people reported having negative experiences with health professionals (stigma for being LGBT or having STIs and assumptions that cis-heterosexuality was the standard, etc.). For fear of discrimination, some LGBT people delayed or avoided accessing the healthcare system. | CASPe: 10/10 | Q |
| McCann and Brown (2018) | Systematic review. 22 selected articles on health professionals. | Nursing interventions. | Training health professionals and inclusion of knowledge about LGBT health in the curricula followed can help these professionals to promote culturally competent care. | PRISMA: 18/27 | 2++ |
| Bristol et al. (2018) USA | Quasi-experimental pre-test–post-test study. 135 health professionals. | Educational intervention. | After the intervention, health professionals’ knowledge and skills significantly increased. Openness and support scores also increased, but not significantly. Limitations: use of convenience sampling and low survey return rate. | CASPe: 6/11 | 2+ |
| Du Mont et al. (2020) Canada | Quasi-experimental pre-test–post-test study. 47 forensic nurses. | Educational intervention. | After the intervention, both perceived and demonstrated competence significantly increased in all the established domains. | CASPe: 6/11 | 2+ |
| Maruca et al. (2018) USA | Quasi-experimental pre-test–post-test study. 47 nursing students. | Educational intervention. | There was a significant difference between the mean pre-test and post-test scores for practical behaviours and a non-significant change in beliefs/attitudes. | CASPe: 6/11 | 2+ |
| Vance et al. (2016) USA | Quasi-experimental pre-test–post-test study. 20 health professionals and students. | Educational intervention. | After the intervention, knowledge scores related to trans youth considerably increased. | CASPe: 6/11 | 2+ |
| Wyckoff (2019) USA | Quasi-experimental pre-test–post-test study. 30 nurses. | Educational intervention. | There was a statistically significant difference between the total pre-test and post-test scores as well as the behaviour score. In the belief score, the difference was not statistically significant. | CASPe: 6/11 | 2+ |
| Kuzma et al. (2019) USA | Qualitative study. 99 advanced practice nursing students. | Standardised patient experiences and debriefing sessions. Nursing interventions. | The students said that the experiences with standardised patients helped them to develop knowledge and skills on how to treat LGBT patients and set aside their assumptions, prejudices, and biases. | CASPe: 7/10 | Q |