| Literature DB >> 35619900 |
Jane M Ussher1, Rosalie Power1, Janette Perz1, Alexandra J Hawkey1, Kimberley Allison1.
Abstract
Background: Awareness of the specific needs of LGBTQI cancer patients has led to calls for inclusivity, cultural competence, cultural safety and cultural humility in cancer care. Examination of oncology healthcare professionals' (HCP) perspectives is central to identifying barriers and facilitators to inclusive LGBTQI cancer care. Study Aim: This study examined oncology HCPs perspectives in relation to LGBTQI cancer care, and the implications of HCP perspectives and practices for LGBTQI patients and their caregivers. Method: 357 oncology HCPs in nursing (40%), medical (24%), allied health (19%) and leadership (11%) positions took part in a survey; 48 HCPs completed an interview. 430 LGBTQI patients, representing a range of tumor types, sexual and gender identities, age and intersex status, and 132 carers completed a survey, and 104 LGBTQI patients and 31 carers undertook an interview. Data were analysed using thematic discourse analysis.Entities:
Keywords: LGBTQI; cancer care; cultural competence; discourse analysis; healthcare professionals; patients and carers; qualitative study
Year: 2022 PMID: 35619900 PMCID: PMC9127408 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.832657
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 5.738
Figure 1The Out with Cancer Study overall design.
Sociodemographic and Professional Characteristics of Participating Health Care Professionals.
| Demographic/Professional characteristic | Survey participants | Interview participants |
|---|---|---|
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| Age (years) (n = 356) | 47.29 (12.45), | 45.94 (13.04), |
| 22-82 | 24-68 | |
| Time working in cancer care (years) (n = 303) | 14.31 (10.21), 0.33-45 | 13.15 (9.89), 0.50-40 |
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| Gender (n = 357) | ||
| Female | 278 (77.9%) | 36 (75.0%) |
| Male | 76 (21.3%) | 12 (25.0%) |
| Non-binary | 3 (0.8%) | 0 |
| Ethnicity (n = 352) | ||
| Caucasian | 305 (85.4%) | 42 (87.5%) |
| Asian | 22 (6.2%) | 2 (4.2%) |
| Middle Eastern/African | 6 (1.7%) | 3 (6.3%) |
| Mixed background | 8 (2.2%) | 1 (2.1%) |
| Other/unclear background1 | 11 (3.1%) | 0 |
| LGBTQI+ themselves (n = 328) | ||
| Yes | 60 (18.3%) | 18 (37.5%) |
| No | 264 (80.5%) | 30 (62.5%) |
| Prefer not to answer | 4 (1.2%) | 0 |
| Has LGBTQI+ family (n = 328) | ||
| Yes | 135 (41.2%) | 25 (52.1%) |
| No | 191 (53.5%) | 22 (45.8%) |
| Prefer not to answer | 2 (0.6%) | 1 (2.1%) |
| Has LGBTQI+ friend/s (n = 328) | ||
| Yes | 300 (91.5%) | 47 (97.9%) |
| No | 28 (7.8%) | 1 (2.1%) |
| Country (n = 357) | ||
| Australia | 315 (88.2%) | 44 (91.7%) |
| United States of America | 17 (4.8%) | 0 |
