Next Article in Journal
Effects of Combined Exercise and Low Carbohydrate Ketogenic Diet Interventions on Waist Circumference and Triglycerides in Overweight and Obese Individuals: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Next Article in Special Issue
Contesting Sexual Prejudice to Support Sexual Minorities: Views of Chinese Social Workers
Previous Article in Journal
Norepinephrine Infusion in the Emergency Department in Septic Shock Patients: A Retrospective 2-Years Safety Report and Outcome Analysis
Previous Article in Special Issue
Experiences of LGBTIQA+ People with Disability in Healthcare and Community Services: Towards Embracing Multiple Identities
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Review

The Politics of LGBT+ Health Inequality: Conclusions from a UK Scoping Review

1
Department of Health Research, Lancaster University, Lancashire LA1 4YW, UK
2
The National LGB&T Partnership, Exeter EX4 6NA, UK
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18(2), 826; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020826
Submission received: 6 November 2020 / Revised: 11 December 2020 / Accepted: 16 December 2020 / Published: 19 January 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Health Inequalities and Social Support among LGBT + Populations)

Abstract

:
This scoping review of UK evidence aimed to describe what is known about Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Trans (LGBT+) health inequalities in relation to cancer, mental health, and palliative care to inform research, policy and public health interventions. Using a scoping review methodology, we identified studies from database searches, citation tracking, and expert consultation. The in/exclusion criteria was based on the PICOS framework. The data were charted and then summarised to map the theoretical approaches and the main types of evidence and identify knowledge gaps. In total, 279 articles were screened and 83 were included in the final review. We found that there is limited UK research examining LGBT+ health inequality in cancer, mental health and palliative care. We would argue that this thin evidence base is partly due to national policy discussions of LGBT+ health inequality that are framed within a depoliticised ‘it’s getting better’ narrative, and an unwillingness to adequately acknowledge the unjust social and economic relations that produce LGBT+ health inequality. In addition, LGBT+ health inequality is depoliticised by existing public health explanatory theories, models and frameworks that exclude sexual orientation and gender diversity as dimensions of power that interlock with those of socio-economic, race and ethnicity. This is a barrier to developing public health interventions that can successfully tackle LGBT+ health inequality

1. Introduction

There is now a body of research evidence that demonstrates that lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans (LGBT+) people experience significant health inequalities in terms of health outcomes, health care service provision and health risk factors in comparison to cis-heterosexual populations [1]. Recent research has highlighted how LGBT+ experiences of health and well-being require specific or specialised identity-centred interventions to better support LGBT+ health in a range of specialties [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Current research across multiple types of service provision has highlighted how LGBT+ people perceive current health or social care provision as in need of improvement in relation to their treatment and sexual and/or gender identity [7,8,9].
Increasingly, these inequities have been recognised by the UK Government and national health bodies (e.g., NHS England and Public Health England). In particular, policy attention on LGBT+ health was sparked by the 2017 Government Equalities Office survey of UK-based LGBT+ people [1]. This survey received more than 108,000 responses from LGBT+ people who highlighted the significant everyday experiences of discrimination that LGBT+ people live through [1]. One outcome from the survey was the UK Government 2018 LGBT Action Plan with a specific target of improving health policy and health care provision for LGBT+ people [1]. Since then, the UK Government Women and Equalities Committee launched an inquiry into LGBT+ health and social care and made policy recommendations based on their findings [10]. However, preliminary work to define this scoping review showed that very few actionable suggestions have been made, with most policy and health care strategies calling for more research into LGBT+ health inequalities.
Critics have suggested that the reluctance to develop policies to seriously tackle LGBT+ inequality is explained less by the absence of robust evidence and instead more likely to demonstrate the entrenched resistance to LGBT+ equality in the UK [11]. We would argue that policy discussions of LGBT+ health inequality are ‘depoliticised’ because they are framed by a ‘it’s getting better’ narrative [12] and an unwillingness to adequately acknowledge the unjust social and economic relations that produce LGBT+ health inequality. In addition, LGBT+ health inequality is depoliticised by existing public health explanatory theories, models and frameworks that exclude sexual orientation and gender diversity as dimensions of power that interlock with those of socio-economic, race and ethnicity, etc. [13]. For example, neither the influential Social Determinants of Health ‘Rainbow Model’ [14] nor Ecosocial Theory [15] include sexual orientation or gender diversity in their explanations of health inequality.
Against this background, the aim of this scoping review study was to draw together the LGBT Health Advisor at NHS England, policy makers, LGBT+ third-sector organisations and academics to consider the type of research required to develop policy and practice interventions to tackle LGBT+ health inequality. The aim of this study was to: (a) identify UK research on LGBT+ health inequalities to support policy development aimed at reducing LGBT+ health inequalities; (b) to develop recommendations on future health research and policy that aim to reduce LGBT+ health inequalities.
The focus of the review was developed in collaboration following a discussion of the strategic direction of key national health care policies, government equality policy and the UK research councils. The decision was taken to concentrate on cancer, mental health and palliative care because these were national health priorities where there was some recognition, in both policy and research, of the inequalities faced by LGBT+ populations. Collaborative meetings resulted in the following research question: What is known from the existing UK research literature and policy on LGBT+-relevant risk factors, prevention strategies, and health care experiences across (a) cancer, (b) mental health, and (c) palliative care?

2. Methods

This study used a scoping review methodology which is a more recent addition to evidence synthesis methods [16] but has been gaining increased interest in health research [16,17,18]. Scoping reviews are conducted for different purposes than systematic reviews. The purpose of scoping reviews is to ‘describe the nature of a research field rather than synthesise findings’ [19]. Scoping reviews can be conducted to identify knowledge gaps, scope a body of literature, clarify concepts, set research agendas or provide a roadmap for a subsequent full systematic review [16,17,18].
Despite the different purpose to systematic reviews, scoping reviews follow a similar structured approach and use rigorous transparent methods [19]. Since Arksey and O’Malley [20] developed the framework for scoping reviews, there has been growing acknowledgement of the need to establish methodological standardisation and reporting guidelines [16,17,18]. This scoping review follows the five recommended steps in completing scoping reviews [17,18,20]: (a) identifying the research question; (b) identifying relevant studies; (c) study selection; (d) charting the data; (e) collating, summarising and reporting the results.

2.1. Search Strategy

Studies were identified through electronic database searches, reference citation, online grey literature searches and expert consultation. The electronic database searches were restricted to PubMed and Web of Science databases to ensure both clinical and social science research were located. Experts in each subfield (cancer, mental health, and palliative care) were contacted with preliminary database findings to gain clarity on any papers that had not emerged during the database search.
The search terms were adapted for each electronic database (see Table 1 and Table 2) but included 3 domains: sexual and gender identity; health condition; and geographical location. Searches were conducted across cancer, mental health, and palliative care using either keywords or ‘mesh’ searches depending on database.

2.2. Study Selection

The PICOS framework was utilised to define the inclusion/exclusion criteria (see Table 3) which is recommended when time and resources are limited [21]. Two reviewers screened the titles and abstracts from the electronic databases and then applied the inclusion/exclusion criteria to the full-text papers. In the course of conducting the scoping review, two reviewers made additional decisions to exclude from the review medical case studies and treatment guidelines because they did not address population health concerns. The final included studies were collated in the Endnote reference management system. Two reviewers independently checked the inclusion and exclusion criteria against all studies found in the course of database searches, citation tracking, journal hand searching, and expert consultation.

2.3. Data charting and Summarising Results

All data were reported according to PRISMA guidelines. A scoping review does not synthesise results but rather present an overview of all material reviewed [20]. Data were charted to allow for a narrative review. Arksey and O’Malley [20] borrow the term ‘charting’ to refer to Ritchie and Spencer’s [22] technique for synthesising and interpreting qualitative data by filtering, categorising and organising material according to key issues and themes.
In this scoping review, two reviewers designed a standardised data chart excel template that allowed for data to be both extracted from each full-text study, and to develop an overall narrative review. The data chart template contained the main study details (e.g., study population, aim, methodology, key results) but also included ‘conceptual framework’ and ‘interpretation’ categories. The characteristics for each full text article was charted by a single reviewer with a second reviewer regularly assessing the data charting process to resolve any conflicts. This process was used to develop an overall narrative that summarised the results in a way that was consistent with the scoping review research question and purpose [17].

3. Results

3.1. Search Results

The search was conducted between February and March 2020. In total, 279 articles were screened and 83 studies were included in the final review (see Figure 1 for PRISMA flowchart and Appendix A for included studies and a data extraction chart).

3.2. Results Summary

In this section, we summarise the broad UK research trends in relation to understanding LGBT+ health inequalities in (a) cancer, (b) palliative care, and (c) mental health.

3.3. Cancer

The scoping review yielded 31 studies relevant to LGBT+ cancer care in the United Kingdom. Of these studies, 12 focused on anal and/or prostate cancer [23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34], 2 focused on cervical cancer [35,36], 5 focused on unspecified cancers [37,38,39,40,41], 3 focused on breast cancer [42,43,44], and 9 focused on HPV-related work [45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53]. These studies used a range of methods including qualitative studies (7) [26,32,38,39,42,49,51], quantitative studies (9) [28,35,40,41,44,47,48,50,52], systematic reviews (2) [43,54], meta-syntheses (2) [23,31], mixed-methods studies (1) [45], summit papers (1) [37], cost-efficacy papers (2) [24,29], clinical papers (4) [25,33,46,55], and literature reviews (3) [30,36,53]. Overall, these studies are largely focused on sexual organs, i.e., HPV, AIDS, cervical cancer, anal cancer, and prostate cancer.
Each paper represented different foci of interest. A total of 7 papers looked at LGBT+-specific screening, cost efficiencies, prevalence and risk factors [24,29,41,43,46,47,53]. A total of 8 papers looked at LGBT+ patient experiences pre, during, and/or post-treatment [23,26,31,32,35,38,39,40]. A total of 11 studies explored LGBT+ people’s cancer awareness and the efficacy/acceptability of treatments/testing/screening [25,27,28,33,36,42,44,45,50,51,54]. A total of 5 studies focused on health provider and expert attitudes towards LGBT+ patients’ treatment and diagnoses [30,37,48,49,52].
The results from all studies indicated that LGBT+ people were more likely to have a negative experience or outcome when being diagnosed, receiving treatment, or in post-treatment in comparison to the cis-heterosexual population. The majority of authors acknowledged that LGBT+ people’s poorer experience and outcomes were due to the absence of LGBT+-specific care and attention from health care providers. Qualitative studies highlighted a significant area of concern was that LGBT+ people struggle to ‘come out’ in a cancer treatment setting [39], and consequently not receiving culturally competent care [32,35,40,42,44,56]. Fish and Williamson’s work [38] found, for example, that some LGB people hid their sexual identities during cancer care treatment and in support environments [38]. Some studies indicated heteronormative institutional practices that implicitly marginalised LGBT+ people, such as Doran’s study, which demonstrated how gay men with prostate cancer were treated with heteronormative assumptions that did not meet their needs [26].
The absence of UK large-scale comparative data and epidemiological data was a deficiency in the research studies identified. The implications of this lack of data were underlined by expert consultants as a key problem in developing understandings of cancer prevalence and recovery rates in LGBT+ populations. It was suggested that including sexual identity and gender diversity characteristics in the cancer registry would enable the study of cancer prevalence and epidemiology in LGBT+ populations. Experts also raised issues regarding the underfunding of LGBT+ cancer scholarship and barriers, i.e., ‘institutional homophobia’ in attempting to access data, gain funding, and enact health care policies to better support LGBT+ cancer patients.

