Culturally Competent Gender, Sex, and Sexual Orientation Information Practices and Electronic Health Records: Rapid Review

BackgroundOutdated gender, sex, and sexual orientation (GSSO) information practices in health care contribute to health inequities for sexual and gender minorities (SGMs). Governments, statistics agencies, and health care organizations are developing and implementing moderniz...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Davison, Kelly, Queen, Roz, Lau, Francis, Antonio, Marcy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2021-02-01
Series:JMIR Medical Informatics
Online Access:http://medinform.jmir.org/2021/2/e25467/
id doaj-6b5b458af65b4da898100dee3d9de88f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6b5b458af65b4da898100dee3d9de88f2021-05-03T02:53:53ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Medical Informatics2291-96942021-02-0192e2546710.2196/25467Culturally Competent Gender, Sex, and Sexual Orientation Information Practices and Electronic Health Records: Rapid ReviewDavison, KellyQueen, RozLau, FrancisAntonio, Marcy BackgroundOutdated gender, sex, and sexual orientation (GSSO) information practices in health care contribute to health inequities for sexual and gender minorities (SGMs). Governments, statistics agencies, and health care organizations are developing and implementing modernized practices that support health equity for SGMs. Extending our work, we conducted a rapid review of grey literature to explore information practices that support quality health care for SGMs. ObjectiveThe aim of this rapid review of grey literature was to elucidate modern GSSO information practices from leading agencies for adaptation, adoption, and application by health care providers and organizations seeking to modernize outdated GSSO information practices that contribute to health inequities among SGMs. MethodsWe searched MEDLINE and Google from 2015 to 2020 with terms related to gender, sex, sexual orientation, and electronic health/medical records for English-language grey literature resources including government and nongovernment organization publications, whitepapers, data standards, toolkits, health care organization and health quality practice and policy guides, conference proceedings, unpublished academic work, and statistical papers. Peer-reviewed journal articles were excluded, as were resources irrelevant to information practices. We also screened the reference sections of included articles for additional resources, and canvassed a working group of international topic experts for additional relevant resources. Duplicates were eliminated. ATLAS.ti was used to support analysis. Themes and codes were developed through an iterative process of writing and discussion with the research team. ResultsTwenty-six grey literature resources met the inclusion criteria. The overarching themes that emerged from the literature were the interrelated behaviors, attitudes, and policies that constitute SGM cultural competence as follows: shared language with unambiguous definitions of GSSO concepts; welcoming and inclusive care environments and affirming practices to reduce barriers to access; health care policy that supports competent health care; and adoption of modernized GSSO information practices and electronic health record design requirements that address invisibility in health data. ConclusionsHealth equity for SGMs requires systemic change. Binary representation of sex and gender in electronic health records (EHRs) obfuscates natural and cultural diversity and, in the context of health care, places SGM patients at risk of clinical harm because it leads to clinical assumptions. Agencies and agents in health care need to be equipped with the knowledge and tools needed to cultivate modern attitudes, policies, and practices that enable health equity for SGMs. Adopting small but important changes in the language and terminology used in technical and social health care systems is essential for institutionalizing SGM competency. Modern GSSO information practices depend on and reinforce SGM competency in health care.http://medinform.jmir.org/2021/2/e25467/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Davison, Kelly
Queen, Roz
Lau, Francis
Antonio, Marcy
spellingShingle Davison, Kelly
Queen, Roz
Lau, Francis
Antonio, Marcy
Culturally Competent Gender, Sex, and Sexual Orientation Information Practices and Electronic Health Records: Rapid Review
JMIR Medical Informatics
author_facet Davison, Kelly
Queen, Roz
Lau, Francis
Antonio, Marcy
author_sort Davison, Kelly
title Culturally Competent Gender, Sex, and Sexual Orientation Information Practices and Electronic Health Records: Rapid Review
title_short Culturally Competent Gender, Sex, and Sexual Orientation Information Practices and Electronic Health Records: Rapid Review
title_full Culturally Competent Gender, Sex, and Sexual Orientation Information Practices and Electronic Health Records: Rapid Review
title_fullStr Culturally Competent Gender, Sex, and Sexual Orientation Information Practices and Electronic Health Records: Rapid Review
title_full_unstemmed Culturally Competent Gender, Sex, and Sexual Orientation Information Practices and Electronic Health Records: Rapid Review
title_sort culturally competent gender, sex, and sexual orientation information practices and electronic health records: rapid review
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Medical Informatics
issn 2291-9694
publishDate 2021-02-01
description BackgroundOutdated gender, sex, and sexual orientation (GSSO) information practices in health care contribute to health inequities for sexual and gender minorities (SGMs). Governments, statistics agencies, and health care organizations are developing and implementing modernized practices that support health equity for SGMs. Extending our work, we conducted a rapid review of grey literature to explore information practices that support quality health care for SGMs. ObjectiveThe aim of this rapid review of grey literature was to elucidate modern GSSO information practices from leading agencies for adaptation, adoption, and application by health care providers and organizations seeking to modernize outdated GSSO information practices that contribute to health inequities among SGMs. MethodsWe searched MEDLINE and Google from 2015 to 2020 with terms related to gender, sex, sexual orientation, and electronic health/medical records for English-language grey literature resources including government and nongovernment organization publications, whitepapers, data standards, toolkits, health care organization and health quality practice and policy guides, conference proceedings, unpublished academic work, and statistical papers. Peer-reviewed journal articles were excluded, as were resources irrelevant to information practices. We also screened the reference sections of included articles for additional resources, and canvassed a working group of international topic experts for additional relevant resources. Duplicates were eliminated. ATLAS.ti was used to support analysis. Themes and codes were developed through an iterative process of writing and discussion with the research team. ResultsTwenty-six grey literature resources met the inclusion criteria. The overarching themes that emerged from the literature were the interrelated behaviors, attitudes, and policies that constitute SGM cultural competence as follows: shared language with unambiguous definitions of GSSO concepts; welcoming and inclusive care environments and affirming practices to reduce barriers to access; health care policy that supports competent health care; and adoption of modernized GSSO information practices and electronic health record design requirements that address invisibility in health data. ConclusionsHealth equity for SGMs requires systemic change. Binary representation of sex and gender in electronic health records (EHRs) obfuscates natural and cultural diversity and, in the context of health care, places SGM patients at risk of clinical harm because it leads to clinical assumptions. Agencies and agents in health care need to be equipped with the knowledge and tools needed to cultivate modern attitudes, policies, and practices that enable health equity for SGMs. Adopting small but important changes in the language and terminology used in technical and social health care systems is essential for institutionalizing SGM competency. Modern GSSO information practices depend on and reinforce SGM competency in health care.
url http://medinform.jmir.org/2021/2/e25467/
work_keys_str_mv AT davisonkelly culturallycompetentgendersexandsexualorientationinformationpracticesandelectronichealthrecordsrapidreview
AT queenroz culturallycompetentgendersexandsexualorientationinformationpracticesandelectronichealthrecordsrapidreview
AT laufrancis culturallycompetentgendersexandsexualorientationinformationpracticesandelectronichealthrecordsrapidreview
AT antoniomarcy culturallycompetentgendersexandsexualorientationinformationpracticesandelectronichealthrecordsrapidreview
_version_ 1721484847607709696