| United Kingdom | 10 (2.8%) | 3 (6.3%) |
| New Zealand | 5 (1.4%) | 0 |
| Canada | 3 (0.8%) | 1 (2.1%) |
| Other | 7 (2.0%) | 0 |
| Professional discipline (n = 356) | ||
| Medical | 87 (24.4%) | 12 (25.0%) |
| Nursing | 142 (39.9%) | 15 (31.3%) |
| Allied health | 69 (19.4%) | 15 (31.3%) |
| Leadership | 38 (10.7%) | 4 (8.3%) |
| Other2 | 20 (5.6%) | 2 (4.2%) |
| Workplace location (n = 355) | ||
| Urban | 247 (69.2%) | 38 (79.2%) |
| Regional | 85 (26.6%) | 9 (18.8%) |
| Rural | 9 (2.5%) | 1 (2.1%) |
| Remote | 4 (1.1%) | 0 |
| Healthcare sector* | ||
| Public | 230 (64.4%) | 29 (60.4%) |
| Private | 72 (20.2%) | 10 (20.8%) |
| Primary healthcare | 9 (2.5%) | 0 |
| Community-based | 11 (3.1%) | 2 (4.2%) |
| Not for profit | 88 (24.6%) | 16 (33.3%) |
| Something else | 24 (6.7%) | 2 (4.2%) |
| Number of patients seen per week (n = 318) | ||
| 0-25 | 189 (59.4%) | 23 (48.9%) |
| 26-50 | 75 (23.6%) | 12 (25.5%) |
| 51-75 | 29 (8.1%) | 9 (19.1%) |
| 76+ | 25 (7.9%) | 3 (6.4%) |
| Age groups seen* (n = 320) | ||
| Paediatric | 17 (5.3%) | 1 (2.1%) |
| Adolescent and young adult | 86 (26.9%) | 18 (38.3%) |
| Adult | 279 (87.2%) | 39 (83.0%) |
| Older adult/elderly | 177 (55.3%) | 29 (61.7%) |
| Estimated proportion of patients who are LGBTQI+ (n = 317) | ||
| None | 29 (9.1%) | 0 |
| <5% | 154 (48.6%) | 24 (51.1%) |
| 6-10% | 58 (18.3%) | 13 (27.7%) |
| 11-15% | 10 (3.2%) | 1 (2.1%) |
| 16-20% | 4 (1.3%) | 0 |
| > 20% | 2 (0.6%) | 2 (4.3%) |
| Unsure | 57 (18.0%) | 7 (14.9%) |
| N/A | 3 (0.9%) | 0 |
| Had formal education about healthcare needs of…* (n = 355) | ||
| Sexuality diverse people | 96 (27.0%) | 23 (47.9%) |
| Trans and gender diverse people | 74 (20.8%) | 18 (37.5%) |
| People born with an intersex variation | 52 (14.6%) | 11 (22.9%) |
*Participants could select multiple options for questions about healthcare sector, age groups seen, and LGBTQI healthcare training.
1Ethnicity Other/unclear background: Latin American (n = 4), Jewish (n = 3), Aboriginal (n = 1), not clearly described (n = 3).
2Professional background - Other: Research (n = 7), administration (n = 3), dentistry (n = 1), paralegal (n = 1), education/training (n = 1), none/retired (n = 7).
Demographic and cancer characteristics of LGBTQI patients and carers - Survey Participants.
| Demographic/Cancer Characteristic | Patient Survey | Carer Survey | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | Carers | Patients carer for by carers1 | ||||
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| Age at time of study (years) | 429 | 52.5 (15.7), 16-92 | 132 | 50.2 (17.0), 15-76 | – | – |
| Age at diagnosis (years) | 363 | 46.3 (15.3), 1-79 | 126 | 42.8 (16.6), 0-70 | 120 | 50.3 (15.6), 1-92 |
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| Country | 430 | 132 | – | – | ||
| Australia | 311 (72.3%) | 93 (70.5%) | ||||