3.4. Palliative Care

The scoping review provided 10 articles relevant to palliative care and LGBT+ people in the UK. A total of 8 papers were qualitative studies [8,57,58,59,60,61,62,63] and two papers were systematic reviews [7,64]. One paper explored how older LGB individuals felt about the ‘right to die’ [60], two systematic reviews assessed current work in bereavement, palliative care, and palliative treatments [7,64], and seven qualitative studies assessed the experience of loss and bereavement for gay and lesbian elders [8,57,58,59,61,62,63].
All 10 studies demonstrated that palliative care and bereavement considerations were different for LGBT+ older people. Almack et al.’s [57] study found, for example, that older LGBT+ people may have had to live closeted lives and therefore may not have their same-gender partners recognised after their deaths [57]. Ingham et al. [59] found that older LGB women may face complex barriers following the death of their partner due to persistent heterosexist and heteronormative attitudes in the UK [59]. Similar to research on cancer and LGBT+ populations, this small body of research suggests that culturally dominant norms surrounding cis-heteronormativity contributed to LGB people’s poor experience of palliative care and bereavement support.
Palliative care research experts also emphasized the absence of large datasets as a barrier to developing evidence to improve palliative care and policy for LGBT+ populations. Furthermore, experts argued that palliative care more broadly was not on the national agenda of the current government.

3.5. Mental Health

The review yielded 42 studies relating to LGBT+ mental health. Of these included papers, 10 were qualitative papers [65,66,67,68,69,70,71,72,73,74], 22 were quantitative papers [75,76,77,78,79,80,81,82,83,84,85,86,87,88,89,90,91,92,93,94,95,96], 6 were review papers [97,98,99,100,101,102], and 4 were mixed-methods papers [103,104,105,106]. Broadly, these papers were thematically divided across three areas. Firstly, six papers focused on professional opinions and treatment outcomes of LGBT+ mental health [70,77,82,87,98,99]. Secondly, 22 papers were concerned with the incidence of mental health problems, and the risk factors associated with the elevated rates of mental health problems within LGBT+ populations [75,76,78,79,80,81,83,84,85,86,90,91,92,93,94,95,96,97,100,101,102,106]. Thirdly, 14 papers were concerned with LGBT+ people’s experiences of having mental health problems and treatment, and explaining the factors contributing to their poor mental health [65,66,67,68,69,71,72,73,74,88,89,103,104,105].
A total of 22 of the studies examined young people’s experiences of mental health and consistently reported an increased incidence of LGBT+ youth poor mental health compared to their cis-heterosexual counterparts. Studies in mental health focused on conditions including depression, eating disorders, anxiety, suicidality and self-esteem, with no research conducted into exploring rarer diagnosis such as schizophrenia or dissociative identity disorder for example.
The evidence base is more developed in LGBT+ mental health inequality in the UK. This is facilitated by the recent inclusion of measures of sexual orientation (less so gender diversity) on large-scale datasets, e.g., the Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey [78]. This has produced some robust evidence such as a pooled analysis of 12 UK population surveys that demonstrates adults who identified as lesbian/gay have higher prevalence of common mental disorders when compared to heterosexual adults [91]. Importantly, the evidence base includes longitudinal datasets such as the Millennium Cohort Study that enable the tracking of poor mental health over the life course of LGBT+ populations. Amos and colleagues’ [75] study indicates that by age 10 years, depressive symptoms were higher in sexual minorities than in heterosexuals. Reflecting the greater availability of large-scale data, studies have been able to provide robust statistical analysis of the differences between identity groups particularly bisexual, trans, non-binary and gender non-conforming identities. In Colledge et al.’s study, for example, bisexual women were 37% more likely to have self-harmed compared to lesbians [79]. Rimes et al [88] found that female SAAB (sex assigned at birth) participants (aged 16–25) (binary and non-binary) were more likely to report a current mental health condition and history of self-harm than male SAAB participants (binary and non-binary).
The majority of papers utilised (implicitly) the minority stress theory [107] as a theoretical paradigm to explore the relationship between LGBT+ status and the increased risk of poor mental health. The minority stress theory is a psychological conceptual framework that is critiqued by some studies [108] as inadequate to explain the broader social and cultural norms that impact on LGBT+ people’s mental health.

4. Discussion

This review of UK evidence aimed to describe what is known about LGBT+ health inequalities in relation to cancer, mental health, and palliative care to inform research, policy and public health interventions. The UK has a long tradition of research on health inequalities but until recently LGBT+ population groups were not included in public health research, policies and practice that attempt to tackle persistent health inequalities between population groups. Since the Equality Act 2010 [109], there has been a substantial increase in recognition that LGBT+ populations have a disproportionate health burden in comparison to cis-gendered heterosexual populations. This is evident in numerous health policies, e.g., Suicide Prevention Strategy [110], Transforming Children and Young People’s Mental Health Provision: a Green Paper [111]. In addition, the Equality Act 2010 public sector duty has driven a concern within the health care sector to demonstrate that it is providing services and care equally regardless of sexual orientation (and, to lesser degree, gender identity). There is much greater appetite from the UK Government, policy makers, NHS England, health staff and Public Health England to address LGBT+ health inequality.
However, the findings from this scoping review suggest that the evidence base, on mental health, cancer and palliative care, is insufficient to address this nationally recognised health inequality. The current body of UK LGBT+ health inequality research is relatively small but there is clear evidence of health inequities between LGBT+ and cis-heterosexual populations. The research is strongest in terms of demonstrating the elevated rates of poor mental health in comparison to cis-heterosexual populations [91,110,112], reproductive and sexual health cancers, risk/transmission rates and barriers [113,114,115,116], and late diagnoses of cancer [2,117]. The evidence base for palliative care [4,7,8,63,64,118,119,120,121] is very small. Across all three areas of this review, there is consistent evidence that a significant proportion of health care providers are not well trained in LGBT+ identities, and consequently misunderstand the needs of LGBT+ populations [9,122]. This is particularly acute for trans and/or non-binary people who encounter difficulties engaging with gender identity services and health providers, and experience considerable barriers to reproductive and sexual health services [5,108,114,123].
The majority of LGBT+ health research in the three areas homogenise LGBT+ identities by using a single identity category, ‘LGBT’. This has the effect of obscuring health differences between identity categories. The notable exception is a small subset of LGBT+ mental health research where substantial population-based datasets are available for reliable statistical analysis of differences between identity categories. These studies have suggested that when compared to heterosexuals and people who identify as gay and/or lesbian, bisexual-identifying people experience more significant rates of suicidality, eating problems, self-harm, and addiction [79,112], and trans and/or non-binary people have significantly higher incidences of poor mental health and greater risk of suicide and self-harm [124]. Furthermore, little research examines the ways in which intersectional minoritised identities may mediate LGBT+ health inequality. There is a lack of exploration of race, ethnicity, faith, immigration status, social class, (dis)ability, aging, etc. This is a substantial omission in the evidence base to support public health interventions. The UK has decades of research that establishes the ways in which major social inequalities such as socio-economic status, gender and race/ethnicity are determinants of poor health. If LGBT+ health inequality is to be successfully addressed, then it is imperative that research consistently examines the intersectionality of LGBT+ health inequality.
The results of this review suggest three key recommendations for the development of research on mental health, cancer and palliative care that can inform public health interventions to tackle LGBT+ health inequality. Firstly, there is often an absence of large datasets, with representative samples and administrative datasets on which to base our understanding of the extent of health inequality. Examples include differential cancer prevalence rates, access to health services, and treatment outcomes. Without large-scale datasets it is difficult to generate research that convinces policy makers and health care providers of the scale of the inequality. LGBT+ mental health research ‘weight’ of evidence has gained impetus at a national government level as large datasets have started to include measures of sexual orientation and gender identity, e.g., the Millennium Cohort Study, the Avon Bristol Study, the British Cohort Study 2012, the Health Survey for England 2011, 2012 and 2013, the Longitudinal Study of Young People in England 2009/10 and Understanding Society 2011/12. These are still missing for cancer and palliative care.
Secondly, LGBT+ health inequality research has a tendency to ‘fix’ or essentialise identity. The impact of this is the homogenisation of the categories LGBT+, especially bisexuality and trans/non-binary. In most cases, research prioritises LGBT+ identity and ignores other interlocking systems of oppression/power relating to class, age, disability and race/ethnicity. Public health research and policy must work with a framework that has central the multiple experiences of inequality (race, gender class, etc.) that are mutually constitutive of health outcomes and experience for LGBT+ populations. It is crucial that if we want to address LGBT+ health inequality that we have reliable data on the ways in which health differs between LGBT+ people.
Thirdly, the majority of LGBT+ health inequality research is conducted within the dominant frame of clinical, biomedical and lifestyle risk factors. Far less research employs an alternative theory using social models of health inequality such as socio-political, psychosocial or socio-ecological. The biomedical and lifestyle theories are individualistic approaches that primarily focus on decontextualised individual-level pathology, biology, and behaviour. In contrast, more social theories posit that there are interconnecting and complex social, cultural, political, economic factors that shape health inequality [15]. Much of the research included within our scoping review acknowledged that heteronormativity or LGBT+ discrimination and stigma were partly to blame for limiting access to services or poor experience of services. Very little UK research attempted to explain the underlying social mechanisms that influence LGBT+ health inequality. McDermott et al.’s [124] paper examining the social determinants of LGBT+ youth mental health inequality is a rare example (see also [120]).
The dominance of the biomedical and lifestyle risk approach decontextualises LGBT+ health inequality and reduces the ways of addressing the problem to individual biological pathology and improving access to treatment and services. While clearly it is important to provide equity of access to health services and treatments, this does not, from a public health perspective, address the inequality between LGBT+ and cis-heterosexual populations. Why, for example, is there poorer mental health? Why are there low rates of cervical screening? The theories we use to understand LGBT+ health inequality impact on the questions we ask, the data we collect, our analysis, and eventually our ability to address LGBT+ health inequality at a population level [13]. The lack of alternative social theory leads to de-politicised descriptions of LGBT+ health inequality that do not recognise power and the unjust social relations that produce LGBT+ health inequities. This is a barrier to developing public health interventions that can successfully tackle LGBT+ health inequality.
The purpose of this review was to provide a tentative direction for LGBT+ health inequality research that would improve the ability of public health interventions to successfully reduce this inequality. A scoping review is a methodology that is used when there are few resources, to give an overview, and should not replace a more in-depth systematic review. Despite these methodological limitations, scoping reviews such as ours can be adaptable tools to direct future research that informs policy and practice. In our view, future research on LGBT+ health inequalities in mental health, cancer and palliative care needs to: (1) be resourced through large-scale datasets; (2) utilise theories/models that recognise the unequal social relations that produce health equality; (3) and pay attention to the health differences between LGBT+ populations.

