PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Preparing clinicians for the international anti-LGBTQI+ crisis

Medical community should build systems that are responsive to this population

2023-08-28
(Press-News.org) Contact: Maria Ober, 617-224-8963, mpober@bu.edu

Preparing Clinicians for the International Anti-LGBTQI+ Crisis

Medical community should build systems that are responsive to this population

(Boston)—Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex and additional sexual and gender minority (LGBTQI+) people in every region of the world face marginalization and oppression. At least 67 countries ban sexual conduct between consenting adults of the same sex. According to a report from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees on LGBTQI+ people in forced displacement and statelessness, regressive laws that foster hostile environments for LGBTQI+ persons will most likely result in increasing numbers of such people fleeing their home countries and seeking sanctuary elsewhere.

While safety can sometimes be sought in neighboring countries, LGBTQI+ refugees and asylum-seekers often choose to migrate to countries with laws that explicitly protect their rights. “The journey to destinations perceived as safe can be perilous for LGBTQI+ migrants and asylum-seekers and reception in those countries can also result in further trauma and human rights violations. Consequently, clinicians need to be prepared to assess these unique stressors and how they affect the health of their refugee and asylum-seeking patient population,” say Carl G. Streed, Jr., MD, MPH, FACP, FAHA and Sarah Kimball, MD, both assistant professors of medicine at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, in a perspective published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Streed and Kimball believe clinicians need to be prepared to provide support for LGBTQI+ refugees and asylum-seekers facing the unique issues related to legal, social, and cultural persecution based on their sexual orientation and gender identity. Clinicians need to know how to probe and document experiences of childhood trauma; verbal, emotional, physical and sexual abuse; assault; discrimination; harassment; wrongful imprisonment and rape, by employing a trauma- and culturally informed approach.

“Through documentation of these issues at the individual and clinic-level, the picture of what LGBTQI+ individuals and communities face emerges,” say Streed and Kimball, who are the research lead for the GenderCare Center and Director of the Immigrant & Refugee Health Center at Boston Medical Center, respectively.

In the context of rising anti-LGBTQI+ interpersonal violence and legislative hostility, the healthcare setting can serve as a safe and reparative space for refugees and asylum-seekers according to Streed and Kimball. “Beyond individual clinician training and patient care, clinics that serve LGBTQI+ refugees and asylum-seekers should develop medico-legal partnerships to ensure that immigration legal needs are addressed. Such partnerships have shown success in numerous critical outcomes, such as reducing patient stress and visits to the emergency room, while also improving housing outcomes and economic prospects in the communities they serve,” they add.

For clinicians seeking more training on how to complete assessments and engage in this work, Streed and Kimball point out that there are opportunities to connect within the Society of Refugee Healthcare Providers (https://refugeesociety.org/) as well as Rainbow Railroad (https://www.rainbowrailroad.org/)--organizations that provide advocacy, education and networking opportunities within refugee and asylee health.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

PSA levels after treatment may not be reliable predictor of survival for patients with prostate cancer

2023-08-28
FINDINGS A UCLA-led study found treatments that reduce the risk of being diagnosed with a cancer recurrence based on rising prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels after radiotherapy, commonly referred to as biochemical recurrence, do not necessarily improve a patient’s long-term overall survival. The team of investigators found that while biochemical recurrence was associated with a higher risk of death, it still did not meet the criteria to be a reliable surrogate endpoint for overall survival. As defined by the FDA, a clinical outcome directly measures whether people in a trial feel or function better, or live ...

Two networks, two realities, one big problem

Two networks, two realities, one big problem
2023-08-28
National news coverage from the two largest broadcast outlets, CNN and Fox News, not only reflects growing political polarization in America, but in a recent publication, researchers at Virginia Tech have shown that partisan and inflammatory broadcast coverage has increased over time and can exacerbate growing divides in the new public square of social media. Collaborative insights Eugenia Rho is assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science with a background in political science and a passion for ...

The physics of fat droplets reveal DNA danger

2023-08-28
Fat is a normal and necessary part of the body. Fat cells store and release energy, as well as play significant roles in hormonal regulation and immunity. In recent decades, a concerning rise in metabolic illnesses – such as cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure and diabetes – has focused scientific attention on the biology and chemistry of fat, resulting in a wealth of information about how fat cells work. But fat cells and their metabolic activities are only part of the story. Fat-filled lipid droplets, tiny spheres ...

SfN’s TPDA Program earns ASAE 2023 Power of Associations Gold Award

2023-08-28
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Society for Neuroscience (SfN) earned a Power of Associations Gold Award from the American Society of Association Executives (ASAE) for its successful Trainee Professional Development Award (TPDA) program. ASAE’s Power of Association awards celebrate and promote the invaluable contributions that associations make within the U.S. and globally through catalytic initiatives focused on professional advancement, global development, diversity and inclusion practices, advocacy, and community support and engagement.  In operation since 2015, the TPDA program recognizes undergraduate and graduate ...

New approach to fighting malaria

New approach to fighting malaria
2023-08-28
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- The mosquito-borne infectious disease malaria resulted in about 241 million clinical episodes and 627,000 deaths in 2020. In young children and pregnant women living in areas where the disease is endemic, a major cause of death is Plasmodium falciparum, the most virulent, prevalent, and deadly human malaria parasite. Scientists are keen to understand the mechanisms that regulate gene expression through the different stages of P. falciparum’s lifecycle because such knowledge can ...