| United States of America | 62 (14.4%) | 14 (10.6%) | ||||
| United Kingdom | 29 (6.7%) | 9 (6.8%) | ||||
| New Zealand | 8 (1.9%) | 6 (4.5%) | ||||
| Canada | 7 (1.6%) | 4 (3.0%) | ||||
| Other | 13 (3.0%)2 | 6 (3.6%)3 | ||||
| Gender | 430 | 132 | 132 | |||
| Cis female | 216 (50.2%) | 83 (62.9%) | 90 (68.2%) | |||
| Cis male | 145 (33.7%) | 26 (19.7%) | 36 (27.3%) | |||
| Non-binary | 34 (7.9%) | 16 (12.1%) | 2 (1.5%) | |||
| Trans female | 13 (3.0%) | 5 (3.8%) | 1 (0.8%) | |||
| Trans male | 8 (1.9%) | 2 (1.5%) | 0 | |||
| Different or multiple identities | 14 (3.3%)4 | 0 | 3 (2.3%) | |||
| Sexuality | 430 | 132 | 131 | |||
| Lesbian, gay or homosexual | 317 (73.7%) | 95 (72.0%) | 81 (61.8%) | |||
| Bisexual or pansexual | 47 (10.9%) | 17 (12.9%) | 5 (3.8%) | |||
| Queer | 45 (10.5%) | 12 (9.1%) | 5 (3.8%) | |||
| Straight or heterosexual | 10 (2.3%) | 5 (3.8%) | 33 (25.2%) | |||
| Different or multiple identities | 11 (2.6%) | 3 (2.3%) | 1 (0.8%) | |||
| Not sure | – | – | 6 (4.6%) | |||
| Intersex variation | 430 | 132 | 132 | |||
| Yes | 31 (7.2%) | 5 (3.8%) | 0 | |||
| No | 388 (90.2%) | 127 (96.2%) | 127 (96.2%) | |||
| Prefer not to answer | 11 (2.6%) | 0 | 0 | |||
| Not sure | – | – | 5 (3.8%) | |||
| Race/ethnicity | 425 | 132 | – | – | ||
| Caucasian | 362 (85.2%) | 109 (82.6%) | ||||
| Asian | 11 (2.6%) | 5 (3.8%) | ||||
| Australian Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander or Maori | 9 (2.1%) | 4 (3.0%) | ||||
| Mixed background | 19 (4.5%) | 6 (4.5%) | ||||
| Other/unclear background | 24 (5.6%)5 | 8 (6.1%)6 | ||||
| Education | 422 | 131 | – | – | ||
| Less than secondary | 10 (2.4%) | 7 (5.3%) | ||||
| Secondary | 45 (10.7%) | 17 (13.0%) | ||||
| Some post-secondary | 55 (13.0%) | 9 (6.9%) | ||||
| Post-secondary | 312 (73.9%) | 98 (74.8%) | ||||
| Location | 429 | 132 | – | – | ||
| Urban | 234 (54.5%) | 69 (52.3%) | ||||
| Regional | 145 (33.8%) | 48 (36.4%) | ||||
| Rural or remote | 50 (11.7%) | 15 (11.4%) | ||||
| Relationship to PWC | – | – | 132 | – | – | |
| Partner/ex-partner | 84 (63.6%) | |||||
| Family | 31 (23.5%) | |||||
| Friend | 12 (9.1%) | |||||
| Different relationship | 3 (2.3%) | |||||
| Multiple PWCs/relationships | 2 (1.5%) | |||||
| Cancer diagnosis (first) | 370 | – | – | 129 | ||
| Brain | 11 (3.0%) | 9 (7.0%) | ||||
| Breast | 90 (24.3%) | 37 (28.7%) | ||||
| Cervical | 11 (3.0%) | 4 (3.1%) | ||||
| Colorectal | 17 (4.6%) | 8 (6.2%) | ||||
| Head/neck | 14 (3.8%) | 10 (7.8%) | ||||
| Leukaemia | 17 (4.6%) | 5 (3.9%) | ||||
| Lymphoma | 24 (6.5%) | 6 (4.7%) | ||||
| Ovarian | 17 (4.6%) | 13 (10.1%) | ||||
| Prostate | 59 (15.9%) | 8 (6.2%) | ||||
| Skin | 25 (6.8%) | 3 (2.3%) | ||||
| Uterine | 23 (6.2%) | 4 (3.1%) | ||||
| Other | 58 (15.7%)7 | 19 (14.7%)8 | ||||
| Not sure or unknown | 4 (1.1%) | 3 (2.3%) | ||||