Author Contributions

Conceptualisation, E.M.; Methodology, E.M. and H.W.; Formal Analysis, E.M. and R.N.; Data Curation, R.N.; Writing—Original Draft Preparation, R.N.; Writing—Review and Editing, H.W., R.N. and E.M.; Supervision, E.M.; Project Administration, R.N.; Funding Acquisition, E.M. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

UK Research and Innovation’s Strategic Priorities Fund.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the LGBT+ Consortium, the National LGB&T Partnership, and Michael Brady (LGBT Health Advisor, NHS England) for their input and ideas relating to the development of this paper. With great thanks to the following experts who assisted in the production of this systematic review: Catherine Meads, Julie Fish, Katherine Johnson, Katherine Rimes, and Kathryn Almack. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. Mental Health UK LGBT+ Studies.
Table A1. Mental Health UK LGBT+ Studies.
Author, YearRef NumberStudy Design/Aims/ObjectivesSetting/Population/SampleMethodsMain Results
Amos et al., 2016[75]
  • To develop an up-to-date population-level estimate of the extent of risk across mental health problems, adverse social environments, and negative health outcomes between sexual minority adolescents and their heterosexual counterparts
9885 adolescentsMillennium cohort study analysisSexual minority adolescents in the UK experience disparities in mental health, social, and health-related outcomes despite living in a time of substantial progress in rights for sexual minorities. These adverse outcomes co-occur, with implications for lifelong health and social outcomes. Health and educational practitioners should be aware of the increased risk for adverse outcomes in sexual minority adolescents
Argyriou et al., 2020[76]
  • To investigate psychosocial mediators in the association amongst young people between having a Lesbian, Gay, or Bisexual (LGB) orientation and depressive symptoms
14,814 individualsQuantitative research; mediation analysesSexual minority youth (SMY) were at a higher risk for showing depressive symptoms at age 18 when compared to heterosexual young people
SMY also had more unhelpful assumptions and poorer relationships with their family
Suggest that more unhelpful self-beliefs, lower self-esteem, and poorer family relationships, contribute to higher amounts of depressive symptoms for SMY
Bartlett et al., 2009[77]
  • To discover how professionals in psychotherapy and psychiatric organisations feel about treatments intended to change sexual orientation
1328 practitionersQuantitative postal survey methodA significant minority of practitioners in psychology and psychiatric organisations are providing therapy to lesbian, gay, and bisexual clients to try and help them be heterosexual.
These therapies do not have evidence that suggests they are effective
Bridge et al., 2019[97]
  • To complete a systematic review and meta-analysis to highlight how sexual minority people’s self-esteem compares to heterosexual people
LGB people compared to heterosexual peopleSystematic review and meta-analysisSelf-esteem is lower in sexual minority identified people when compared to heterosexual people
Some evidence suggests that there may be even more differences for men and bisexual people, but this is not yet conclusive
Chakraborty et al., 2011[78]
  • To see how mental disorder, self-harm, and suicide attempts compare between sexual orientations
7403 participants of the Adult Psychiatric Morbidity SurveyQuantitative statistical analysis based on a surveyNon-heterosexuals have a greater incidence of mental health problems and service usage
Suggest that discrimination can act as a social stressor in the genesis of mental health problems
Colledge et al., 2015[79]
  • To compare mental health between lesbian and bisexual women
937 bisexual women and 4769 lesbian womenSurvey led quantitative methodsBisexual women were more likely to report poor mental health or psychological distress when compared to lesbian women
Suggest bisexual women have ‘double discrimination’ of homophobia and biphobia which is felt as internalised and stigma
Dhejne et al., 2016[98]
  • To review literature relating to psychiatric disorders and psychopathology of trans people
  • To review literature and the psychiatric outcome after gender-confirming interventions
Trans and gender non-conforming peopleReview and synthesisTrans people attending trans health care services seem to have more psychiatric morbidity which is improved following gender confirmation treatment
Foy et al., 2019[103]
  • To explore LGB+ adult’s experiences with Improving Access to Psychological Therapies services and/or primary care counselling
136 LGBQ+ peopleMixed methods: online questionnaire and combination of descriptive statistics and thematic analysis42% of LGBQ+ participants worried about experiencing LGBQ+-specific discrimination prior to accessing services
33% of clients did not disclose their sexuality, and 42% did not discuss sexuality in treatment
LGBQ+ people felt that service stigma, lack of sexuality disclosure, lack of sexuality discussion in treatment, lack of LGBQ+ awareness affected their treatment
52% felt that treatment could be improved
Gabb et al., 2019[65]
  • To see how LGBTQ+ young people could sustain or survive familial relationships
12 LGBTQ+ young people and 5 ‘family-like’ participantsSemi-structured interviews, emotion maps, and diariesFamilies have a significant impact on LGBTQ+ young people’s lives and emotional landscapes
Family practices can be paradoxical which need to be navigated by young people
Gnan et al., 2019[80]
  • To observe LGBTQ-specific and general factors associated with having current mental health problems, and to look at the use of mental health services, and suicide risk and self-harm
1948 LGBTQ university students (age 16–25)Survey analysisAll four outcomes were associated particularly with female gender, sexual abuse, other abuse or violence, and being trans
Other more minimally associated factors (i.e., associated with one or more of the outcomes) included being bisexual, thinking that they were LGBTQ under the age of 10, coming out before age 16, not feeling accepted where they live, having no LGBTQ+ role models in universities, and experiencing LGBTQ-related crime
Hickson et al., 2016[81]
  • To describe inequality in mental health indicators among gay and bisexual men
5799 men who are attracted to other menInternet-based surveyMental ill health common, particularly associated with lower education, younger age, and lower income
Depression also associated with being a member of visible ethnic minority
Depression also associated with being bisexual
Cohabiting with a man and living in London were protective of mental health
Hughes et al., 2018[82]
  • To examine how mental health staff perceive and practice working with LGBTQ youth suicide and self-harm in mental health care settings
113 NHS mental health staff across 3 trustsCross-sectional surveyMental health staff have a decent knowledge about LGBTQ+ young people and self-harm and suicide
Training is helpful to extend an understanding of sexual orientation
Only a third of staff reported routinely discussing LGBTQ+ issues
Irish et al., 2018[83]
  • To see the trajectory of depressive symptoms in sexual minority young people and heterosexuals from 10 to 21
  • To examine self-harm rates amongst heterosexual and sexual minority youths at ages 16 and 21
4828 adolescentsLongitudinal survey dataFrom the age of 10, depressive symptoms were more apparent in LGBTQ+ young people, and continued to increase with age to a larger extent
LGBTQ+ people were more likely to report self-harm at ages 16 and 21 with no clear demonstration that this decreased with age
Jones et al., 2017[84]
  • To investigate the risk of anxiety disorders in sexual minority youth and heterosexual youth
  • To explore the influence of gender nonconformity, bullying, and self-esteem on anxiety disorders
5652 adolescentsSurvey dataLGBTQ+ had higher earlier gender nonconformity, lower self-esteem, and reported more bullying than heterosexual adolescents
Sexual minority youth are at increased risk of anxiety disorders relative to heterosexual youth at 17.5 years.
Bullying between 12 and 16 years and lower self-esteem may contribute to this risk
King et al., 2007[99]
  • To review existing research on counselling and psychotherapy for LGBTQ people
  • To evaluate the contributions of different research techniques and identify future priorities
LGBT people in counselling and psychotherapySystematic and thematic reviewAffirmative talking therapies help LGBT people counteract homophobia in early development
The article concludes with many recommendations, some of which include: Psychotherapy training institutes need to include LGBT specific training, Encourage the training of LGBT therapists, Therapists should consider telling clients their own sexual identity
King et al., 2008[100]
  • To identify the prevalence of mental disorder, substance misuse, suicide, suicidal ideation, and deliberate self-harm in LGB people
LGB people receiving counsellingSystematic review and meta-analysisLGB people at higher risk of mental disorder, suicidal ideation, substance misuse, and deliberate self-harm than heterosexual people
There are some differences between identities identified in this paper (e.g., LB women particularly at risk of substance use disorders)
Lewis, 2009[101]
  • To identify any indicators or trends in relation to place, sexual minorities, and mental health
LGBT peopleMeta-analysisPolicy regimes, health programming, and the ways in which sexual minorities are constructed in places all contribute to mental health in different spaces
Marshall et al., 2016[102]
  • To assess the literature surrounding mental health problems (depression, NSSI behaviour and suicidal thoughts) and trans people
Trans peopleSystematic reviewThere is a high prevalence of NSSI among trans people—particularly trans men—when compared to cis people
Suicidality is higher amongst trans people than cis people
McAndrew and Warne, 2010[66]
  • To gain an in-depth understanding of life experiences leading to suicidality amongst four gay men
4 gay menPsychoanalytically informed interviewsSignificant life experiences revealed why some men may have both long term mental health problems and also engage in suicidality (father/son relationship, loneliness of outsiderness, leading a double life are some examples)
McAndrew and Warne, 2012[67]
  • To offer an understanding of gay men’s experiences of mental well-being
4 gay menPsychoanalytically informed interviewsHeterosexism affects the development of gay children, making it harder for them
There is a necessity for nurturing that extends beyond heterosexist assumptions in schools
McDermott, 2006[68]
  • To examine the ways in which the psychological health of women may be influenced by workplace sexual identity performances and social class positioning
24 lesbian or gay womenSemi-structured interviewsWorkplace settings are a significant factor in lesbian/gay women’s psychological health
Social class can mediate the risk of compulsory heterosexuality in the workplace, where middle class women are best positioned to negotiate their sexuality in the workplace
McDermott, 2015[69]
  • To see how LGBT young people seek help in relation to their mental health
LGBT people in online spacesQualitative virtual methodsYoung LGBT often want assistance to support their mental health, but find it difficult to ask for help, articulate their distress and tell people that they are ‘failed’
There is a lot of shame associated with negotiating norms of heterosexuality and adolescence
These norms regulate what emotions it is possible to articulate and what lives are therefore possible
McDermott et al., 2018[104]
  • To explore how LGBT young people seek help and experience suicidality
29 LGBT young people (interviews) and 789 young people (surveys)Interviews and an online surveyParticipants only ask for help when they reach a crisis point as they normalise their distress
Seeking help is more likely when connected to self-harm, suicidality or sexuality/gender based abuse
The reluctance to seek help comes from negotiating norms and being unable to talk about emotions
McDermott et al., 2018[105]
  • To investigate the social determinants of the mental health inequality amongst LGBT young people and heterosexuals
29 LGBT young people (interviews) and 789 young people (surveys)Interviews and an online surveySocial determinants included homo/bi/transphobia, sexual and gender norms, managing sexual and gender identity across different life domains, being unable to talk, other life crises
Some identities were more likely to be suicidal, including trans youth, disabled youth, those affected by abuse, and those with a previous history of self-harm
Oginni et al., 2019[85]
  • To investigate self-esteem and depressive symptoms as mediators of increased rates of suicidal ideation or self-harm among sexual minority youth, and the roles of childhood gender nonconformity and sex as moderators of these relationships
4724 young peopleSurvey dataSMY were 3x more likely to report past year suicidal ideation or self-harm
Lower self-esteem and increased depressive symptoms partly explain the increased risk for later suicidal ideation and self-harm in SMY
Page et al., 2016[70]
  • To report on one health board’s attempts to work more closely with older members of the transgender community
Older trans people with mental health problems accessing specialist servicesAppreciative inquiry to deliver service chanceNurses learned a lot more about trans issues through the course of this research
Older trans people met receptive workers in the organisation
Further change might happen
Rasmussen et al., 2019[86]
  • To use the Integrated Motivational Volitional Model of Suicide (IMV) to examine sexual orientation
  • To examine demographics, psychological distress and personality as they impact the IMV motivational factors of defeat, entrapment and suicidal ideation
418 18–34 year oldsCross-sectional online surveyResults showed that there were high rates (>50%) of a 12 month suicidal ideation prevalence and also (>45%) a willingness to enact a future suicide attempt
Bisexual (and pansexual) reported high levels of IMV-related outcomes (for example internal entrapment or defeat)
Rimes et al., 2018[87]
  • To compare socio-demographic and clinical characteristics with treatment outcomes across sexual orientation groups amongst adults receiving primary psychological care interventions
188 lesbians, 222 bisexual women, 6637 heterosexual women, 645 gay men, 75 bisexual men, and 3024 heterosexual menClinical data used to compare treatment characteristicsVarying differences between identity groups
Lesbian and bisexual women (particularly bisexual women) show less benefit from primary psychological intervention compared with heterosexual women
No significant difference for men, but was not enough data to conclude this entirely for bisexual men
Rimes et al., 2019[88]
  • To compare mental health, self-harm, and suicidality, and substance use, and victimisation experiences between non-binary and binary trans young adults
105 trans females, 210 trans males, 93 non-binary AMAB, 269 AFAB non-binaryOnline survey dataAFAB were more likely to report self-harm and a current mental health condition than AMAB
AFAB participants more likely to report sexual abuse
Non-binary AMAB were less likely to report past suicide attempts and previous help seeking for depression/anxiety
Binary participants reported lower life satisfaction than non-binary participants
Mental health problems, self-harm, suicidality, alcohol use, and victimisation experiences all higher when compared to general population statistics
Rimes et al., 2019[90]
  • To investigate LGB related and other factors associated with suicide attempts, suicidal ideation, and future suicide risk
3575 LGB young adultsSurveyLGB stigma and discrimination were significantly associated with suicide attempts, ideation, and future suicide attempt likeliness
