Rainbow Health Conference in Toronto – February 5-7, 2014

This just in from  Anna Travers, Director of Rainbow Health Ontario!  Registration is open until January 22!
We are still taking registrations and the hotel is offering guaranteed rates until January 22nd.  Toronto is a wonderfully gay friendly city and Canada and especially Ontario is doing Rainbow_Health_Ontario_-_Registrationamazing work in the area of LGBTQ health.
Be sure to register for the only conference in Canada focused on LGBT health and wellness – the RHO 2014 Conference taking place Feb 5th to 7th at the Toronto Hilton.  This dynamic forum will showcase the latest research, innovative programs, and unique networking opportunities. Preferential hotel rates until Jan 22nd.

Over 150 speakers will participate in delivering 75 presentations. Topics cover a wide spectrum from youth to seniors, gender identity, newcomers, mental health and addictions, and HIV. Topics such as “Fattening the Truth: Examining Fat-phobia in LGBTQ Health and Social Service Provision”, and “Queering Sex Ed: Reimagining Sex Education in LGBTQ Youth Communities” are only available together at this conference. 

Registrants will have access to complimentary yoga, massage and acupuncture, and everyone is welcome to join us for a fabulous evening Cabaret. Be a part of creating change together.

Anna Travers, MSW
Director, Rainbow Health Ontario
Sherbourne Health Centre
333 Sherbourne Street
Toronto, Ontario
M5A 2S5
Tel:  416-324-4168
Registration is now open for the RHO 2014 Conference
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Sexual Minorities and the Crisis of Legitimation in Medicine

More than thirty years on from the first appearance in print of what we in North America now name HIV/AIDS (or SIDA in other parts of the globe), a recent report of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies (IOM) noted:

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) individuals experience unique health disparities. . . .  Although a modest body of knowledge on LGBT health has been developed, these populations, stigmatized as sexual and gender minorities, have been the subject of relatively little health research. As a result, a number of questions arise: What is currently known about the health status of LGBT populations? Where do gaps in the research exist? What are the priorities for a research agenda to address these gaps? (2011: S-1)

If queer people might have cause today to distrust the healthcare establishment, we need to understand our history with health professionals. For example, how much more fragile doctor is outwas the relationship between us and health clinicians and researchers in the first decade and a half of the AIDS epidemic. Dissent from consensus health care and health research then was clearly a question of survival in the face of political and medical intransigence.

In the post-World War II United States, a social, cultural, and political consensus developed around health science and the figures of the medical researcher and physician. The development of new vaccines (the Salk and Sabin vaccines against polio in particular), the invention of an array of antibiotics, and the creation of contraceptive devices and pharmaceuticals, all served to endow enormous symbolic and cultural capital in the medical sciences and their practitioners. Beginning in the 1950s, cancer researchers began to develop treatments beyond surgery, and by 1971 U.S. President Richard M. Nixon declared a war on cancer that he announced would achieve a decisive victory by America’s bicentennial year, 1976. Culturally, the family physician occupied a place of special respect and authority in middle-class life, represented in sentimentalized images by Norman Rockwell, and the hospital physician like Dr. Kildare or Dr. Casey was depicted in popular culture as a heroic figure. American parents of the Baby Boom generation were guided in their child rearing practices by Dr. Benjamin Spock’s Baby and Child Care. Important strides were made in the treatment of cardio-vascular disease, and in 1967 the heart, that most metaphorical organ, was transplanted from one human to another for the first time.

However, several factors contributed to an eventual legitimation crisis (see Habermas, 1975) surrounding medical science and practice. The dream of technology encountered the realities of the law-of-unintended-consequences, including pharmaceutical side effects, like those of thalidomide-caused birth defects. Cancer was not cured. The counterculture of the 1960s, with its back-to-nature ethos, was suspicious of technology, including medical technology and pharmaceutical technology. Women and minorities also discovered that they had not always been well served by a dominantly white, male medical establishment. The dissemination of Holocaust documentary including exposure of the Nazi’s pernicious medical “experiments” (which entered widespread popular awareness with the publication of William L. Shirer’s [1960] The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich and the televising of the trial of Nazi war criminal Adolph Eichmann in 1961, the subject of Hannah Arendt’s five-part series of articles in The New Yorker in February and March of 1963, and her [1964] Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil) was eventually followed by revelations in the 1970s of the Tuskegee syphilis experiment in the United States (see Jones, 1981). Women like those of the Boston Women’s Health Book Collective (1976) acknowledged that they had “experienced similar feelings of frustration and anger toward specific doctors and the medical maze in general, and initially . . . wanted to do something about those doctors who were condescending, paternalistic, judgmental and non-informative” (11), resulting in the writing and publication of Our Bodies, Ourselves, a do-it-yourself manual for women’s health promotion and disease prevention (see Davis, 2007). Even beyond an erosion of confidence in some vaguely imagined “medical establishment,” personified in large pharmaceutical corporations and the American Medical Association, the patient-physician relationship itself by the 1980s had absorbed this crisis of legitimation. The title of Terry Mizrahi’s 1986 longitudinal study of the professional socialization of interns and residents aptly expresses this crisis: Getting Rid of Patients.