| Cancer stage | 369 | – | – | 129 | ||
| Localised | 228 (61.8%) | 55 (42.6%) | ||||
| Regional | 88 (23.8%) | 43 (33.3%) | ||||
| Distant/metastatic | 32 (8.7%) | 23 (17.8%) | ||||
| N/A (e.g. blood cancer) | 5 (1.4%) | 1 (0.8%) | ||||
| Not sure or unclear | 16 (4.3%) | 7 (5.4%) | ||||
| Subsequent cancers* | 370 | – | – | 129 | ||
| Recurrence | 57 (15.4%) | 30 (23.3%) | ||||
| New primary cancer | 40 (10.8%) | 20 (15.5%) | ||||
| Treatment status | 370 | – | – | 129 | ||
| No treatment yet | 37 (10.0%) | 5 (3.9%) | ||||
| On active curative treatment | 37 (10.0%) | 14 (10.9%) | ||||
| On maintenance treatment | 60 (16.2%) | 19 (14.7%) | ||||
| In remission/completed treatment | 217 (58.6%) | 35 (27.1%) | ||||
| Receiving palliative care (no further active reatment) | 4 (1.1%) | 2 (1.6%) | ||||
| Deceased | – | 51 (39.5%) | ||||
| Not sure, unclear, or multiple | 8 (2.2%) | 3 (2.3%) | ||||
1 Key demographic and cancer characteristics of the patients who carers cared for.
2 Austria (n=4), Bahrain, Chad, Costa Rica, Denmark, Germany, Morocco, Poland, Russian Federation, Serbia (n=1 each).
3 Belize (n=2), Argentina, Lebanon, Germany, Uganda (n=1 each).
4 Intersex (n=4), female with fleeting genderfluid moments, intersex woman, intersex nonbinary woman, female but questioning, trans (n=1 each).
5 Jewish (n = 9), Hispanic/Latine (n = 4), Middle Eastern, Native American, Romani (n=1 each), not clearly described (n = 8).
6 Hispanic/Latine, Jewish (n = 2 each), African, Native American (n=1 each), not clearly described (n = 2).
7 Sarcoma (n=9), kidney, testicular (n=8 each), bladder, thyroid (n=6 each), lung (n=5) anal, pancreatic (n=4 each), liver (n=2), something else (n=6).
8Lung (n=7), bladder, liver, pancreatic (n=2 each), kidney, mesothelioma, pseudo myxoma perotini, sarcoma, stomach, thymus (n=1 each).
*Participants could selected multiple options, if applicable.
LGBTQI patient and carer interview participants by sexuality, gender and intersex status.
| Patient n,% | Carer n,% | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Cis female | 48 (46.2%) | 18 (58.1%) |
| Cis male | 42 (40.4%) | 6 (19.4%) |
| TGD | 11 (10.6%) | 6 (19.4%) |
| Different identity | 3 (2.9%) | 1 (3.2%) |
| Sexuality | ||
| Lesbian, gay or homosexual | 86 (82.7%) | 19 (61.3%) |
| Bisexual | 5 (4.8%) | 3 (9.7%) |
| Queer | 9 (8.7%) | 6 (19.4%) |
| Straight or heterosexual | 1 (1.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| Different or multiple identities | 3 (2.9%) | 3 (9.7%) |
| Intersex variation | ||
| Yes | 3 (2.9%) | 1 (3.2%) |
| No | 100 (96.2%) | 29 (93.5%) |
| Prefer not to answer | 1 (1.0%) | 1 (3.2%) |
TGD, trans and gender diverse.
Figure 2Subject Positions Adopted by Health Care Professionals and the Impact for LGBTQI Patients and their Carers.