Bisexuality, not feeling accepted where one lives, younger sexual minority identification, and younger coming out were also associated with suicidality
Other associated factors included female gender, lower social support, anxiety/depression help seeking, abuse/violence, and sexual abuse.
Rimes et al., 2019[89]
  • To investigate whether sexual minority patients have poorer treatment outcomes than heterosexual patients
Patients attending Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) servicesRoutine national dataLesbian and bisexual women have higher final session severity for depression, anxiety, and functional impairment, and increased risk of not attaining reliable recovery
Bisexual men had higher final session severity for depression, anxiety, and functioning and increased risk of not attaining reliable recovery when compared to heterosexual and gay men
Gay and heterosexual men did not differ on treatment outcomes
Racial minority LGB patients did not have significant outcomes compared to white LGB patients
Rivers et al., 2018[71]
  • To explore participants’ narratives surrounding their perception of risk and protective circumstances
  • To explain suicide attempts in youth
17 LGBT individualsInterviewsSome LGBT individuals have effectively—although arduously—navigated suicidal crises using various coping methods
Roen et al., 2008[72]
  • To understanding how young people make sense of suicide
69 participants aged 16–24Interviews and focus groupsYoung people understand suicide as: suicidal subjects as other, suicide as accessible, rationalising suicidal behaviour, defining suicidal subjects in terms of their relationships with others
Scourfield et al., 2011[73]
  • To see how young people talk about self-harm
13 LGBT interviewees, 66 LGBT focus groupsInterviews and focus groupsDichotomy between display for public and personal intense distress amongst LGBT people
Self-harm can be private, but can be a way of reaching out
Self-harm is complicated and multifaceted
Scourfield et al., 2008[74]
  • To explore cultural context of youth suicide
  • To explore connections between sexual identity and self-destructive behaviour
69 young peopleInterviews and focus groupsLGBT young people employ resilience, ambivalence and self-destructive behaviour when faced with distress
Practitioners should move to ecological approach to help LGBT young people
Semlyen, J er al., 2016[91]
  • To determine an estimate of the association between sexual orientation identity and poor mental health and well-being among adults from 12 population surveys in the UK, and to consider whether effects differed for specific subgroups of the population
94,818 participants of large-scale surveysSurvey analysisIn the UK, LGB adults have higher prevalence of poor mental health and low well-being when compared to heterosexuals, particularly younger and older LGB adults. Sexual orientation identity should be measured routinely in all health studies and in administrative data in the UK in order to influence national and local policy development and service delivery. These results reiterate the need for local government, NHS providers and public health policy makers to consider how to address inequalities in mental health among these minority groups
Sherr et al., 2008[106]
  • To measure suicidal ideation in HIV clinic attenders in the UK
778 attendees at five HIV clinicsQuestionnaire, clinic note data, treatment data31% prevalence of suicidal ideation
Factors associated with suicidal ideation included being heterosexual man, black ethnicity, unemployment, lack of disclosure of HIV status, stopping antiretroviral treatment, psychical and/or psychological symptoms, and poorer quality of life
Taylor et al., 2018[92]
  • To explore the association between LGB status and self-harm in UK higher education students
707 UK university studentsOnline surveyLGB status associated with an elevated risk of NSSI and SA
Timmins et al., 2017[93]
  • To test direct/indirect associations between minority stressors and psychological distress among trans people
1207 trans individualsOnline surveyThere is a relationship between minority stressors and psychological distress among trans people
These relationships are partially explained by rumination
Timmins et al., 2018[94]
  • To investigate minority stressors and distress in twins
  • To understand the role of the environment
38 twin pairs, where one is heterosexual and the other is LGBQuestionnaire surveyLGB twins have high rumination
LGB twins high incidence of rejection, active concealment, self-stigma, prejudice events, childhood gender non-conformity, and lower scores on sexual orientation disclosure
Environmental factors are a causal explanation for disparities in rumination between LGB and heterosexual individuals
Timmins et al., 2019[95]
  • To test mechanisms by which social stigma contributes to psychological distress in sexual minority individuals
4248 LGB peopleSurveyStrong relationship between minority stressors and psychological distress in LGB individuals, which are partially accounted for by rumination
Woodhead et al., 2016[96]
  • To compare well-being, common mental disorder symptoms, suicidal ideation over a lifetime, alcohol and drug use amongst non-heterosexual and heterosexual individuals
7403 adultsSurveyNon-heterosexual orientation strongly associated with common mental disorder, lifetime suicidal ideation, harmful alcohol and drug use
Inner city sample had poorer mental health overall compared with national sample—this discrepancy was larger for non-heterosexuals than heterosexuals
Childhood and adult adversity substantially influence but do not account for sexual orientation related mental health disparities
Table A2. UK Cancer and LGBT+ Studies.
Table A2. UK Cancer and LGBT+ Studies.
Author, YearRef NumberStudy Design/Aims/ObjectivesSetting/Population/SampleMethodsMain Results
Alexis and Worsley, 2018[23]
  • To explore gay and bisexual men’s experience of prostate cancer post-treatment
Gay and bisexual men in prostate cancer post-treatmentMeta-synthesisGay and bisexual men experience sexual impact, physical, and psychological difficulties, as well as challenges to intimacy and support mechanisms. The systems in place need to proactively accommodate gay and bisexual men
Burkhaltler et al., 2016[37]
  • To identify gaps in LGBT cancer research
2 day Summit on Cancer in LGBT Communities56 summit participantsShared lessons and experience resulting in 16 recommendations covering sexual orientation and gender identity data collection, clinical care of LGBT persons, and education and training of health care providers
Czoski-Murray et al., 2010[24]
  • To assess cost effectiveness of screening for anal cancer in men and women who are HIV positive, and in particular, men who have sex with men
People with anal cancerCost-effectiveness screeningIt is unlikely that screening of identified high-risk groups will generate health improvements at a reasonable cost
Dalla Pria et al., 2014[25]
  • To assess the efficacy of screening for potential anal cancer based on presence of anal lesions in HIV-positive MSM
HIV-positive MSM undergoing anoscopy screeningHigh resolution anoscopy with intervention for high grade squamous intrapithetial lesions was offered to asymptomative HIV-positive MSM. Patients and HSILs were treated and follow-up HRA was performed after 6 months whilst patients with low-grade squamous intrapethelial lesions had a repeat HRA after 12 monthsAIN-3 is a significant risk factor for subsequent anal cancer, although the tumours detected in screened patients were small localised, and generally the outcomes were favourable
Darwin and Campbell, 2009[35]
  • To assess sexual minority women’s opinions relating to cervical screening
34 sexual minority women Q sortsThere is a need for affirmation of diversity within criteria for national screening programmes. There is a complexity of meanings around cervical screening
Doran et al., 2018[26]
  • To understand gay men’s experiences of health care (all cancer-related)
Gay men with experience of prostate cancerInterviewsParticipants wanted, and expected, candid discussions with health care professionals about how prostate cancer could affect their lives, sexual function, and how to access culturally relevant support before and after treatment. Participants perceived that their health care team had little knowledge about their needs, and if, or how, their experience differed due to their sexual orientation. Information provided was considered heteronormative
Fish, 2016[42]
  • To conduct a PAR project with the hope of improving LB women’s experiences of breast cancer health care
Lesbian and bisexual womenPAR-informed knowledge and exchange programmeThis project raised awareness of unmet need in relation to LB women with breast cancer; this in itself was notable as their needs were previously assumed to be the same as those of their heterosexual counterparts. Subsequently, LB women were included in equality and diversity policy statements for the first time. The project also provided a number of different learning opportunities for cancer professionals to develop knowledge, attitudes and skills
Fish and Anthony, 2005[44]
  • To see whether risk perceptions, experiences of health care, and health seeking behaviour were correlated
1066 lesbiansSurveyWhile lesbians were less likely than lesbians in a similar U.S. study to report that their risk of cervical cancer was the same as that of heterosexual women, perceptions of risk were not correlated with participation in screening. We assumed that bad experiences of screening would act as a barrier to attendance; instead, good experiences were associated with the increased likelihood of attendance. These findings underscore the need for a pro-active agenda for lesbian health which addresses the need for culturally competent health care, the sharing of best practice amongst health care providers, and the creation of systemic institutional change to improve the care lesbians receive
Fish and Williamson, 2018[38]
  • To find out experiences of LGB people with cancer
15 British LGB cancer patientsInterviewsThere is the ‘awkward choreography around disclosure’ opportunities and dilemmas for LGB patients, we describe ‘making sense of sub-optimal care’ which included instances of overt discrimination but was more frequently manifested through micro-aggressions and heteronormative systems and practices, and explore accounts of ‘alienation from usual psychosocial cancer support’
Fish et al., 2019[39]
  • To explore conditions under which a sample of British LGB cancer patients revealed their sexual orientation in hospital settings to enable a more nuanced approach to understanding disclosure in this context
30 LGB patients with cancerSemi-structured interviewsThere are three themes as part of the analysis: authenticity as a driver for disclosure in cancer care; partners as a (potential) salutogenic resource; and creating safe, healing environments conducive to disclosure. The findings are reported and discussed in relation to three inter-related concepts from current salutogenesis theorising including a sense of coherence, generalised resistance resources and healing environments which can facilitate sexual orientation disclosure
Fox et al., 2009[55]
  • To determine whether imiquimod was more effective than placebo for the treatment of high-grade anal canal intraepithelial neoplasia (HG-ACIN)
64 HIV-positive MSMDouble-blind, randomised placebo-controlled clinical trial. Sixty-four HIV-positive patients were randomised to self-application of imiquimod cream or matched placebo into the anal canal three times a week for 4 months. Response was assessed by cytology, high-resolution anoscopy and biopsy 2 months after therapy. All patients who failed to resolve were offered treatment with open-label imiquimod for a further 4 months
This study demonstrates the effectiveness of imiquimod for the treatment of ACIN, and the benefit of prolonged or repeated treatments. This form of therapy is likely to be especially valuable for patients with widespread multifocal ACIN who are otherwise difficult to treat, and should be considered as an adjunct to ablative therapy
Henderson, 2009[36]
  • To explore the evidence base for the premise that women who are exclusively lesbian have a very low chance of developing cervical cancer
LesbiansLiterature reviewCase reports and prevalence studies show that HPV can be transmitted sexually between women. It is not known whether prevalence of HPV or cervical cancer differs between lesbians and heterosexual women. The evidence consistently shows that prevalence of non-attendance for cervical screening is much higher in lesbian than heterosexual women, which is linked to a belief that lesbians are less susceptible to cervical cancer and have less need for screening. Despite sharing most of the same risk factors as heterosexual women, lesbians are much less likely to undergo regular screening
Heyworth, 2016[28]
  • To conduct a prostate cancer awareness survey, the results of which would inform the development of new patient information
217 gay/bisexual men and trans womenSurveyUsing the data from the survey and the available evidence base, it was agreed that four postcards should be produced, addressing four key areas: survivorship—and specifically issues around sexual function following treatment; the prevalence of prostate cancer in gay and bisexual men; taking care of your prostate—reducing cancer risk; communication
Hulbert-Williams et al., 2017[40]
  • To explore cancer experiences in LGB people
68,737 individuals (0.8% were lesbian, gay, or bisexual)National Cancer Patient Experience SurveyThere is a pattern of inequality, with less positive cancer experiences reported by lesbian, gay and (especially) bisexual respondents. Poor patient–professional communication and heteronormativity in the health care setting potentially explain many of the differences found. Social isolation is problematic for this group and warrants further exploration
Karnon et al., 2008[29]
  • Cost–utility analysis of screening for anal cancer in high-risk groups from a UK perspective
MSMCost utility analysisReference case results showed screening is unlikely to be cost effective. Sensitivity analyses identified two important parameters: regression from low-grade anal intraepithelial neoplasia (AIN) and utility effects. Increased AIN regression rates resulted in a minimum incremental cost per QALY gained of £39 405, whereas a best case scenario reduced the ratio to £20 996.
Kelly et al., 2018[30]
  • To discuss the risks that heteronormative assumptions play in prostate cancer care and how these may be addressed
LGBT patients with cancerIdentification and inclusion of relevant international evidence combined with clinical discussion
This paper posits a number of questions around heteronormativity in relation to prostate cancer information provision, supportive care and male sexuality. While assumptions regarding sexual orientation should be avoided in clinical encounters, this may be difficult when heteronormative assumptions dominate. Existing research supports the assertion that patient experience, including the needs of LGBT patients, should be central to service developments.
Kesten et al., 2019[45]
  • To understand young MSM’s knowledge and attitude towards HPV vaccination
51 YMSM completed questionnaires and 17 YMSM participated in focus groupsQuestionnaires and focus groupsOver half of YMSM were aware of HPV (54.9%), yet few (21.6%) had previously discussed vaccination with a health care professional (HCP). Thematic analyses found that YMSM were willing to receive the HPV vaccine. Vaccination programmes requiring YMSM to request the vaccine, particularly prior to sexual orientation disclosure to family and friends, were viewed as unfeasible. Educational campaigns explaining vaccine benefits were indicated as a way to encourage uptake
King et al., 2015[46]
  • To estimate the prevalence of oral detectable HPV DNA in HIV-negative MSM attending a sexual health clinic in London and concordance with anogenital HPV infection
