Sexual orientation and medicine
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This is the main article for the Category:Sexual orientation and medicine and Category:LGBT physicians.
This article discusses issues related to sexual orientation and medicine including medical associations and societies, medical schools, health, health policy, access to health care and health disparities.
It also includes a timeline of events related to sexual orientation and medicine.
Contents |
[edit] LGBT-specific medical associations
[edit] Australia
- Australian Lesbian Medical Association
[edit] United Kingdom
- CHAPS (health organisation)
- Gay and Lesbian Association of Doctors and Dentists
- LGBTI Health Summit
- LGBT Centre for Health and Wellbeing
[edit] United States
- National Association for Research & Therapy of Homosexuality
- Institute for the Study of Sexual Identity -(website)
- Bay Area Physicians for Human Rights
- Gay and Lesbian Medical Association - (website)
- LGBT Health Action Committee (part of AMSA)
- LGBTI Health Summit
- Lesbian Health and Research Center
- National Coalition for LGBT Health
- Pritzker School of Medicine LGBT People In Medicine
- Center for Gender Wholeness - (website)
- Rainbow Health Initiative (Minnesota) - (website)
- Touro University Gay-Straight Alliance
- U of Michigan Medical School Bisexuals, Gays, Lesbians, and Allies in Medicine
[edit] Germany
- Deutsches Institut für Jugend und Gesellchaft - (website)
[edit] Medical associations with policy related to sexual orientation
[edit] Australia
- Australian Medical Association[1]
[edit] China
[edit] United States
- American Academy of Pediatrics [2]
- American Medical Association[3]
- American Medical Student Association [4]
- American Psychological Association (for public)[5] (for educators)[6]
- Catholic Medical Association[1]
- Christian Medical and Dental Association [7]
- Center for Disease Control LGBT health
[edit] Timeline of events related to sexual orientation and medicine
- See also: Timeline of AIDS and Timeline of LGBT history
- 1886
- Dr. Richard Freiherr von Krafft-Ebing, a German psychiatrist, publishes a study of sexual perversity.
- 1957
- The Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality is founded to encourage the rigorous systematic study of sexuality.
- 1974
- The American Psychiatric Association votes to remove homosexuality from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM).
- 1977
- The Bay Area Physicians for Human Rights is founded in San Francisco as a support group for gay and lesbian medical students, residents, and other health care providers. The group claims to be the first LGBT medical society in the US.[2]
- 1981
- The Gay and Lesbian Medical Association is founded 1981 as the American Association of Physicians for Human Rights.
- The first cases of Gay related immunodeficiency, now known as AIDS, were first reported June 5, 1981, when the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recorded a cluster of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in five homosexual men in Los Angeles.
- 1987
- The diagnosis of Ego-dystonic sexual orientation is dropped from the DSM.
- 1992
- The World health organization replaces its categorization of homosexuality as a mental illness with the diagnosis of ego-dystonic homosexuality.
- 1993
- Dr. Dean Hamer publishes a paper suggesting a genetic component to sexual orientation.[3]
- 1995
- Saquinavir, the first protease inhibitor is approved for public use by the FDA. HAART radically changes the prognosis of HIV/AIDS.
- 1996
- The US Department of Defense includes homosexuality in a list of "mental disorders," in a document known as "directive 1332.38: physical disability evaluation."
- 2002
- The United States Department of Health and Human Services publishes Healthy People 2010, with the goals of increasing the quality and years of healthy life and eliminating health disparities in America. It identifies sexual orientation as one of 6 demographic factors contributing to health disparities.
America’s gay and lesbian population comprises a diverse community with disparate health concerns. Major health issues for gay men are HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases, substance abuse, depression, and suicide. Gay male adolescents are two to three times more likely than their peers to attempt suicide. Some evidence suggests lesbians have higher rates of smoking, overweight, alcohol abuse, and stress than heterosexual women. The issues surrounding personal, family, and social acceptance of sexual orientation can place a significant burden on mental health and personal safety.