Additional Quotes from Health Care Professionals, and LGBTQI Patients and Carers.
| Inclusive and Reflective Practitioner |
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| As a gender-diverse and queer person, when I go in, I don’t make those assumptions about my patients and when they talk about like, I’ll refer to their spouse or their partner, I don’t put those assumptions on them. And I think that makes queer patients a lot more comfortable because they don’t feel like they have to have the awkward correctional coming out. [Lane, Clinical Trials coordinator, 26, Queer, Non-binary] (1)# |
| They need to feel welcomed, they need to be able to feel that they can come out in health care without having to struggle over all these barriers. [Emily, Allied, 54, Lesbian] (2) |
| Establishing early contact and building report early and creating a safe space and thinking about hetero normative language is really important for AYAs. [Natasha, Allied, 30, Lesbian] (3) |
| To be seen by the health practitioner is really important. An aspect of respect, I think, is to respect people’s terminology and self-identification. Another aspect is really respecting and making the relationship or relationships visible. [Suzanne, Med, 40, Queer] (4) |
| If somebody is trans and they’ve grown out their hair, are they going to feel like they’ve taken a step backwards or something if they lose their hair? [Amelia, Nurse, 35, Lesbian] (5) |
| They would be having a different experience of it, because when we talk patients we talk about the impact it’s had on their body and also their sense of identity. And things like, weight loss or weight gain, it can very much impact on body image and identity for gay men. [Lexie, Allied, 27, Straight] (6) |
| This diversity of information should be considered mainstream and the norm rather than an exception to routine practice. For example, being able to give advice to a gay/bisexual man about factors influencing PSA testing, safe timing and approaches to resumption of anal sex after prostate radiotherapy [Survey, Allied, 62, Straight] (7) |
| The majority of our staff talk about using condoms for intercourse and don’t divulge into, you know, what about other types of barrier protection that’s not heterosexual penetrative sex, that doesn’t just focus on using a condom. [Jessica, Nurse, 38, Straight] (8) |
| I ask questions explicitly- that will tend to be how it will come up, if somebody has a same-sex partner, then it comes out that way in talking about what their support networks are. [ … ] So for me, it will come up whenever I get into sort of discussion about who somebody has in their life, who’s going to support them through their cancer diagnosis. [Brett, Med, 37, Gay] (9) |
| It’s essential that everybody assiduously takes note of the preferred gender pronouns and doesn’t dead name them. To be aware that sometimes the name in the medical notes is not the preferred name. And if you don’t know, ask, you know. [Suzanne, Med, 40, Queer] (10) |
| It’s quite daunting, for every patient but particularly for LGBTQI patients. Those kinds of things, like a poster or sticker or whatever it is, I think they make like a big difference for the communities. [Belinda, Med, 44, Lesbian] (11) |
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| Of my cancer-care doctors, my sexuality has mainly been treated as a non-issue. My GP is a gay man so it is openly discussed. My surgeon was welcoming to anyone I brought with me to appointments including my female partner. [Survey, 39, Queer, Breast] (12) |
| The nurses always refer to me as my kids mom and they even went out of their way to say to my kids, what’s this mum called and what do you call that mom. They interacted positively with my children, with my partner and with me. [Virginia, 48, Lesbian, Lymphoma] (13) |
| Because we live in a rural, small town area, where everyone knows everyone - I think we experience little discrimination, it helps with being respected. [Survey, Partner, 57, Lesbian, Lung] (14) |
| There was no sign of [HCP] discomfort or not knowing how to handle it. I felt at ease being there as his same sex partner. And they respected our relationship and didn’t have any issues whatsoever. [Nathan, Partner, 50, Gay, Head/Neck] (15) |
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| I don’t tailor the care, because I don’t want to be like, oh, you’re a lesbian couple, come here and I’ll do all this fancy stuff with you. I guess I try to treat everyone the same” [Naomi, Allied, 28, Straight] (16) |
| I don’t take a lot of time to say, ‘so is your partner male or female?’ I don’t know whether or not that’s an important thing to do. I think that people that want to tell you and feel comfortable with you will tell you. [Belinda, Med, 44, Lesbian] (17) |