151 HIV negative MSMPaired oral rinse samples and anogenital samples were available from 151 HIV-negative MSM within a larger cross-sectional survey. All samples were tested in parallel for 21 types of HPV DNA using an in-house assayHR-HPV DNA, including HPV 16/18, was detected in oral specimens from HIV-negative MSM attending sexual health clinics, suggesting a potential role for vaccination, but is far less common than anogenital infection. How this relates to the risk and natural history of HPV-related head and neck cancers warrants further study. Lack of concordance with anogenital infection also suggests that oral HPV infection should be considered separately when estimating potential vaccine impact
King et al., 2015[47]
  • To see whether HPV prevalence and risk factors in MSM could inform the potential effectiveness of vaccinating MSM from HPV
522 MSM aged 18-40Cross-sectional study of 522 MSM aged 18–40 attending a London sexual health clinic who completed a computer-assisted self-interview. Urine and two swabs (anal and penile/scrotal/perianal) were collected and tested using an in-house Luminex-based HPV genotyping system.On the basis of the current infection status, most MSM, even among a high-risk population attending a sexual health clinic, are not currently infected with the vaccine-type HPV. A targeted vaccination strategy for MSM in the UK could have substantial benefits
Matheson et al., 2017[31]
  • To synthesise existing qualitative research on younger/unpartnered/gay men to see how prostate cancer impacts these groups
Young, unpartnered, gay/bisexual men with prostate cancerSystematic meta-synthesisThe three overarching constructs illustrated the magnified disruption to men’s biographies, namely marginalisation, isolation and stigma—relating to men’s sense of being “out of sync”; the burden of emotional and embodied vulnerabilities and the assault on identity, illustrating the multiple threats to men’s work, sexual and social identities; shifting into different communities of practice—such as the shift from being part of a sexually active community to celibacy
McConkey and Holborn, 2018[32]
  • To explore the lived experience of gay men with prostate cancer
8 gay men treated for prostate cancerIn-depth interviewsGay men with prostate cancer have unmet information and supportive care needs throughout their prostate cancer journey, especially related to the impact of sexual dysfunction and associated rehabilitation, negatively impacting their quality of life. Issues associated with heteronormativity, minority stress, and stigma may influence how gay men interact with the health service, or how they perceive the delivery of care. Health care education providers should update prostate cancer education programmes accordingly
Meads and Moore, 2013[43]
  • This systematic review investigated all evidence on whether there is, or likely to be, higher rates of breast cancer in LB women
Lesbians and bisexual womenSystematic reviewSearches found 198 references. No incidence rates were found. Nine studies gave prevalence estimates - two showed higher, four showed no differences, one showed mixed results depending on definitions, one had no comparison group and one gave no sample size. All studies were small with poor methodological and/or reporting quality. One incidence modelling study suggested a higher rate.
Four risk modelling studies were found, one Rosner-Colditz and three Gail models. Three suggested higher and one lower rate in LB compared to heterosexual women. Six risk factor estimates suggested higher risk and one no difference between LB and heterosexual women
Merriel et al., 2018[48]
  • To explore and compare the knowledge and attitudes of UK General Practitioners and sexual health care professionals regarding HPV vaccination for YMSM (16–24)
GPs and Sexual Health Care PractitionersSurveyTwenty-two participants (20 SHCPs, p < 0.001) had vaccinated a YMSM patient against HPV. GPs lack of time (25/38, 65.79%) and SHCP staff availability (27/49, 55.10%) were the main reported factors preventing YMSM HPV vaccination. GPs were less likely than SHCPs to believe there was sufficient evidence for vaccinating YMSM (OR = 0.02, 95% CI = 0.01, 0.47); less likely to have skills to identify YMSM who may benefit from vaccination (OR = 0.03, 95% CI = 0.01, 0.15); and less confident recommending YMSM vaccination (OR = 0.01, 95% CI = 0.00, 0.01). GPs appear to have different knowledge, attitudes, and skills regarding YMSM HPV vaccination when compared to SHCPs
Nadarzynski et al., 2017[49]
  • To identify sexual health care professionals perceived barriers and facilitators MSM-targeted MSM HPV vaccination
13 doctors, 3 nurses, 3 health care advisorsTelephone interviewsHCPs were unsure about selection criteria, acceptable health care settings and the source of vaccination funding for the introduction of MSM-targeted HPV vaccination. Lack of political and public support, MSMs’ limited access to HPV vaccination and disclosure of sexual orientation to HCPs, identification of eligible MSM, patients’ poor HPV awareness and motivation to complete HPV vaccination were perceived as significant barriers. HCPs believed that the introduction of official guidelines on HPV vaccination for MSM, awareness campaigns and integrated clinic procedures could improve vaccination coverage
Nadarzynski et al., 2018[50]
  • To examine HPV vaccine acceptability amongst MSM in the UK
1508 MSM Online surveyAlthough nearly half of MSM would not actively pursue HPV vaccination, the vast majority would accept the vaccine if recommended by HCPs. In order to achieve optimal uptake, vaccine promotion campaigns should focus on MSM who do not access SHCs and those unwilling to disclose their sexual orientation
Nadarzynski et al., 2017[51]
  • To explore MSMs perceptions of HPV and HPV vaccination prior to the introduction of this programme
33 MSMFocus groups and interviewsMost MSM have poor knowledge about HPV and associated anal cancer. Despite the lack of concern about HPV, most MSM expressed willingness to receive HPV vaccination. There is a need for health education about the risks of HPV and HPV-related diseases so that MSM can appraise the benefits of being vaccinated. Concerns about HPV vaccine effectiveness in sexually active men and possible stigmatisation need to be addressed to optimise HPV vaccine acceptability
Nadarzynski et al., 2015[52]
  • To explore MSMs perceptions of HPV and HPV vaccination prior to the introduction of this programme
325 sexual health professionalsSurveyAmong 325 sexual health professionals, 14% were already vaccinating men against HPV, 83% recommended gender-neutral HPV vaccination and 65% recommended targeting MSM. Over 50% reported having poor knowledge about the use of HPV vaccine for MSM and the skills to identify MSM likely to benefit from HPV vaccination
Ong et al., 2014[54]
  • To assess the literature to see how regular digital anorectal examination (DARE) is incorporated into HIV management guidelines
HIV-positive MSMSystematic reviewFew HIV guidelines discuss or recommend DARE as a means of anal cancer screening. Studies of the efficacy, acceptability and cost effectiveness of DARE are needed to assess its role in anal cancer screening
Saunders et al., 2017[41]
  • To address gaps in evidence on the risk of cancer in people from sexual minorities
769,594 people from English GP Patient Survey and 249,010 people from English Cancer Patient Experience SurveySurveyLarge-scale evidence indicates that the distribution of cancer sites does not vary substantially by sexual orientation, with the exception of some HPV- and HIV-associated cancers. These findings highlight the importance of HPV vaccination in heterosexual and sexual minority populations
Schofield et al., 2016[33]
  • To establish the feasibility and acceptability of anal screening among MSM
Known HIV-positive and negative MSM who have anoreceptive intercourse
Anal screening with human papilloma virus (HPV) testing, liquid-based cytology and high-resolution anoscopy with biopsy of anoscopic abnormalities. Participants completed questionnaires at baseline and at 6 months
The high prevalence of high-risk HPV and frequency of false negative cytology in this study suggest that high-resolution anoscopy would have most clinical utility, as a primary screening tool for anal cancer in a high-risk group. The prevalence of AIN3+ in HIV-positive MSM lends support for a policy of screening this group, but the high prevalence of lower grade lesions which do not warrant immediate treatment and the limitations of treating high-grade lesions requires careful consideration in terms of a screening policy.
Soe et al., 2018[53]
  • To investigate the cost effectiveness for HPV vaccination program in older women (age > 26), heterosexual men, and MSM
Older women, heterosexual men, and MSMLiterature reviewTargeted HPV vaccination for MSM should be next priority in HPV prevention after having established a solid girls vaccination programme. Vaccination for heterosexual men should be considered when 2-dose 4vHPV/9vHPV vaccines become available with a reduced price, whereas targeted vaccination for women over age 26 is unlikely to be cost effective
Table A3. Palliative UK LGBT+ Studies.
Table A3. Palliative UK LGBT+ Studies.
Author, YearRef NumberStudy Design/Aims/ObjectivesSetting/Population/SampleMethodsMain Results
Almack et al., 2010[57]To see how sexual orientation may impact on concerns about and experiences of end of life care and bereavement within same-sex relationshipsLesbian and gay eldersFocus groupsThe focus on end of life care and bereavement sheds light on a series of relatively neglected issues associated with lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) ageing and, more broadly, the topics of care and support within ‘non-traditional’ intimate relationships and personal networks. They point to the importance of further research into the lives of older lesbians and gay men facing issues of end of life care and bereavement
Almack et al., 2015[63]
  • To identify particular needs salient to sexual/gender orientation relating to end of life care as identified by older LGBT people
  • To examine how sexual and gender orientation may impact on experience of end of life care for LGBT older people
  • To explore LGBT older people’s familial and friendship networks and the ways in which these personal networks may influence later life experiences towards and at end of life
  • To identify recommendations for good practice in end of life care for older LGBT people
Older LGBT peopleSurvey, interviews, and public engagement workshopLGBT people wanted greater inclusivity, a reflection of diversity, validation, safety, and ‘like-minded’ people in accessing services. Those working in end of life care should be sensitive to understanding LGBT lives. Trans people had specific concerns around being misgendered after their deaths
Almack, K 2018[8]
  • To explore the end of life care experiences and care needs of older LGBT people aged 60+
LGBT+ people aged 60+ or LGBT people in a relationship with someone aged 60+ across the UKSurvey and interviewsParticipants’ networks presented a complex diversity and richness including families of origin and of choice. It is clear however that LGBT older adult’s histories and pathways have ongoing profound influences on the means of social support available to individuals at the end of life
Almack et al., 2015[62]
  • To explore inequalities experienced by LGBT people accessing palliative and end of life care services
Older LGBT peopleStakeholder meetings and focus groupsIt is important to look at the whole person and address heterosexist attitudes in the delivery of end of life care. Developing cultural sensitivity in addressing the distinct, complex and multiple needs of LGBT people holds the potential to develop non-discriminatory services that will benefit everyone
Bristowe et al., 2016[64]
  • To identify and appraise the evidence of the bereavement experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and/or trans* people who have lost a partner and develop an explanatory model of lesbian, gay, bisexual and/or trans partner bereavement
LGBT people who have lost a partnerSystematic reviewStudies described universal experiences of the pain of losing a partner; however, additional barriers and stressors were reported for lesbian, gay, bisexual and/or trans* people, including homophobia, failure to acknowledge the relationship, additional legal and financial issues and the ‘shadow’ of HIV or AIDS. A novel model was developed to explain how the experience for lesbian, gay, bisexual and/or trans* people is shaped by whether the relationship was disclosed and acknowledged in life and into bereavement and how this impacts upon needs and access to care
Bristowe et al., 2018[61]
  • To explore health care experiences of LGBT people facing advanced illness
40 LGBT people from across the UK facing advanced illness (cancer = 21, non-cancer = 16, and both cancer and non-cancer = 3)Semi-structured interviewsExperiences of discrimination and exclusion in health care persist for LGBT people. Ten recommendations are made within this data
Fenge, 2013[58]
  • To consider the experience of loss and bereavement for lesbian and gay elders
Bereaved lesbian and gay elders (4) and an agency that works with older LGBT peopleInterviewsIssues include: undisclosed identities, lack of recognition of partnership, disenfranchised grief, and cultural competency within health and social care service workforce, and accessing appropriate bereavement services, and support from funeral homes
Harding et al., 2012[7]
  • To identify and appraise the existing evidence for the needs, experiences, and preferences for palliative and end-of-life care in lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) populations
12 articles, primarily relating to cancer experience of gay and lesbian peopleSystematic reviewExisting evidence is explicit and indeed repetitive in highlighting the educational needs of health care professionals to explore sexual preferences, avoid heterosexist assumptions, and recognise the importance of partners in decision making. There is also a significant need to research LGBT experiences and refine services for patients and their caregivers
Ingham et al., 2016[59]
  • To explore experiences of same-sex partner bereavement in women over the age of 60
8 women who had lost a same-sex partnerSemi-structured interviews and an interpretative phenomenological analysisThe findings indicate that in addition to the experiences of partner bereavement noted in research with heterosexual widows, older women who lose same-sex partners may face particular challenges, which can impact upon psychological well-being and adjustment to loss. These challenges appear to result from past and current homophobic and heterosexist attitudes within the UK culture. A range of interventions at individual, group, health service, and societal levels may be beneficial in improving the psychological well-being of older women who lose a same-sex partner
Westwood, 2017[60]
  • To explore the ’right to die’ debate from the perspectives of older lesbians and gay men
60 older LGB individualsSemi-structured interviewsOlder lesbians and gay men are multiply disadvantaged (a) by an increased risk of feeling that life is not worth living due to affective inequalities (inadequate informal and formal social support) and (b) by a denial of access to the right to die both under such circumstances and/or if they wish to resist the normativities associated with a passive, medicalised death. There is a need to distinguish between a wish to die because of deficiencies in the care system and a wish to die in order to control how, when and where one’s life ends. The analysis highlights the contextual contingencies of ‘vulnerability’ in relation to the right to die and interrogates the heterosexist and disciplinary reproductive normativities underpinning the notions of ‘natural’ deaths

