Meeting Health Needs of Transgender and ...
Document type :
Autre communication scientifique (congrès sans actes - poster - séminaire...)
Title :
Meeting Health Needs of Transgender and Gender Diverse People in Primary Care based on Free and Informed Consent
Author(s) :
Baleige, Anna [Auteur]
Éducation Éthique Santé EA 7505 [EES]
Guernut, Mathilde [Auteur]
Savoirs, Textes, Langage (STL) - UMR 8163 [STL]
Denis, Frédéric [Auteur]
Éducation Éthique Santé EA 7505 [EES]
Nantes Université - UFR Odontologie [Nantes Univ – UFR Odonto]
Éducation Éthique Santé EA 7505 [EES]
Guernut, Mathilde [Auteur]
Savoirs, Textes, Langage (STL) - UMR 8163 [STL]
Denis, Frédéric [Auteur]
Éducation Éthique Santé EA 7505 [EES]
Nantes Université - UFR Odontologie [Nantes Univ – UFR Odonto]
Conference title :
27th WONCA Europe Conference 2022
Conference organizers(s) :
WONCA
City :
London
Country :
Royaume-Uni
Start date of the conference :
2022-06-28
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences du Vivant [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie
English abstract : [en]
BACKGROUND. Transgender and gender diverse (TGD) individuals represent a heterogeneous and growing population. Unmet needs, epistemic changes and political activism are leading to a transformation of care delivery. The ...
Show more >BACKGROUND. Transgender and gender diverse (TGD) individuals represent a heterogeneous and growing population. Unmet needs, epistemic changes and political activism are leading to a transformation of care delivery. The free and informed consent model based on primary care is widely promoted. General practitioners remain insufficiently trained and informed about TGD issues. To present a review of TGD health needs. To build common knowledge between consumers and professionals to face epistemic inconsistencies in science. To illustrate practical organizational changes.METHODS. This work lies at the con?uence of academic, experiential and ?eld knowledge. It is based on a review of recent scientific publications, a thematic synthesis of activist literature and a ?eld experiment in community care.OUTCOMES. Public health-based approaches share an epistemic proximity to arguments from the activist world, unlike specialized approaches, particularly in mental health, which lack ecological validity. Concrete examples of successful implementation also tend to reinforce this practical validity.DISCUSSION. Conceptualizing TGD people as a population at risk for systemic risks appears a better solution than hyperspecialized approaches based on diagnostic and prognostic assessment. Thus, transforming health care services towards primary care does not mean shifting tasks, but rather putting forward new practices and a new medical and paramedical stance in the service of self-determination and human rights.Show less >
Show more >BACKGROUND. Transgender and gender diverse (TGD) individuals represent a heterogeneous and growing population. Unmet needs, epistemic changes and political activism are leading to a transformation of care delivery. The free and informed consent model based on primary care is widely promoted. General practitioners remain insufficiently trained and informed about TGD issues. To present a review of TGD health needs. To build common knowledge between consumers and professionals to face epistemic inconsistencies in science. To illustrate practical organizational changes.METHODS. This work lies at the con?uence of academic, experiential and ?eld knowledge. It is based on a review of recent scientific publications, a thematic synthesis of activist literature and a ?eld experiment in community care.OUTCOMES. Public health-based approaches share an epistemic proximity to arguments from the activist world, unlike specialized approaches, particularly in mental health, which lack ecological validity. Concrete examples of successful implementation also tend to reinforce this practical validity.DISCUSSION. Conceptualizing TGD people as a population at risk for systemic risks appears a better solution than hyperspecialized approaches based on diagnostic and prognostic assessment. Thus, transforming health care services towards primary care does not mean shifting tasks, but rather putting forward new practices and a new medical and paramedical stance in the service of self-determination and human rights.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Peer reviewed article :
Oui
Audience :
Internationale
Popular science :
Non
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