| I would be asking about some of these social networks, you know, who’s in their life? Do you have a partner? That’s very often how they’re going to get through. It becomes very much patient led, so the patient can tell you about whatever they want to, if they wish, or not, disclose or whatever. [Brett, Med, 37, Gay] (18) |
| I let them lead the conversation a little bit. I’d have it if they were prepared to. I don’t have any problems talking about anything that anybody wants to talk about, but probably my confidence in initiating those conversations would be low because I don’t know enough about it. [Jessica, Nurse, 38, Straight] (19) |
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| I think it’s really the vibes that they give off. You can’t really pin it to one sort of thing. I think if they’re sort of open, if they’re seeming open and interested in how your life is then that’s a bit of an opening and then you explore a bit and sort of see how they react to other sort of lifestyle things. [Aaron, 32, Gay, Bowel] (20) |
| You’re constantly having to decide whether it’s worth disclosing to this person, and whether that cost-benefit ratio of how much privacy you have to give up for your care is actually going to pay off. [Dylan, 32, Gay, Non-binary, Leukaemia] (21) |
| It’s nobody’s business what I do in my private life. I would have to have an enormous amount of trust in them. So, I won’t share none of it with no one. Of course, they are not stupid, they can guess all they want. [Survey, 67, Gay, Head/Neck] (22) |
| There wasn’t anything specific to same gender couples. There might have been one page out of the whole resource, out of the whole collection of resources. [Cameron, Partner, 38, Queer, Non-binary, Breast] (23) |
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| I’ve heard nurses say, well, I’m entitled to my beliefs that homosexuality is wrong. [Amy, Nurse, 55, Lesbian] (24) |
| There’s no way anyone is going to openly discriminate or be openly prejudiced. And so those acts are a lot more insidious and subtle. The clinicians will say, oh, no, we do everything great, when in fact they don’t because if you ask the patients, they’ll say, no, they don’t. [Jodi, Allied, 39, Lesbian] (25) |
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| I thought that maybe he was just having an off day. But it turns out it wasn’t, he was just a homophobic jerk. He clearly read me as a lesbian and he was dismissive of me as a person, It felt like I was being treated like a lesser person. And that judgment was based on his belief system. [Jasper, 50, Queer, Breast] (26) |
| That kind of discrimination that is just so constant and covert and daily that it gradually chips away at your confidence and sense of self-worth. [Jessie, 37, Queer, Non-binary/Gender-fluid, Medical Intervention] (27) |
| At times it felt like medical professionals were reluctant to provide me with any information, and treated me lesser than because I was not a heterosexual white individual. [Survey, Carer, 40, Queer, Non-binary/gender-fluid, Bowel] (28) |
| You just get that look or that raised eyebrow, or you don’t get referred to properly. I reckon about two out of every ten professionals that we’ve had to deal with, have been a little bit uncomfortable or a little bit weird about it. [Barry, Partner, 56, Gay, Lung] (29) |
| A couple of times doctors have questioned whether my partner has other family even though I am listed as next of kin on the paperwork. I have found this to be a bit insensitive and it feels like they are looking for more legitimate people to engage with. [Survey, Partner, 39, Lesbian, Brain] (30) |
| I had difficulty engaging various healthcare professionals because of my presentation as non-binary/trans. I often felt mainstream services did not willingly provide me with the support I needed. So I chose to present as female and made a point to shave off facial hair and present as more feminine. [Survey, Carer, 40, Queer, Non-binary/Gender-fluid, Bowel] (31) |
| I suspect that the underlying issue with why I would be mis-diagnosed with anxiety might just be that people think gay people are overdramatic or maybe hypochondriacs or something. I certainly wasn’t taken seriously. [Noah, 44, Gay, Lymphoma] (32) |
| I’ve had operations where I’ve had no pain relief afterwards because the nurse doesn’t like trans people. When you’re on over the night shift and she’s locked your mobile phone in the safe so you can’t call anyone and denied you your drugs. I mean, that’s what we’re talking about with abuse and that’s what bad treatments like and that’s what having someone with you stops. [Scott, 55, Trans man, Gay, Multiple] (33) |
# numbers are linked to short quotes cited in the results.