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Making the invisible visible: a systematic review of sexual minority women’s health in Southern Africa

机译:使看不见的人可见:对南部非洲少数族裔妇女健康的系统评价

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Background Over the past two decades research on sexual and gender minority (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender; LGBT) health has highlighted substantial health disparities based on sexual orientation and gender identity in many parts of the world. We systematically reviewed the literature on sexual minority women’s (SMW) health in Southern Africa, with the objective of identifying existing evidence and pointing out knowledge gaps around the health of this vulnerable group in this region. Methods A systematic review of publications in English, French, Portuguese or German, indexed in PubMed or MEDLINE between the years 2000 and 2015, following PRISMA guidelines. Additional studies were identified by searching bibliographies of identified studies. Search terms included (Lesbian OR bisexual OR “women who have sex with women”), (HIV OR depression OR “substance use” OR “substance abuse” OR “mental health” OR suicide OR anxiety OR cancer), and geographical specification. All empirical studies that used quantitative or qualitative methods, which contributed to evidence for SMW’s health in one, a few or all of the countries, were included. Theoretical and review articles were excluded. Data were extracted independently by 2 researchers using predefined data fields, which included a risk of bias/quality assessment. Results Of 315 hits, 9 articles were selected for review and a further 6 were identified through bibliography searches. Most studies were conducted with small sample sizes in South Africa and focused on sexual health. SMW included in the studies were racially and socio-economically heterogeneous. Studies focused predominately on young populations, and highlighted substance use and violence as key health issues for SMW in Southern Africa. Conclusions Although there are large gaps in the literature, the review highlighted substantial sexual-orientation-related health disparities among women in Southern Africa. The findings have important implications for public health policy and research, highlighting the lack of population-level evidence on the one hand, and the impact of criminalizing laws around homosexuality on the other hand.
机译:背景信息在过去的二十年中,有关性和性别少数群体(女同性恋,男同性恋,双性恋和变性者; LGBT)的健康研究突出了世界许多地方基于性取向和性别认同的巨大健康差距。我们系统地回顾了有关南部非洲性少数族裔妇女(SMW)健康的文献,目的是确定现有证据并指出该地区该弱势群体健康方面的知识差距。方法按照PRISMA指南,系统综述2000年至2015年间以PubMed或MEDLINE收录的英文,法文,葡萄牙文或德文出版物。通过搜索已鉴定研究的书目来鉴定其他研究。搜索词包括(女同性恋或双性恋或“与妇女发生性关系的妇女”),(艾滋病毒或抑郁症或“使用毒品”或“滥用毒品”或“心理健康”或自杀或焦虑症或癌症)和地理特征。所有使用定量或定性方法进行的经验研究均有助于SMW在一个,几个或所有国家中的健康证据。理论和评论文章均不包括在内。数据由2位研究人员使用预定义的数据字段独立提取,其中包括偏差/质量评估的风险。结果在315次命中中,选择了9篇文章进行审查,并通过书目搜索确定了另外6篇文章。在南非,大多数研究都是以小样本进行的,并且侧重于性健康。研究中包括的SMW在种族和社会经济上都是异质的。研究主要集中在年轻人口上,并强调了毒品使用和暴力是南部非洲SMW的关键健康问题。结论尽管文献上存在很大差距,但该评论强调了南部非洲妇女与性取向有关的健康差异。这些发现对公共卫生政策和研究具有重要意义,一方面突出了缺乏人口层面的证据,另一方面突出了将同性恋定为刑事法律的影响。

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