Transgender and gender nonconforming (TGNC) individuals face a number of health disparities, many of which can be tied to a lack of access to or use of primary care. Stigma and misunderstanding make simple doctor's visits into ordeals only worth enduring for the most serious of problems. This project addresses those issues by enlisting TGNC people as experts on their own experience. TGNC individuals will form a year-long cohort that will form the basis for this research. Collectively, they will define the scope of challenges faced when seeking healthcare, what medical advocacy training they desire, and how to address groups of healthcare providers and staff. Healthcare providers, including MDs, nurses, and Physicians Assistants (PAs), will attend two facilitated sessions with the TGNC cohort to meet as peers with knowledge exchanged in both directions. Similar meetings will occur with clinic staff, as TGNC individuals have expressed how stigma begins from the moment they call a medical office. Our hypothesis is that when TGNC individuals are given the tools to navigate the healthcare system and the ability to speak with medical professionals as peers, rather than patients, through a participatory action research design they will be better able to access appropriate care through increased confidence and mutual support. The complementary hypothesis for medical providers is that direct interaction with a variety of TGNC individuals who articulate their needs will decrease stigma and increase comfort when treating TGNC people as patients. As a partnership between academic, medical, and community institutions, this project has the potential to directly impact the lives of TGNC individuals who participate and indirectly impact others served by the LGBT Center. This proposal works on three levels: 1) at the academic level - an assessment of participatory action research as an intervention to decrease health disparities, 2) at the individual level - the potential for individuals to increase personal knowledge and skills, and 3) at the institutional level - as actors within the TGNC community develop relationships with individual healthcare providers, medical clinics and activist groups and community partners and educational institutions are concurrently forming networks that will have positive, although probably more diffuse, impact on TGNC individuals as these institutions come together to support TGNC health care.
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Change in Knowledge of TGNC Individuals of Total Number of Locations to Receive Medical Care in Cleveland Known
Timeframe: Baseline and 11 months
Change From Baseline in Knowledge of TGNC Cohort About Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Medical Issues
Timeframe: Baseline and 11 months
Change From Baseline in Knowledge of Healthcare Participants About Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Medical Issues
Timeframe: Baseline and 24 hours
Change From Baseline in Attitude of TGNC Individuals Towards Navigating Their Interactions With Healthcare Providers.
Timeframe: Baseline and 11 months
Change in Attitude of Medical Providers Towards Transgender Issues.
Timeframe: Baseline and 24 hours.
Qualitative Shift in Confidence of TGNC Individuals in Seeking Medical Care After the Intervention.
Timeframe: Interview at 11 months.
Qualitative Shift in Confidence of Medical Provider in Providing Culturally Competent Medical Care to TGNC Individuals After the Intervention.
Timeframe: Interview within one day following the facilitated dialogue