In the 1970s, gay men were alert to disparities in their treatment
by the medical establishment. “Finding a physician” was one of the topics in 1977’s encyclopedic The Joy of Gay Sex, which asserted baldly that, “Not only are many straight doctors ignorant of gay medicine, some are actively hostile to gay patients” (Silverstein & White, 1977: 93) and grounded its discussion in the notion that gay men have unique health problems requiring a gay physician, or at least one who has worked with many gay patients. Its authors advised against having one doctor for ordinary health problems and another for sexual health problems, recommending: “It’s best to have one doctor to keep track of all your health needs, and if you cannot come out to him you need another doctor” (94). This guide likewise suggested that gay men needed to be equipped to direct and inform ignorant doctors, if, for example, they found themselves ill while traveling in a foreign country. The authors concluded: “For too long the health problems of gays have been neglected by irresponsible physicians” (94).

Only a decade before the appearance of AIDS, gay activists had successfully engaged in a struggle to have homosexuality removed from the lists of mental disorders of the American Psychiatric Association and of the American Psychological Association (Bayer, 1981), but right-wing figures countered with discredited social science, like the writings of Paul Cameron, in their opposition to gay social equality (Herman 1997: 76-80), characterization sexual minority lives as intrinsically unhealthy. As gay men, especially those in urban settings with large gay enclaves, became aware of the AIDS epidemic, debates among them about appropriate responses ranged from fervent calls for monogamy or even sexual abstinence to vilification of physicians as “erotophobic,” in time coalescing into a set of “safe sex” or “safer sex” guidelines (see Epstein, 1996; Long, 2005: 63-105). Eventually, the most visibly HIV/AIDS-affected communities, namely sexual-minority populations, resisted mainstream medical research conventions, taking charge of their own health and survival. Understanding this history helps us to place our current issues in context.

 References

Arendt, Hannah. 1964. Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. New York: Viking Press.

Bayer, Ronald. 1981. Homosexuality and American Psychiatry: The Politics of Diagnosis. New York: Basic Books.

Boston Women’s Health Book Collective. 1976. Our Bodies, Ourselves: A Book by and for Women. 2nd ed. New York: Simon and Schuster.

Davis, Kathy. 2007. The Making of Our Bodies, Ourselves: How Feminism Travels across Borders.  Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Epstein, Steven. 1996. Impure Science: AIDS, Activism, and the Politics of Knowledge. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Habermas, Jürgen. 1975. Legitimation Crisis. Thomas McCarthy, trans. Boston: Beacon Press.

Herman, Didi. 1997. The Antigay Agenda: Orthodox Vision and the Christian Right. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Institute of Medicine (IOM). 2011. The Health of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender People: Building a Foundation for Better Understanding. Washington, DC: National Academies Press. http://www.iom.edu/Reports/2011/The-Health-of-Lesbian-Gay-Bisexual-and-Transgender-People.aspx. Accessed 11 August 2011.

Jones, James H. 1981. Bad Blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment. New York: Free Press.

Long, Thomas L. 2005. AIDS and American Apocalypticism: The Cultural Semiotics of an Epidemic. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.

Mizrahi, Terry. 1986. Getting Rid of Patients: Contradictions in the Socialization of Physicians. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.

Shirer, William L. 1960. The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. New York: Simon and Schuster.

Silverstein, Charles, and Edmund White. 1977. The Joy of Gay Sex:  An intimate guide for gay men to the pleasures of a gay lifestyle. New York: Crown.

(Note: This material is excerpted and revised from an article in the Journal of Medical Humanities.)

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Graduate Certificate Program in LGBT Health!

LGBT_Health_Graduate_Certificate_Program___The_George_Washington_UniversityThe George Washington University Professional Psychology Program offers an LGBT Health Graduate Certificate program that trains current and future healthcare leaders to develop strategies that address health issues and reduce health disparities for the LGBT population. The program is currently accepting applications from qualified applicants for the program hat starts this coming summer.  They accept applications at any time. However, priority will be given to applications received prior to June 1, 2014.

This is a multidisciplinary “hybrid” program .. it involves two on-site meetings on the George Washington University campus, plus online activities throughout the program. The program runs from June through April.

Students are professionals and future professionals in the field—physicians, nurses, psychologists, school counselors, administrators, policy analysts, educators, or social workers—provide care, manage care, and shape health care policy for LGBT people. Students meet and study with leaders in applied physical and mental health care and health policy from the government, academia, non-profits, and the for-profit private sector.

They are planning to announce a scholarship program soon.  This is a fabulous opportunity! Here is a video that portrays what folks have already experienced in the program.   If you are interested, visit the web site to learn more!

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Gay and Lesbian Nurses: One of these is not like the other

At a recent LGBT healthcare conference, I was somewhat surprised to discover that many LGBT nurses in attendance (and other healthcare providers and allies) were not aware of the disparate ways that gay male and lesbian nurses have experienced the discipline of nursing.  In some fields, LGB and T people may be lumped together because of similar experiences of stigma and resultant discrimination, but nursing has a unique history that differs significantly from other health professions.  I’m going to simplify the discussion in this first blog to gay men and lesbians.  Bisexual and transgender individuals have unique experiences, but were largely invisible in the history that I outline here.  I hope someone else will take up the cause and write about those experiences in the near future.

History of Nursing

          Nursing was and still is a female-dominated profession.  From its origins, women made up the bulk of the profession, because the tasks/responsibilities of a nurse fit firmly within gendered stereotypes of nurturance, care-giving, and self-sacrifice.  In the early days of nursing, women were in servitude to men’s needs and nurses in servitude to doctors.  Prior to the 1970s, and the second wave of feminism, most women were in the workforce only temporarily, until marriage or childbirth, leaving the only women who could be career nurses the “spinsters” or nuns.  Both groups contained disproportionate numbers of lesbians.  They became the head nurses, the directors of nursing, the deans and directors of nursing schools, and the faculty in nursing schools.  They were deeply closeted, out of necessity.  Around the same time (1970s), when nursing was striving to be viewed as an autonomous discipline from medicine, with its own theories, interventions, and outcomes, there was even more pressure for lesbian nurses to remain closeted.  As in the feminist movement, the presence of lesbians was thought to “taint” the efforts to be a legitimate force in health care and in society.  Lesbian-baiting was a way to discount the entire movement or the entire discipline of nursing.  So while the LGBT movement was emphasizing coming out as a political strategy, lesbian nurses remained in the closet.  We were kept there by other closeted lesbian nurses who feared what would happen if some of us were out (they might be outed), we were kept there by faculty mentors who told us as students or junior faculty that we dare not do research on LGBT topics or we would not get grants, get published, get jobs, or get tenure, and sometimes we closeted ourselves to keep our jobs, or in a misguided belief that we were helping the profession.  Lesbian witch hunts in nursing schools continued well into the 1990s, confirming that we could be fired for being out.

          Gay men, on the other hand, have had a very different experience.  Because nursing was and continues to be considered a “feminine” profession, men who choose nursing are automatically considered to be gay.  Gay men in nursing fit stereotypes about “effeminancy” equating them with women (lesbian stereotypes proclaim as not fully women).  It’s not as difficult to come out as gay if everyone already assumes you are gay.  In fact, heterosexual men may find it challenging to be out as heterosexual without sounding homophobic.  Women in nursing leadership roles who do not have a feminist consciousness (way too many of the leaders) tend to glorify men who choose nursing, and we know that men often move up the ranks faster than women in nursing.  Nursing may be the only profession where men are actively recruited as a minority group.  I’m not implying that gay men have it easy in nursing, but I think it’s easier to come out as gay than come out as lesbian.  And once out, there is less hostility, suspicion, and imposed silence on gay men than there is on lesbian nurses.  In the many years of working as a hospital nurse, and then as a nursing educator, all the gay male nurses I knew were out and fairly well-accepted.  But most of the lesbian nurses I knew were not out.  When I took my faculty position in 1987, I would estimate that 30% of the faculty were closeted lesbians and another 20% were an “open secret.”  That is, they lived together, but never called themselves lesbians or talked about their relationships.

Where’s the Evidence?

          I am writing this from my own experiences and observations from 20 years as a lesbian nursing educator and 15 or so years in clinical nursing settings.  I have not seen this written up anywhere, so I may be biased by my own experience.  I’m not a historian of nursing history.  So please, weigh in on my comments and let’s build a theory about how sexual and gender identities, feminist orientations, and other factors differentially shape the experience of men and women in nursing, as well as lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender experiences.  It’s time to shed some light on these experiences, so that we can better support the next generation of LGBTQ nurses and our heterosexual allies.

 

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Interview on Out in the Bay

Interview on Out in the Bay

Podcast from an interview about Doing It For Ourselves on KALW Jan 9th about a lesbian health program.

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