- 2004
- New York Medical College revokes the charter of the its LGBT medical student group after the applies to change its name from Student Help Organization to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender People in Medicine. School officials claimed “the organization and its leader would advocate and promote activities inconsistent with the values of NYMC.”[5][6] In an interview with the Westchester Journal News, then AMA president Dr. John Nelson says that as a private institution the college has the right to set and enforce its own policies. The AMA organization did not support the ban, and the organization released a statement claiming the president's views were not representative of AMA policy.[7]
If you own a business or if you have a private entity, and there are rules for membership there, you have to follow the rules or you can't be a member. For example, if you come to Brigham Young University, where my children happen to go to school, there are certain things you do not do, among which is, you do not drink Coca-Cola on campus because that's against the rules. ...
– Dr. John Nelson, president AMA[8]
-
- The American Academy of Pediatrics publishes "Sexual orientation and adolescents", a report on the state of health of LGBT youth in the United States.
These [LGBT] adolescents may experience profound isolation and fear of discovery, which interferes with achieving developmental tasks of adolescence related to self-esteem, identity, and intimacy. Nonheterosexual youth often are subjected to harassment and violence; 45% of gay men and 20% of lesbians surveyed were victims of verbal and physical assaults in secondary school specifically because of their sexual orientation. Nonheterosexual youth are at higher risk of dropping out of school, being kicked out of their homes, and turning to life on the streets for survival. Some of these youth engage in substance use, and they are more likely than heterosexual peers to start using tobacco, alcohol, and illegal drugs at an earlier age. Youth in high school who identify themselves as gay, lesbian, or bisexual; engage in sexual activity with persons of the same sex; or report same-sex romantic attractions or relationships are more likely to attempt suicide, be victimized, and abuse substances. . . . School-based studies have found that these adolescents, compared with heterosexual peers, are 2 to 7 times more likely to attempt suicide [and] are 2 to 4 times more likely to be threatened with a weapon at school.
- 2005
- American Medical Association president Edward Hill, MD becomes the first AMA president to address the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association in a speech entitled "Understanding, Advocacy, Leadership: The AMA Perspective on LGBT Health."
I know that GLMA members and LGBT physicians have been treated unfairly by the AMA in the past. There is simply no excuse for discriminatory actions or exclusions based on sexual orientation or gender identity -- none. First, GLMA has opened [the AMA's] eyes to the diverse needs of LGBT patients, and second -- and just as important -- GLMA has told patients that they have the right to expect a health care system filled with openness, fairness and equality."[10]
– Dr. Edward Hill, MD, president American Medical Association
- 2006
- Touro University, a medical school in California, revokes the charter of its LGBT student organization[8]. After an outcry of protest from various groups, the school restores the group and school officials apologize.[11]
- 2007
- The American Medical Student Association membership votes to create an action committee on LGBT health issues and elects Brian Hurley to the office of national vice-president, the first LGBT person to hold the office.
- The US Food and Drug Administration re-affirms its policy prohibiting men who have sex with men (MSM) from donating blood despite recommendations from the American Red Cross, and the American Association of Blood Banks.
- James Holsinger is nominated by President George W. Bush to be US surgeon general. Because of Holsinger's alleged support of the ex-gay movement, his nomination draw sharp criticism from groups like the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association and the Human Rights Campaign.[12][13]
[edit] See also
- Homosexuality and science
- Homosexuality and psychology
- Sexual orientation and science
- "The Lesbian and Gay Health Care Community and the AMA"
- Correlation does not imply causation
- ^ Catholic Medical Association
- ^ BAPHR
- ^ Hamer, Hu, Magnuson, Hu and Pattatucci (1993) A linkage between DNA markers on the X chromosome and male sexual orientation. Science 261(5119): pp. 321-7.
- ^ Healthy People 2010, 2nd ed. "A Systematic Approach to Health Improvement" http://www.healthypeople.gov/Document/tableofcontents.htm#parta
- ^ http://www.amsa.org/lgbt/nymc.cfm
- ^ Gay group is bad medicine? - Washington Blade
- ^ Gay News From 365Gay.com
- ^ Eddings, Keith. The Journal News. 12 February 2005 http://www.thejournalnews.com/newsroom/021205/a01p12gaymed.html
- ^ PEDIATRICS Vol. 113 No. 6 June 2004, pp. 1827-1832 http://aappolicy.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/pediatrics;113/6/1827
- ^ AMA (GLBT) News release from the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association
- ^ http://www.amsa.org/lgbt/touro.cfm
- ^ Gay News From 365Gay.com
- ^ http://www.kentucky.com/news/state/story/85442.html