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Development and evaluation of an LGBT+ education programme for palliative care interdisciplinary teams

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Development and evaluation of an LGBT+ education programme for palliative care interdisciplinary teams. / Chidiac, Claude; Grayson, Kate; Almack, Kathryn.
In: Palliative Care and Social Practice, Vol. 2021, 31.12.2021.

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Chidiac C, Grayson K, Almack K. Development and evaluation of an LGBT+ education programme for palliative care interdisciplinary teams. Palliative Care and Social Practice. 2021 Dec 31;2021. Epub 2021 Oct 22. doi: 10.1177/26323524211051388

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Chidiac, Claude ; Grayson, Kate ; Almack, Kathryn. / Development and evaluation of an LGBT+ education programme for palliative care interdisciplinary teams. In: Palliative Care and Social Practice. 2021 ; Vol. 2021.

Bibtex

@article{f5c1bd892a9e4e79bcfbd63196fa1aa3,
title = "Development and evaluation of an LGBT+ education programme for palliative care interdisciplinary teams",
abstract = "Background:Despite national policy recommendations to enhance healthcare access for LGBT+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and those who do not identify as cisgender heterosexual) people, education on LGBT+ issues and needs is still lacking in health and social care curricula. Most of the available resources are focused on primary care, mental health, and sexual health, with little consideration to broader LGBT+ health issues and needs. The limited available educational programmes pertaining to LGBT+ individuals outside the context of sexual or mental health have mainly focused on cancer care or older adults.Aim:To support palliative care interdisciplinary teams to provide LGBT+ affirmative care for people receiving and needing palliative and end-of-life care.Methods:A 1½-h workshop was developed and evaluated using Kotter{\textquoteright}s eight-step process for leading change. Across four hospices, 145 health and social professionals participated in the training. A quasi-experimental non-equivalent groups pre–post-test design was used to measure self-reported levels of knowledge, confidence, and comfort with issues, and needs and terminology related to LGBT+ and palliative care.Results:There was a significant increase in the reported levels of knowledge, confidence, and comfort with issues, needs, and terminology related to LGBT+ and palliative care after attending the training. Most participants reported that they would be interested in further training, that the training is useful for their practice, and that they would recommend it to colleagues.Conclusion:The project illustrates the importance of such programmes and recommends that such educational work is situated alongside wider cultural change to embed LGBT+-inclusive approaches within palliative and end-of-life care services.",
author = "Claude Chidiac and Kate Grayson and Kathryn Almack",
year = "2021",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1177/26323524211051388",
language = "English",
volume = "2021",
journal = "Palliative Care and Social Practice",
issn = "2632-3524",
publisher = "Sage",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Development and evaluation of an LGBT+ education programme for palliative care interdisciplinary teams

AU - Chidiac, Claude

AU - Grayson, Kate

AU - Almack, Kathryn

PY - 2021/12/31

Y1 - 2021/12/31

N2 - Background:Despite national policy recommendations to enhance healthcare access for LGBT+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and those who do not identify as cisgender heterosexual) people, education on LGBT+ issues and needs is still lacking in health and social care curricula. Most of the available resources are focused on primary care, mental health, and sexual health, with little consideration to broader LGBT+ health issues and needs. The limited available educational programmes pertaining to LGBT+ individuals outside the context of sexual or mental health have mainly focused on cancer care or older adults.Aim:To support palliative care interdisciplinary teams to provide LGBT+ affirmative care for people receiving and needing palliative and end-of-life care.Methods:A 1½-h workshop was developed and evaluated using Kotter’s eight-step process for leading change. Across four hospices, 145 health and social professionals participated in the training. A quasi-experimental non-equivalent groups pre–post-test design was used to measure self-reported levels of knowledge, confidence, and comfort with issues, and needs and terminology related to LGBT+ and palliative care.Results:There was a significant increase in the reported levels of knowledge, confidence, and comfort with issues, needs, and terminology related to LGBT+ and palliative care after attending the training. Most participants reported that they would be interested in further training, that the training is useful for their practice, and that they would recommend it to colleagues.Conclusion:The project illustrates the importance of such programmes and recommends that such educational work is situated alongside wider cultural change to embed LGBT+-inclusive approaches within palliative and end-of-life care services.

AB - Background:Despite national policy recommendations to enhance healthcare access for LGBT+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and those who do not identify as cisgender heterosexual) people, education on LGBT+ issues and needs is still lacking in health and social care curricula. Most of the available resources are focused on primary care, mental health, and sexual health, with little consideration to broader LGBT+ health issues and needs. The limited available educational programmes pertaining to LGBT+ individuals outside the context of sexual or mental health have mainly focused on cancer care or older adults.Aim:To support palliative care interdisciplinary teams to provide LGBT+ affirmative care for people receiving and needing palliative and end-of-life care.Methods:A 1½-h workshop was developed and evaluated using Kotter’s eight-step process for leading change. Across four hospices, 145 health and social professionals participated in the training. A quasi-experimental non-equivalent groups pre–post-test design was used to measure self-reported levels of knowledge, confidence, and comfort with issues, and needs and terminology related to LGBT+ and palliative care.Results:There was a significant increase in the reported levels of knowledge, confidence, and comfort with issues, needs, and terminology related to LGBT+ and palliative care after attending the training. Most participants reported that they would be interested in further training, that the training is useful for their practice, and that they would recommend it to colleagues.Conclusion:The project illustrates the importance of such programmes and recommends that such educational work is situated alongside wider cultural change to embed LGBT+-inclusive approaches within palliative and end-of-life care services.

U2 - 10.1177/26323524211051388

DO - 10.1177/26323524211051388

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2021

JO - Palliative Care and Social Practice

JF - Palliative Care and Social Practice

SN - 2632-3524

ER -