by Vadim Shteyler
Amid this week’s disheartening studies highlighting discrimination of LGBT populations, the American College of Physicians (ACP) affirms its support and offers new recommendations for furthering LGBT health.
The bad “news”: is not really news. It is further evidence of how much more effort needs to be placed on ending LGBT discrimination and inequalities. A national survey published in the Ann of Intern Med found that lesbians were significantly less likely to get vaccinated for HPV than their heterosexual counterparts (adjusted prevalence of 8.5% v 28.4%). HPV is easily transmissible through contact and believed to be equally transmissible in gay and heterosexual women. The vaccine can prevent most cases of cervical cancer, which has terrible outcomes if discovered late, indicating that many deaths could have been prevented. An editorial in the same issue describes neglected health concerns affecting LGBT populations and calls for better professional education on LGBT health. The CDC’s and American Congress of Obstetrics and Gynecology’s (ACOG) efforts to inform patients about pap smear rates not been slow and inconsistent in changing medical practice. Combined with markedly lower HPV vaccination rates, cervical cancer remains a big concern. Read More