UMass Amherst computer scientists use AI to accelerate computing speed by thousands of times

UMass Amherst computer scientists use AI to accelerate computing speed by thousands of times
2023-08-28
AMHERST, Mass. – A team of computer scientists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, led by Emery Berger, recently unveiled a prize-winning Python profiler called Scalene. Programs written with Python are notoriously slow—up to 60,000 times slower than code written in other programming languages—and Scalene works to efficiently identify exactly where Python is lagging, allowing programmers to troubleshoot and streamline their code for higher performance. There are many different programming ...

Rare disease shares mechanism with cystic fibrosis

2023-08-28
Aug. 28, 2023 Images ANN ARBOR—University of Michigan researchers have discovered that the same cellular mechanism involved in a form of cystic fibrosis is also implicated in a form of a rare disease called cystinosis. The mechanism cleans up mutated proteins. In cystinosis, a genetic disease, this allows cystine crystals to build up in the cell. This disrupts the cell, and eventually, tissues and ultimately organs, particularly the kidneys and the eyes. The problem begins when the lysosome, an organelle within the cell, is unable to ...

Once rhabdomyosarcoma, now muscle

Once rhabdomyosarcoma, now muscle
2023-08-28
“Every successful medicine has its origin story. And research like this is the soil from which new drugs are born,” says Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Professor Christopher Vakoc. For six years, Vakoc’s lab has been on a mission to transform sarcoma cells into regularly functioning tissue cells. Sarcomas are cancers that form in connective tissues like muscle. Treatment often involves chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation—procedures that are especially tough on kids. If doctors could transform cancer cells into healthy cells, it would offer patients a whole new treatment option—one that could spare them and their families a great deal of ...

Past abrupt changes in North Atlantic Overturning have impacted the climate system across the globe

2023-08-28
The Dansgaard-Oeschger events are rapid Northern-Hemisphere temperature jumps of up to 15°C in Greenland that repeatedly occurred within a few decades during the last ice age. “These events are the archetype of abrupt climate changes and further increasing our understanding of them is crucial for more reliable assessments of the risk and possible impacts of future large-scale climate tipping events”, says Niklas Boers from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) and the Technical University of Munich, one of the authors of the study to be published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences PNAS. In the ...

Historic red tide event of 2020 fueled by plankton super swimmers

Historic red tide event of 2020 fueled by plankton super swimmers
2023-08-28
A major red tide event occurred in waters off Southern California in the spring of 2020, resulting in dazzling displays of bioluminescence along the coast. The spectacle was caused by exceedingly high densities of Lingulodinium polyedra (L. polyedra), a plankton species renowned for its ability to emit a neon blue glow. While the red tide captured the public’s attention and made global headlines, the event was also a harmful algal bloom. Toxins were detected at the height of the bloom that had the potential to harm marine life, and dissolved oxygen levels dropped to near-zero as the extreme biomass of the red tide decomposed. This lack of oxygen led to fish die-offs ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Silvia Cavagnero to receive 2025 Emily M. Gray Award

European Society of Endocrinology expands journal portfolio with the launch of Environmental Endocrinology and Obesity and Endocrinology

Atmospheric blocking slows ocean-driven melting of Greenland’s largest glacier tongue

Improved cement to protect the living treasures of our coastlines

Absolute and functional iron deficiency in the US

Rural-urban disparities in hospital services and outcomes for children with medical complexity

Fewer than half of US jails provide life-saving medications for opioid use disorder

Voice-activated cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia

New cancer diagnoses did not rebound as expected following pandemic

Abrupt intensification of northern wildfires due to future permafrost thawing

Review shows bird flu control strategies ‘not working’

How a butterfly invasion minimizes genetic diversity

Another Franklin expedition crew member has been identified

SrGa12O19: The first low-εr Ga-based microwave dielectric ceramic with anomalous positive τf

HiTIP-seq profiles epigenomic reprogramming of patient-derived diffuse midline glioma stem cells to epigenetic therapy

SNU researchers develop ‘Selective Metal Films Deposition Technique’ enabling fabrication of soft electronics with various form factors

Extinct volcanoes a ‘rich’ source of rare earth elements

PSU English professor to lift curtain on one of world’s most powerful supercomputers

UTSA Center for Public Opinion Research releases survey of Bexar County voter opinions ahead of November 5 election

Emily Carter wins prestigious Marsha I. Lester Award from American Chemical Society

New report from the University of Phoenix Career Institute® and the Center on Rural Innovation reveals keys to retaining rural America’s future generation

Greenhouse gas emissions from silage fed to livestock

The impact of AI on specific jobs

Diagnosing respiratory infections with breath

Well-being as student success

Spinning artificial spider silk into next-generation medical materials

Low-temperature conversion of ammonia to hydrogen via electric field-aided surface protonics

Challenges in availing reproductive health services experienced by migrant Nepalese men and women in Japan

A risky business: Why do some Parkinson’s disease treatments affect decision making?

New species of flatworm invading the United States

[Press-News.org] Preparing clinicians for the international anti-LGBTQI+ crisis
Medical community should build systems that are responsive to this population