| Literature DB >> 35726805 |
Tommy Persson1,2, Jesper Löve1, Ellinor Tengelin3, Gunnel Hensing1.
Abstract
Health care professionals' (HCPs) notions about gender may influence the provision and quality of care. If care-seeking men are met by HCPs holding idealized and stereotypical notions of masculinity, this could reinforce barriers to adequate care. This study explored notions about men and masculinities among HCPs working with men's sexual health in Sweden. Focus group interviews with 35 HCPs from primary health and sexual health clinics were analyzed using qualitative content analysis. The analysis resulted in three descriptive themes: (a) Contradictory masculinity-elusive but clear. Notions of masculinity as a phenomenon or concept were elusive, but masculine and un-masculine traits, behaviors, and qualities were clear. (b) Sexual health care is a social place where men and masculinities can be challenging. Male patients were associated with unwanted sexual tensions. Masculinity could challenge professionality. Seeking sexual health care was perceived as doing un-masculinity. (c) Regarding masculinity as irrelevant-a difficult ambition to achieve. Participants strived for gender-neutrality by regarding patients as humans, individuals, or patients rather than as men and masculine. The analysis also identified a theme of meaning: Notions of masculinity are situated relationally. HCPs situate masculinity in real and hypothetical relationships. Romantic and sexual preferences were used to define preferred masculinity. This study identified themes that showed how HCPs balanced professional and private notions of men and masculinity in their patient encounters. Increased gender awareness and training are needed to professionalize the management of gendered notions in encounters with men who seek care for sexual health problems.Entities:
Keywords: focus groups; masculinity; men’s health; qualitative research; sexual health
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35726805 PMCID: PMC9218462 DOI: 10.1177/15579883221101274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Mens Health ISSN: 1557-9883
Focus Group Questions.
| Main questions |
|---|
| Tell us about the men who come here seeking sexual health care |
| What is it like to meet men seeking sexual health care? |
| What is masculinity to you? |
| What is your perception of the men that come here? |
| Are there qualities that you consider to be masculine or un-masculine? |
Example of Analysis of Descriptive Theme.
| Meaning unit | Condensation | Code | Subtheme | Theme |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I think that we have a, actually, somewhere a very strong image of what is masculine. But we have a hard time describing it | Masculinity is clearly understood on one level, but cannot be described | Understood but indescribable | Clear notions of masculinity need not translate to an ability to describe it | Contradictory masculinity—elusive but clear |
Study Population and Catchment Distribution.
| Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| No. of participants | 35 |
| Gender, | Female 24 (68.6%), Male 11 (31.4%) |
| Age range | 29–71 years |
| Professions | Assistant physician, Counselor/Social worker, General practitioner, Midwife, Nurse, Assistant nurse, and Psychologist |
| Types of clinic ( | Primary health care clinic (1), Venereology clinic (1), Youth clinic (3), Reproductive clinic (1), Men’s sexual health clinic (1) |
| Catchment areas ( | Inner-city (2), Suburbs (2), Smaller towns (2), Rural area (1) |
Themes, Examples of Subthemes, and Illustrative Quotes.
| Themes | Examples of subthemes | Illustrative quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Descriptive Theme 1: Contradictory Masculinity—Elusive but Clear | Elusive: | “Yes, because I don’t even know what it [masculinity] is because it is changeable . . . I don’t see it as something that has its own core.” |
| Descriptive Theme 2: Sexual Health Care is a Social Place where Men and Masculinities can be Challenging | Experiencing unwanted sexual tension | “It can be hard to avoid a heterosexual attraction in the room if the man [patient] is close [to me] in age” |
| Descriptive Theme 3: Regarding Masculinity as Irrelevant—a Difficult Ambition to Achieve | Gender isn’t relevant for me as a professional | “[Y]ou have to go on what kind of person they are, not what their gender is.” |
| Theme of Meaning: | Heterosexual romantic relationships at the core of masculinity | “[I]f there is a man and a women and they are attracted [to each other], if they are oriented that way, then that becomes so darn good, then it is love, but that is because there are opposites.” |