For the second consecutive year, medical students, faculty advisors, and a collaboration of a dozen student clubs at SUNY Downstate organized a series of lectures, discussions, and workshops on a topic often overlooked—and a facet often underserved—within American medicine. In February, 2010, “Sex in Medicine Week” allowed participants and audience members to explore issues ranging from “Relationships, Sexuality, and Disability,” to sexual assault & the healthcare provider’s role, to the unique experiences of LGBT patients within a healthcare setting.
What follows is a reflection written after attending a “Sex in Medicine Week” event. The author is a SUNY Downstate 2nd year medical student.
Conscientious Care for the Patient
By Alaina Burns
Imagine that you and your life partner are about to board a cruise ship for a vacation with your three children when your partner suddenly suffers a massive stroke. Your partner is taken to the nearest hospital, but you are physically denied visitation rights; your partner dies eighteen hours later, and you are allowed entrance to the room only when the priest is reading the final rights.
…Or imagine that you have been receiving care from your physician for a chronic medical condition, and one day, you happen to mention your partner. Your physician, who has been treating you for over a year, suddenly refuses to write you your next prescription.
…Or imagine that you are a woman who has been receiving preparatory treatment for in vitro fertilization from the only in-network provider offered by your insurance plan. When, after a year, the staff at the clinic learn about your partner, they subsequently refuse to continue treatment.
These cases might seem unbelievable, but they are all true; and they all took place in recent years, right here in the United States: in
Miami,
Washington state and
California, respectively. Welcome to the difficult reality faced by many lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) patients who try to navigate the American healthcare system.
Doctor’s offices and hospitals are often vulnerable spaces for all patients, but they can be particularly unpleasant for people who identify as LGBT. As part of SUNY Downstate’s 2010
“Sex in Medicine Week,” Dr. Maile O’Hara gave a talk, entitled, “Being a Good Doctor for ALL of Your Patients: Specific Needs of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Patients,”* in which she spoke about what medical professionals can do to provide more sensitive care for LGBT patients. Dr. O’Hara, a clinical psychologist at the Bellevue/NYU Program for Survivors of Torture, has worked extensively with the LGBT population.
Among Dr. O’Hara’s recommendations for healthcare practitioners are these:
- Treat your patients who are LGBT with the same respect with which you treat all patients.
- Recognize that many LGBT people have had negative experiences with the health care system in the past.
- Ensure that your office has a nondiscrimination policy and that decorations and selections of items such as magazines and pamphlets are inclusive of the LGBT community.
- Treat the partners of LGBT patients as you would spouses, even if they are not legally married.
In an era when most people can rest assured knowing that their civil rights are guaranteed, LGBT individuals, on the other hand, are made aware that discrimination can still lurk in the most unexpected of places. No national anti-discrimination law exists that protects lesbian, gay and transgender people, and among states,
only twenty-one and the District of Columbia currently protect individuals from discrimination based on sexual orientation.
Visiting the doctor, for any person, can often be stressful and scary for various reasons. But for LGBT people, in an unwelcoming healthcare setting, the experience can be doubly terrifying. Educating yourself and being aware of the unique issues faced by people who are LGBT is the first step in providing conscientious care for all of your patients.
*To view the
slides presented during Dr. Maile O’Hara’s talk, given at SUNY Downstate on February 25, 2010, please click on the “LGBT Q&A” link on the top left margin of this page.
Read More...