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Knowledge, Beliefs, and Communication Behavior of Oncology Health-care Providers (HCPs) regarding Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Patient Health care. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the relationship between oncology healthcare providers' (HCPs) knowledge of LGBT health care and their communication behaviors with LGBT patients, focusing on how beliefs about these patients affect this interaction.
  • A survey of 1253 HCPs revealed that only 5% had a full understanding of LGBT health care, indicating a significant knowledge gap that may hinder effective communication.
  • The findings highlight that having positive beliefs about LGBT care can enhance communication behaviors, signaling the need for better education and sensitivity training among oncology HCPs to improve care for LGBT patients.

Article Abstract

Delivery of culturally competent care toward lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) patients depends on how health-care providers (HCPs) communicate with them; however, research about knowledge, attitude, and behavior of HCPs toward LGBT patients is scant. The objectives of our study were to describe oncology HCPs' knowledge and examine if beliefs about LGB and transgender patients mediate the effects of LGBT health-care knowledge on open communication behaviors with LGB and transgender patients, respectively. A total of 1253 HCPs (187 physicians, 153 advance practice professionals (APPs), 828 nurses, and 41 others) at a Comprehensive Cancer Center completed an online survey that included the following measures: LGBT health-care knowledge, beliefs, communication behaviors, willingness to treat LGBT patients, encouraging LGBT disclosure, and perceived importance of LGBT sensitivity training. Only 50 participants (5%) correctly answered all 7 knowledge items, and about half the respondents answered 3 (out of 7) items correctly. Favorable beliefs about LGBT health care mediated the effect of higher LGBT health-care knowledge on open communication behaviors with transgender patients, controlling for effects of type of profession, religious orientation, gender identity, sexual orientation, and having LGBT friends/family. The results of this study demonstrated an overall lack of medical knowledge and the need for more education about LGBT health care among oncology HCPs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5961501PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10810730.2018.1443527DOI Listing

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