References

  1. Government Equalities Office. LGBT Action Plan; Government Equalities Office: London, UK, 2018.
  2. Harding, R.; Bensley, J.; Corrigan, N. Targeting smoking cessation to high prevalence communities: Outcomes from a pilot intervention for gay men. BMC Public Health 2004, 4, 43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  3. McDermott, E.; Roen, K.; Scourfield, J. Avoiding shame: Young LGBT people, homophobia and self-destructive behaviours. Cult. Health Sex. 2008, 10, 815–829. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  4. Hafford-Letchfield, T.; Simpson, P.; Willis, P.B.; Almack, K. Developing inclusive residential care for older lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans (LGBT) people: An evaluation of the Care Home Challenge action research project. Health Soc. Care Community 2018, 26, e312–e320. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  5. Pearce, R. Understanding Trans Health: Discourse, Power and Possibility; Policy Press: Bristol, UK, 2018. [Google Scholar]
  6. Hunt, R.; Bates, C.; Walker, S.; Grierson, J.; Redsell, S.; Meads, C. A Systematic Review of UK Educational and Training Materials Aimed at Health and Social Care Staff about Providing Appropriate Services for LGBT plus People. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 4976. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  7. Harding, R.; Epiphaniou, E.; Chidgey-Clark, J. Needs, experiences, and preferences of sexual minorities for end-of-life care and palliative care: A systematic review. J. Palliat. Med. 2012, 15, 602–611. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Almack, K. ‘I didn’t come out to go back in the closet’: Ageing and end-of-life care for older LGBT people. In Older Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans People; Routledge: Abington, UK, 2018; pp. 158–171. [Google Scholar]
  9. Bachmann, C.L.; Gooch, B. LGBT in Britain Health Report; Stonewall: London, UK, 2018. [Google Scholar]
  10. WEC. Health and Social Care and LGBT Communities; Parliament: London, UK, 2019. [Google Scholar]
  11. Browne, K.; Nash, C.J. Resisting LGBT Rights Where “We Have Won”: Canada and Great Britain. J. Hum. Rights 2014, 13, 322–336. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  12. Lawrence, M.; Taylor, Y. The UK government LGBT Action Plan: Discourses of progress, enduring stasis, and LGBTQI+ lives ‘getting better’. Crit. Soc. Policy 2020, 40, 586–607. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  13. Fish, J.; Karban, K. LGBT Health Inequalities: International Perspectives in Social Work; Policy Press: Bristol, UK, 2015. [Google Scholar]
  14. Dahlgren, G.; Whitehead, M. What Can be Done about Inequalities in Health? Lancet 1991, 338, 1059–1063. [Google Scholar]
  15. Krieger, N. Methods for the scientific study of discrimination and health: An ecosocial approach. Am. J. Public Health 2012, 102, 936–944. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Munn, Z.; Peters, M.D.; Stern, C.; Tufanaru, C.; McArthur, A.; Aromataris, E. Systematic review or scoping review? Guidance for authors when choosing between a systematic or scoping review approach. BMC Med. Res. Methodol. 2018, 18, 143. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Pham, M.T.; Rajić, A.; Greig, J.D.; Sargeant, J.M.; Papadopoulos, A.; McEwen, S.A. A scoping review of scoping reviews: Advancing the approach and enhancing the consistency. Res. Synth. Methods 2014, 5, 371–385. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  18. Tricco, A.C.; Lillie, E.; Zarin, W.; O’Brien, K.; Colquhoun, H.; Kastner, M.; Levac, D.; Ng, C.; Sharpe, J.P.; Wilson, K. A scoping review on the conduct and reporting of scoping reviews. BMC Med. Res. Methodol. 2016, 16, 15. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  19. Gough, D.; Oliver, S.; Thomas, J. An Introduction to Systematic Reviews; Sage: London, UK, 2017. [Google Scholar]
  20. Arksey, H.; O’Malley, L. Scoping studies: Towards a methodological framework. Int. J. Soc. Res. Methodol. 2005, 8, 19–32. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  21. Methley, A.M.; Campbell, S.; Chew-Graham, C.; McNally, R.; Cheraghi-Sohi, S. PICO, PICOS and SPIDER: A comparison study of specificity and sensitivity in three search tools for qualitative systematic reviews. BMC Health Serv. Res. 2014, 14, 579. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  22. Ritchie, J.; Spencer, L. Qualitative data analysis for applied policy research. In Analyzing Qualitative Data; Bryman, A., Burgess, R.G., Eds.; Abingdon Routledge: Oxfordshire, UK, 1994; pp. 173–194. [Google Scholar]
  23. Alexis, O.; Worsley, A.J. The Experiences of Gay and Bisexual Men Post-Prostate Cancer Treatment: A Meta-Synthesis of Qualitative Studies. Am. J. Mens. Health 2018, 12, 2076–2088. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Czoski-Murray, C.; Karnon, J.; Jones, R.; Smith, K.; Kinghorn, G. Cost-effectiveness of screening high-risk HIV-positive men who have sex with men (MSM) and HIV-positive women for anal cancer. Health Technol. Assess. 2010, 14, iii–iv, ix–x, 1–101. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  25. Dalla Pria, A.; Alfa-Wali, M.; Fox, P.; Holmes, P.; Weir, J.; Francis, N.; Bower, M. High-resolution anoscopy screening of HIV-positive MSM: Longitudinal results from a pilot study. Aids 2014, 28, 861–867. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Doran, D.; Williamson, S.; Margaret Wright, K.; Beaver, K. It’s not just about prostate cancer, it’s about being a gay man: A qualitative study of gay men’s experiences of healthcare provision in the UK. Eur. J. Cancer Care 2018, 27, e12923. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Fox, J.; White, P.J.; Macdonald, N.; Weber, J.; McClure, M.; Fidler, S.; Ward, H. Reductions in HIV transmission risk behaviour following diagnosis of primary HIV infection: A cohort of high-risk men who have sex with men. Hiv. Med. 2009, 10, 432–438. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  28. Heyworth, B.; Gilliver, A.; Ralph, S.; Hewitt, P.; Mackereth, P. Prostate cancer awareness survey to proud postcards. Sex. Relatsh. Ther. 2016, 31, 462–472. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Karnon, J.; Jones, R.; Czoski-Murray, C.; Srnith, K.J. Cost-utility analysis of screening high-risk groups for anal cancer. J. Public Health 2008, 30, 293–304. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Kelly, D.; Sakellariou, D.; Fry, S.; Vougioukalou, S. Heteronormativity and prostate cancer: A discursive paper. J. Clin. Nurs. 2018, 27, 461–467. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  31. Matheson, L.; Watson, E.K.; Nayoan, J.; Wagland, R.; Glaser, A.; Gavin, A.; Wright, P.; Rivas, C. A qualitative metasynthesis exploring the impact of prostate cancer and its management on younger, unpartnered and gay men. Eur. J. Cancer Care 2017, 26. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  32. McConkey, R.W.; Holborn, C. Exploring the lived experience of gay men with prostate cancer: A phenomenological study. Eur. J. Oncol. Nurs. 2018, 33, 62–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  33. Schofield, A.M.; Sadler, L.; Nelson, L.; Gittins, M.; Desai, M.; Sargent, A.; McMahon, R.F.; Hill, J.; Crosbie, E.J.; Patnick, J.; et al. A prospective study of anal cancer screening in HIV-positive and negative MSM. Aids 2016, 30, 1375–1383. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Ong, J.J.; Walker, S.; Grulich, A.; Hoy, J.; Read, T.R.; Bradshaw, C.; Chen, M.; Garland, S.M.; Hillman, R.; Templeton, D.J.; et al. Incorporating digital anorectal examinations for anal cancer screening into routine HIV care for men who have sex with men living with HIV: A prospective cohort study. J. Int. AIDS Soc. 2018, 21, e25192. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Darwin, Z.; Campbell, C. Understandings of Cervical Screening in Sexual Minority Women: A Q-Methodological Study. Fem. Psychol. 2009, 19, 534–554. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. Henderson, H.J. Why lesbians should be encouraged to have regular cervical screening. J. Fam. Plann. Reprod. Health Care 2009, 35, 49–52. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Burkhalter, J.E.; Margolies, L.; Sigurdsson, H.O.; Walland, J.; Radix, A.; Rice, D.; Buchting, F.O.; Sanchez, N.F.; Bare, M.G.; Boehmer, U.; et al. The National LGBT Cancer Action Plan: A White Paper of the 2014 National Summit on Cancer in the LGBT Communities. Lgbt Health 2016, 3, 19–31. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  38. Fish, J.; Williamson, I. Exploring lesbian, gay and bisexual patients’ accounts of their experiences of cancer care in the UK. Eur. J. Cancer Care 2018, 27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  39. Fish, J.; Williamson, I.; Brown, J. Disclosure in lesbian, gay and bisexual cancer care: Towards a salutogenic healthcare environment. BMC Cancer 2019, 19, 678. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  40. Hulbert-Williams, N.J.; Plumpton, C.O.; Flowers, P.; McHugh, R.; Neal, R.D.; Semlyen, J.; Storey, L. The cancer care experiences of gay, lesbian and bisexual patients: A secondary analysis of data from the UK Cancer Patient Experience Survey. Eur. J. Cancer Care 2017, 26. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  41. Saunders, C.L.; Meads, C.; Abel, G.A.; Lyratzopoulos, G. Associations between Sexual Orientation and Overall and Site-Specific Diagnosis of Cancer: Evidence from Two National Patient Surveys in England. J. Clin. Oncol. 2017, 35, 3654. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  42. Fish, J. Co-producing knowledge about lesbian and bisexual women with breast cancer: Messages for nursing professionals from a knowledge exchange project. J. Res. Nurs. 2016, 21, 225–239. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  43. Meads, C.; Moore, D. Breast cancer in lesbians and bisexual women: Systematic review of incidence, prevalence and risk studies. BMC Public Health 2013, 13, 1127. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  44. Fish, J.; Anthony, D. UK national Lesbians and Health Care Survey. Women Health 2005, 41, 27–45. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  45. Kesten, J.M.; Flannagan, C.; Ruane-McAteer, E.; Merriel, S.W.D.; Nadarzynski, T.; Shapiro, G.; Rosberger, Z.; Prue, G. Mixed-methods study in England and Northern Ireland to understand young men who have sex with men’s knowledge and attitudes towards human papillomavirus vaccination. BMJ Open 2019, 9. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  46. King, E.M.; Gilson, R.; Beddows, S.; Soldan, K.; Panwar, K.; Young, C.; Jit, M.; Edmunds, W.J.; Sonnenberg, P. Oral human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in men who have sex with men: Prevalence and lack of anogenital concordance. Sex. Transm. Infect. 2015, 91, 284–286. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  47. King, E.M.; Gilson, R.; Beddows, S.; Soldan, K.; Panwar, K.; Young, C.; Prah, P.; Jit, M.; Edmunds, W.J.; Sonnenberg, P. Human papillomavirus DNA in men who have sex with men: Type-specific prevalence, risk factors and implications for vaccination strategies. Br. J. Cancer 2015, 112, 1585–1593. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  48. Merriel, S.W.D.; Flannagan, C.; Kesten, J.M.; Shapiro, G.K.; Nadarzynski, T.; Prue, G. Knowledge and Attitudes of General Practitioners and Sexual Health Care Professionals Regarding Human Papillomavirus Vaccination for Young Men Who Have Sex with Men. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15. 151. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  49. Nadarzynski, T.; Llewellyn, C.; Richardson, D.; Pollard, A.; Smith, H. UK healthcare professionals’ uncertainties, barriers and facilitators to the introduction of targeted human papillomavirus vaccination for men who have sex with men. Sex. Health 2017, 14, 372–377. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  50. Nadarzynski, T.; Smith, H.; Richardson, D.; Bremner, S.; Llewellyn, C. Men who have sex with men who do not access sexual health clinics nor disclose sexual orientation are unlikely to receive the HPV vaccine in the UK. Vaccine 2018, 36, 5065–5070. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  51. Nadarzynski, T.; Smith, H.; Richardson, D.; Pollard, A.; Llewellyn, C. Perceptions of HPV and attitudes towards HPV vaccination amongst men who have sex with men: A qualitative analysis. Br. J. Health Psychol. 2017, 22, 345–361. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  52. Nadarzynski, T.; Smith, H.E.; Richardson, D.; Ford, E.; Llewellyn, C.D. Sexual healthcare professionals’ views on HPV vaccination for men in the UK. Br. J. Cancer 2015, 113, 1599–1601. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  53. Soe, N.N.; Ong, J.J.; Ma, X.; Fairley, C.K.; Latt, P.M.; Jing, J.; Cheng, F.; Zhang, L. Should human papillomavirus vaccination target women over age 26, heterosexual men and men who have sex with men? A targeted literature review of cost-effectiveness. Hum. Vaccin. Immunother. 2018, 14, 3010–3018. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  54. Ong, J.J.; Chen, M.; Grulich, A.E.; Fairley, C.K. Regional and national guideline recommendations for digital ano-rectal examination as a means for anal cancer screening in HIV positive men who have sex with men: A systematic review. BMC Cancer 2014, 14, 557. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  55. Fox, P. Anal cancer screening in men who have sex with men. Curr. Opin. Hiv. Aids. 2009, 4, 64–67. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  56. Hulbert-Williams, N.J.; Plumpton, C.; McHugh, R.; Semlyen, J.; Flowers, P.; Storey, L.; Rearn, E.; Neal, R. What are the Experiences of Cancer Care in Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Patients, and How do These Differ from Heterosexual Cancer Patients. 2015. Available online: https://chesterrep.openrepository.com/bitstream/handle/10034/555442/hulbert-williams+et+al+-PO2015.pdf?sequence=8 (accessed on 15 November 2020).
  57. Almack, K.; Seymour, J.; Bellamy, G. Exploring the Impact of Sexual Orientation on Experiences and Concerns about End of Life Care and on Bereavement for Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Older People. Sociology 2010, 44, 908–924. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  58. Fenge, L.A. Developing understanding of same-sex partner bereavement for older lesbian and gay people: Implications for social work practice. J. Gerontol. Soc. Work 2014, 57, 288–304. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  59. Ingham, C.F.A.; Eccles, F.J.R.; Armitage, J.R.; Murray, C.D. Same-sex partner bereavement in older women: An interpretative phenomenological analysis. Aging. Ment. Health 2017, 21, 917–925. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  60. Westwood, S. Older Lesbians, Gay Men and the ‘Right to Die’ Debate: ‘I Always Keep a Lethal Dose of Something, Because I don’t Want to Become an Elderly Isolated Person’. Soc. Leg. Stud. 2017, 26, 606–628. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  61. Bristowe, K.; Hodson, M.; Wee, B.; Almack, K.; Johnson, K.; Daveson, B.A.; Koffman, J.; McEnhill, L.; Harding, R. Recommendations to reduce inequalities for LGBT people facing advanced illness: ACCESSC are national qualitative interview study. Palliat. Med. 2018, 32, 23–35. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  62. Almack, K.; Smith, T.; Moss, B. Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans Health Inequalities; Policy Press and Bristol University Press: Bristol, UK, 2015. [Google Scholar]
  63. Almack, K.; Yip, A.; Seymour, J.; Sargeant, A.; Patterson, A.; Makita, M.; Smith, A.; Jenkins, C.; Jones, R. The Last Outing: Exploring end of life experiences and care needs in the lives of older LGBT people. Final Report. Nottm. Univ. Nottm. 2015. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  64. Bristowe, K.; Marshall, S.; Harding, R. The bereavement experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual and/or trans* people who have lost a partner: A systematic review, thematic synthesis and modelling of the literature. Palliat. Med. 2016, 30, 730–744. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  65. Gabb, J.; McDermott, E.; Eastham, R.; Hanbury, A. Paradoxical family practices: LGBTQ plus young people, mental health and wellbeing. J. Sociol. 2019. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  66. McAndrew, S.; Warne, T. Coming out to talk about suicide: Gay men and suicidality. Int. J. Ment. Health Nurs. 2010, 19, 92–101. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  67. McAndrew, S.; Warne, T. Gay children and suicidality: The importance of professional nurturance. Issues Ment. Health Nurs. 2012, 33, 348–354. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  68. McDermott, E. Surviving in dangerous places: Lesbian identity performances in the workplace, social class and psychological health. Fem. Psychol. 2006, 16, 193–211. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  69. McDermott, E. Asking for help online: Lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans youth, self-harm and articulating the ‘failed’self. Health 2015, 19, 561–577. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  70. Page, S.; Burgess, J.; Davies-Abbott, I.; Roberts, D.; Molderson, J. Transgender, Mental Health, and Older People: An Appreciative Approach Towards Working Together. Issues Ment. Health Nurs. 2016, 37, 903–911. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  71. Rivers, I.; Gonzalez, C.; Nodin, N.; Peel, E.; Tyler, A. LGBT people and suicidality in youth: A qualitative study of perceptions of risk and protective circumstances. Soc. Sci. Med. 2018, 212, 1–8. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  72. Roen, K.; Scourfield, J.; McDermott, E. Making sense of suicide: A discourse analysis of young people’s talk about suicidal subjecthood. Soc. Sci. Med. 2008, 67, 2089–2097. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  73. Scourfield, J.; Roen, K.; McDermott, E. The non-display of authentic distress: Public-private dualism in young people’s discursive construction of self-harm. Sociol. Health Illn. 2011, 33, 777–791. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  74. Scourfield, J.; Roen, K.; McDermott, L. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender young people’s experiences of distress: Resilience, ambivalence and self-destructive behaviour. Health Soc. Care Community 2008, 16, 329–336. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  75. Amos, R.; Manalastas, E.J.; White, R.; Bos, H.; Patalay, P. Mental health, social adversity, and health-related outcomes in sexual minority adolescents: A contemporary national cohort study. Lancet Child Adolesc. Health 2020, 4, 36–45. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  76. Argyriou, A.; Goldsmith, K.A.; Tsokos, A.; Rimes, K.A. Psychosocial mediators of the relations between sexual orientation and depressive symptoms in a longitudinal sample of young people. Psychol. Sex. Orientat. Gend. Divers. 2020, 7, 142–153. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  77. Bartlett, A.; Smith, G.; King, M. The response of mental health professionals to clients seeking help to change or redirect same-sex sexual orientation. BMC Psychiatry 2009, 9, 11. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  78. Chakraborty, A.; McManus, S.; Brugha, T.S.; Bebbington, P.; King, M. Mental health of the non-heterosexual population of England. Br. J. Psychiatry 2011, 198, 143–148. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  79. Colledge, L.; Hickson, F.; Reid, D.; Weatherburn, P. Poorer mental health in UK bisexual women than lesbians: Evidence from the UK 2007 Stonewall Women’s Health Survey. J. Public Health 2015, 37, 427–437. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  80. Gnan, G.H.; Rahman, Q.; Ussher, G.; Baker, D.; West, E.; Rimes, K.A. General and LGBTQ-specific factors associated with mental health and suicide risk among LGBTQ students. J. Youth Stud. 2019, 22, 1393–1408. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  81. Hickson, F.; Davey, C.; Reid, D.; Weatherburn, P.; Bourne, A. Mental health inequalities among gay and bisexual men in England, Scotland and Wales: A large community-based cross-sectional survey. J. Public Health 2017, 39, 266–273. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  82. Hughes, E.; Rawlings, V.; McDermott, E. Mental Health Staff Perceptions and Practice Regarding Self-Harm, Suicidality and Help-Seeking in LGBTQ Youth: Findings from a Cross-Sectional Survey in the UK. Issues Ment. Health Nurs. 2018, 39, 30–36. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  83. Irish, M.; Solmi, F.; Mars, B.; King, M.; Lewis, G.; Pearson, R.M.; Pitman, A.; Rowe, S.; Srinivasan, R.; Lewis, G. Depression and self-harm from adolescence to young adulthood in sexual minorities compared with heterosexuals in the UK: A population-based cohort study. Lancet Child Adolesc. Health 2019, 3, 91–98. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  84. Jones, A.; Robinson, E.; Oginni, O.; Rahman, Q.; Rimes, K.A. Anxiety disorders, gender nonconformity, bullying and self-esteem in sexual minority adolescents: Prospective birth cohort study. J. Child Psychol. Psychiatry 2017, 58, 1201–1209. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  85. Oginni, O.; Robinson, E.; Jones, A.; Rahman, Q.; Rimes, K. Mediators of increased self-harm and suicidal ideation in sexual minority youth: A longitudinal study. Psychol. Med. 2019, 49, 2524–2532. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  86. Rasmussen, S.; Cramer, R.J.; McFadden, C.; Haile, C.R.; Sime, V.L.; Wilsey, C.N. Sexual Orientation and the Integrated Motivational-Volitional Model of Suicidal Behavior: Results from a Cross-Sectional Study of Young Adults in the United Kingdom. Arch. Suicide Res. 2019. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  87. Rimes, K.A.; Broadbent, M.; Holden, R.; Rahman, Q.; Hambrook, D.; Hatch, S.L.; Wingrove, J. Comparison of treatment outcomes between lesbian, gay, bisexual and heterosexual individuals receiving a primary care psychological intervention. Behav. Cogn. Psychother. 2018, 46, 332–349. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  88. Rimes, K.A.; Goodship, N.; Ussher, G.; Baker, D.; West, E. Non-binary and binary transgender youth: Comparison of mental health, self-harm, suicidality, substance use and victimization experiences. Int. J. Transgenderism 2019, 20, 230–240. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  89. Rimes, K.A.; Ion, D.; Wingrove, J.; Carter, B. Sexual orientation differences in psychological treatment outcomes for depression and anxiety: National cohort study. J. Consult. Clin. Psychol. 2019, 87, 577. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  90. Rimes, K.A.; Shivakumar, S.; Ussher, G.; Baker, D.; Rahman, Q.; West, E. Psychosocial Factors Associated With Suicide Attempts, Ideation and Future Risk in Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Youth The Youth Chances Study. Crisis-J. Crisis Interv. Suicide Prev. 2019, 40, 83–92. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  91. Semlyen, J.; King, M.; Varney, J.; Hagger-Johnson, G. Sexual orientation and symptoms of common mental disorder or low wellbeing: Combined meta-analysis of 12 UK population health surveys. BMC Psychiatry 2016, 16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  92. Taylor, P.J.; Dhingra, K.; Dickson, J.M.; McDermott, E. Psychological correlates of self-harm within gay, lesbian and bisexual UK university students. Arch. Suicide Res. 2018, 24, 1–16. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  93. Timmins, L.; Rimes, K.A.; Rahman, Q. Minority stressors and psychological distress in transgender individuals. Psychol. Sex. Orientat. Gend. Divers. 2017, 4, 328. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  94. Timmins, L.; Rimes, K.A.; Rahman, Q. Minority stressors, rumination, and psychological distress in monozygotic twins discordant for sexual minority status. Psychol. Med. 2018, 48, 1705–1712. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  95. Timmins, L.; Rimes, K.A.; Rahman, Q. Minority stressors, rumination, and psychological distress in lesbian, gay, and bisexual individuals. Arch. Sex. Behav. 2020, 49, 661–680. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  96. Woodhead, C.; Gazard, B.; Hotopf, M.; Rahman, Q.; Rimes, K.A.; Hatch, S.L. Mental health among UK inner city non-heterosexuals: The role of risk factors, protective factors and place. Epidemiol. Psychiatr. Sci. 2016, 25, 450–461. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  97. Bridge, L.; Smith, P.; Rimes, K.A. Sexual orientation differences in the self-esteem of men and women: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychol. Sex. Orientat. Gend. Divers. 2019, 6, 433–446. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  98. Dhejne, C.; Van Vlerken, R.; Heylens, G.; Arcelus, J. Mental health and gender dysphoria: A review of the literature. Int. Rev. Psychiatry 2016, 28, 44–57. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  99. King, M.; Semlyen, J.; Killaspy, H.; Nazareth, I.; Osborn, D. A Systematic Review of Research on Counselling and Psychotherapy for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender People; BACP: Ludwig, UK, 2007. [Google Scholar]
  100. King, M.; Semlyen, J.; Tai, S.S.; Killaspy, H.; Osborn, D.; Popelyuk, D.; Nazareth, I. A systematic review of mental disorder, suicide, and deliberate self harm in lesbian, gay and bisexual people. BMC Psychiatry 2008, 8, 70. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  101. Lewis, N.M. Mental health in sexual minorities: Recent indicators, trends, and their relationships to place in North America and Europe. Health Place 2009, 15, 1029–1045. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  102. Marshall, E.; Claes, L.; Bouman, W.P.; Witcomb, G.L.; Arcelus, J. Non-suicidal self-injury and suicidality in trans people: A systematic review of the literature. Int. Rev. Psychiatry 2016, 28, 58–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  103. Foy, A.A.; Morris, D.; Fernandes, V.; Rimes, K.A. LGBQ+ adults’ experiences of Improving Access to Psychological Therapies and primary care counselling services: Informing clinical practice and service delivery. Cogn. Behav. Ther. 2019, 12, e42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  104. McDermott, E.; Hughes, E.; Rawlings, V. Norms and normalisation: Understanding lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer youth, suicidality and help-seeking. Cult. Health Sex. 2018, 20, 156–172. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  105. McDermott, E.; Hughes, E.; Rawlings, V. The social determinants of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth suicidality in England: A mixed methods study. J. Public Health 2018, 40, E244–E251. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  106. Sherr, L.; Lampe, F.; Fisher, M.; Arthur, G.; Anderson, J.; Zetler, S.; Johnson, M.; Edwards, S.; Harding, R. Suicidal ideation in UK HIV clinic attenders. Aids 2008, 22, 1651–1658. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  107. Meyer, I.H. Prejudice, social stress, and mental health in lesbian, gay, and bisexual populations: Conceptual issues and research evidence. Psychol. Bull. 2003, 129, 674. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  108. McDermott, E.; Roen, K. Queer Youth, Suicide and Self-Harm: Troubled Subjects, Troubling Norms; Palgrave Macmillan: Basingstoke, UK, 2016. [Google Scholar]
  109. Equality Act 2010. Available online: https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2010/15/contents:UnitedKingdom (accessed on 11 January 2021).
  110. Department of Health. Preventing Suicide in England: A Cross-Government Outcomes Strategy to Save Lives; Department of Health: London, UK, 2012.
  111. Department for Health; Department for Education. Transforming Children and Young People’s Mental Health Provision: A Green Paper; Department of Health/Department of Education: London, UK, 2017.
  112. Jorm, A.F.; Korten, A.E.; Rodgers, B.; Jacomb, P.A.; Christensen, H. Sexual orientation and mental health: Results from a community survey of young and middle–aged adults. Br. J. Psychiatry 2002, 180, 423–427. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  113. Greene, G.J.; Fisher, K.A.; Kuper, L.; Andrews, R.; Mustanski, B. “Is this normal? Is this not normal? There is no set example”: Sexual health intervention preferences of LGBT youth in romantic relationships. Sex. Res. Soc. Policy 2015, 12, 1–14. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  114. Hines, S. Intimate transitions: Transgender practices of partnering and parenting. Sociology 2006, 40, 353–371. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  115. Elford, J.; Bolding, G.; Sherr, L. Seeking sex on the Internet and sexual risk behaviour among gay men using London gyms. Aids 2001, 15, 1409–1415. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  116. Bourne, A.; Reid, D.; Hickson, F.; Torres-Rueda, S.; Weatherburn, P. Illicit drug use in sexual settings (‘chemsex’) and HIV/STI transmission risk behaviour among gay men in South London: Findings from a qualitative study. Sex. Transm. Infect. 2015, 91, 564–568. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  117. Stall, R.D.; Greenwood, G.L.; Acree, M.; Paul, J.; Coates, T.J. Cigarette smoking among gay and bisexual men. Am. J. Public Health 1999, 89, 1875–1878. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  118. Bristowe, K.; Hodson, M.; Wee, B.; Almack, K.; Daveson, B.; Koffman, J.; McEnhill, L.; Johnson, K.; Harding, R. What makes it worth the investment to say it?”–Care experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual and/or trans* people facing life-limiting illness: A qualitative interview study. BMJ Support. Palliat. Care 2016, 6, 388. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  119. Jones, R.L.; Almack, K.; Scicluna, R. Older bisexual people: Implications for social work from the ‘Looking Both Ways’ study. J. Gerontol. Soc. Work 2018, 61, 334–347. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  120. Simpson, P.; Almack, K.; Walthery, P. ‘We treat them all the same’: The attitudes, knowledge and practices of staff concerning older lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans residents in care homes. Ageing Soc. 2018, 38, 869–899. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  121. Westwood, S.; King, A.; Almack, K.; Yiu-Tung, S.; Bailey, L. Good practice in health and social care provision for LGBT older people in the UK. In Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans Health Inequalities: International Perspectives in Social Work; Policy Press and Bristol University Press: Bristol, UK, 2015; Volume 1, pp. 145–158. [Google Scholar]
  122. Hinchliff, S.; Gott, M.; Galena, E. ‘I daresay I might find it embarrassing’: General practitioners’ perspectives on discussing sexual health issues with lesbian and gay patients. Health Soc. Care Community 2005, 13, 345–353. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  123. Pearce, R. (Im) Possible Patients?: Negotiating Discourses of Trans Health in the UK; University of Warwick: Warwick, UK, 2016. [Google Scholar]
  124. McDermott, E.; Hughes, E.; Rawlings, V. The social determinants of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth suicidality in England: A mixed methods study. J. Public Health 2017, 40, e244–e251. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
Figure 1. Search results.
Figure 1. Search results.
Ijerph 18 00826 g001
Table 1. Keywords used in Web of Science Searches.
Table 1. Keywords used in Web of Science Searches.
Sexuality and Gender KeywordsHealth KeywordsLocation Keywords
Bisexual *Mental disorderUnited Kingdom
GayMental * illUK
LesbianMental * distressGreat Britain
Transgend *WellbeingEngland
Same-sexPsycholog *NHS
Same-genderSuicid *
Sexual minorit *Cancer
Non-binaryTumour
QueerTumor
TranssexualRadiotherapy
Asexual *Chemotherapy
DemisexualPalliative
Homosexual *End of Life
Pansexual *Ag * care
Two SpiritSocial care
Death
Dying
Table 2. PubMed search strategy.
Table 2. PubMed search strategy.
Sexuality and Gender ‘mesh’ TermsHealth ‘mesh’ Terms (Unless Specified as Keyword)Location Keywords
Sexual and Gender minoritiesHospice and palliative care nursingUnited Kingdom
BisexualityPalliative careUK
HomosexualityPalliative medicineGreat Britain
Transgender personsTerminal careEngland
DeathNHS
Bereavement
Grief
Home care services, hospital-based
Neoplasms
Cancer care facilities
Radiotherapy
Mental disorders
Psychology
Mental health
Suicid * (keyword in title)
Table 3. Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Table 3. Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Inclusion CriteriaExclusion Criteria
PopulationLGBT+ PeopleNon-LGBT+ People
InterventionThose receiving treatment from the NHS or other publicly funded providers for any of the following:
Cancer
Palliative care
Mental Health
Those who are receiving social support due to end of life, mental health, or cancer.
Public health approaches to:
Cancer
Palliative care
Mental Health
Any other medical condition than those listed
Papers focusing on secondary conditions arising from the primary point of interest
Comparison—not relevant for this study
OutcomeAll qualitative and quantitative data related to LGBT+ experiences and outcomes in cancer/mental health/palliative health and social careStudies and findings related to other areas of health care
Theoretical and conceptual pieces relating to this area
Study DetailsBased on findings related to publicly funded health/social care providers
All study designs (qualitative, quantitative, randomized control trials (RCTs), mixed method)
Relevant grey literature and policy documents
Published after 2005
English or Welsh language reporting
Published in languages other than English or Welsh
Published before 2005
Opinion papers, dissertations, theses, newspaper articles, or editorials
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

McDermott, E.; Nelson, R.; Weeks, H. The Politics of LGBT+ Health Inequality: Conclusions from a UK Scoping Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 826. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020826

AMA Style

McDermott E, Nelson R, Weeks H. The Politics of LGBT+ Health Inequality: Conclusions from a UK Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(2):826. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020826

Chicago/Turabian Style

McDermott, Elizabeth, Rosie Nelson, and Harri Weeks. 2021. "The Politics of LGBT+ Health Inequality: Conclusions from a UK Scoping Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 2: 826. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020826

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop