Lavender Health web site make-over!

Big News!  This blog and the Lavender health web site are soon to be “housed” under one roof!  The next time you visit http://www.lavenderhealth.org/, you are likely to land right here, only pointing to our new home page, which you can visit now by clicking on the

The blog and web site will now live in the same bowl!

The blog and web site will now live in the same bowl!

“home” menu link above.

There are a number of reasons for this move, but the most important is that our goal is to involve authors and bloggers who can contribute to our mission of developing a vital resource for LGBTQ health, with a particular emphasis on nursing perspectives.  If you are interested in joining our team, comment here, or send us a message on our new “contact” form.

We are also linked to our Facebook page!   Drop by and “like” us to keep in touch on Facebook.

Most important, explore this site now, and let us know what you think.  We welcome all feedback and suggestions! Let us hear from you!

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LGBTQ Nurses Summit Coming Soon

If you have not yet registered for the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association conference and the first ever Nurses Summit, please consider it.  The Nursing Summit is on September 18th, the day before the conference begins.  It is an opportunity to network with other nurses from across the country and participate in a setting an agenda for moving the nursing field ahead in LGBTQ healthcare rights.  Check out http://www.glma.org for details.  We will publish the agenda here when it is finalized.

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GLMA 2012 Conference Registration Now Open!

Where?  San Francisco!

When? September 19-23, 2012!

Indeed, if you are a health care professional or student, have an interest in LGBTQ health and want to learn more, the GLMA (Gay & Lesbian Medical Association)  conference is for you!  This is a prime opportunity to meet leaders in the field and network with other professionals who are committed to LGBTQ health.  You can also earn nursing or medical continuing education credits.

  GLMA started as a physician-only organization, but over the past several years the group has become inclusive of all health care providers.  It is the only place where we can all come together.  Of course the technical and professional content of the conference programs is important because of the central focus and concern on LGBTQ health issues.  But the networking with other health care professional people has been, for me, the real highlight of the conference.  In my experience, homophobia is the norm among the professional people in my academic world. As a result, for LGBTQ nurses, our day-to-day concerns have to do with navigating our way in a realm of closets and innuendos.  None of this exists at the GLMA conference.  This is a space/place where to be open is the norm, and the concern is more focused on where it should be – the health of our LGBTQ friends, colleagues, patients and communities.

I will be there, so if you can be there, let me know!

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Marriage and Health

Since the landmark announcement by President Obama in support of same-sex marriage, just about every media outlet has carried some form of coverage addressing the issue.  Here we are interested in exploring the connection between marriage and health, since in the heterosexual community there has developed a strong body of evidence that marriage generally confers a positive health outcome, with men benefiting slightly more than women.

Ezra Klein, in a Washington Post article, addressed the economic issues around marriage in general and gay marriage specifically. He noted that the traditional construct of marriage was based on a division of labor, where one partner specialized in earning an income, and the other specialized in managing domestic concerns.  In other words, this construct was based on a system where “opposites,” or two people with very different interests and skills, formed an “ideal” (and romantic) image that was based on an unequal partnership. Today, he argues, marriage in general has shifted – earning an income has become not only necessary, but desirable, for both partners, and managing domestic concerns as a “specialty” has changed dramatically as appliances, conveniences of food preparation, mass production of clothing, and so forth, have entered the market.  This shift has pushed marriage in general to become more of a partnership of “equals” where each partner can and typically does contribute to generating income, and domestic chores demand less specialized skills (e.g. ability to make clothes, to prepare meals, etc.).  Because of this shift, Klein proposes, marriage now requires partners who are more similar than not in terms of skills, interests, and values.  Klein argues that the more similar the partners in a marriage, the more benefits they are likely to realize in the partnership.  His conclusion is that “it’s into this institution that gay couples are being admitted, because the nature of this institution doesn’t provide a good argument for their exclusion.”  The benefits of a marriage partnership in this “new” institution have significant health implications – when both partners contribute economically, they are likely to also reap health benefits associated with economic resources.

But there remain a number of issues that plague attempts to understand the actual health benefits of marriage.  To date, most of the research on this question has been conducted, obviously, on heterosexual couples. The few studies that have been conducted on same-sex couples where same-sex marriage is legal do tend to bear out the general findings of a positive relationship between marriage and health.  However, the underlying issues involved in research and interpretation of research findings have still not been addressed sufficiently to claim a clear and definitive health benefit of marriage.

In a 2007 report titled The effects of marriage on health: a synthesis of recent research evidence (click for a free download of the report) the authors point to a number of confounding factors surrounding the investigation of marriage and health.  They point out that the now well-established fact that there is a positive relationship between heterosexual marriage and health does not mean that marriage “causes” better health.  It could be that healthier people are more likely to marry (stay married) than people who are less healthy (the issue of selection of married people being healthier to being with).  On the other hand, it could be that marriage does indeed offer a degree of “protection” against poor health outcomes .. it can improve economic status (as Ezra Klein points out), provide a partner who supports and encourages better physical and emotional patterns of behavior, and/or protection against various stigmas associated with being single (and in the case of LGBTQ folks, stigmas associated with sexual or gender identity).  The challenge for researchers is to sort out the influences of selection (married people are already healthier to begin with), and protection (married people have a degree of protection against poor health). And this technicality of research design does not even begin to address the issues of the nature and quality of a relationship – whatever that relationship its!

The question remains for those of us who are concerned with the health of LGBTQ people, do we have a basis from which to argue in favor of marriage in our communities?  It seems clear to me that the opposing position against same-sex marriage is one that confers great harm in our communities.  It is a position that amplifies the many homophobic and anti-human rights stigmas that plague our communities and cause great harm with both physical and mental consequences (now well documented).  So even for those of us who are skeptical about the institution of marriage for anyone, I believe we must support the social and political energies that are moving toward legal status of marriage for LGBTQ people.  The research that does exist, even though it may not be as conclusive as we would like, generally supports potential health benefits of marriage and we can point to those studies and use them in our discussions.  Any evidence that is available can be valuable in educating our friends, families and allies.  But the bottom line is, for me, there is one simple argument that can and does stand alone … as long as the institution of marriage is legal for anyone, it needs to be legal for everyone.  It is a basic civic human right.

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Welcome to the LavenderHealth Blog!

Our LavenderHealth.org website is a wonderful resource for information about LGBTQ health – standards of care, ideas for teaching and learning, and health care policy.  Celebrate LGBTQ healhHowever, we want to encourage people to join in discussion, to share ideas, and to request information about LGBTQ health.  So we created a blog to provide this opportunity!  Leave a comment here to get started!  Most important, follow this blog to get some up-to-date information that we will post from time to time.

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