Authors
Sue Westwood, Paul Willis, Julie Fish, Trish Hafford-Letchfield, Joanna Semlyen, Andrew King, Brian Beach, Kathryn Almack, Dylan Kneale, Michael Toze, Laia Becares
Publication date
2020/5/1
Source
J Epidemiol Community Health
Volume
74
Issue
5
Pages
408-411
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
Description
Lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans+ (LGBT+) people report poorer health than the general population and worse experiences of healthcare particularly cancer, palliative/end-of-life, dementia and mental health provision. This is attributable to: (a) social inequalities, including ‘minority stress’; (b) associated health-risk behaviours (eg, smoking, excessive drug/alcohol use, obesity); (c) loneliness and isolation, affecting physical/mental health and mortality; (d) anticipated/experienced discrimination and (e) inadequate understandings of needs among healthcare providers. Older LGBT+ people are particularly affected, due to the effects of both cumulative disadvantage and ageing. There is a need for greater and more robust research data to support growing international and national government initiatives aimed at addressing these health inequalities. We identify seven key research strategies: (1) Production of large data …
Total citations
20202021202220232024811122215
Scholar articles
S Westwood, P Willis, J Fish, T Hafford-Letchfield… - J Epidemiol Community Health, 2020