Health Care and Human Rights for LGBT People: A Critical Focus for Our Work

A person cannot live a full, healthy life when they are unable to experience real human rights or freely express who they are.

Before his untimely death, Jonathan Mann, founder of the UN AIDS program, educated us on the strong link between the concepts of health and human rights. Mann demonstrated how stigma and discrimination are deeply connected to limitations and barriers to sensitive, humane care. In his book Health and Human Rights: A Reader, Mann explains that “Discrimination against ethnic, religious, and racial minorities, as well as on account of gender, political opinion, or immigration status, compromises or threatens the health and well-being and, all too often, the very lives of millions. In its most extreme forms, prejudice or the devaluation of human beings because they are classified as “other” has led to apartheid, ethnic cleansing, and genocide. Discriminatory practices threaten physical and mental health and result in the denial of access to care, inappropriate therapies, or inferior care.”

The same connection can be drawn from the Institute of Medicine’s recent report on the Health of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender People, a publication which represents a landmark step towards LGBT health awareness. Also in Healthy People 2020, the Surgeon General describes how many of the health disparities noted among LGBT people stem directly from stigma and discrimination.

Tyler Clementi is a recent, and tragic example of how prejudice and stigma can hurt LGBT Americans.

A person cannot live a full, healthy life when they are unable to experience real human rights or freely express who they are. Recent examples of bullying are too numerous to cite, the most prominent being Tyler Clementi who jumped to his death from the George Washington bridge after classmates filmed him having sex with another man and posted the video online. And the connection between health and human rights is not limited by national borders. In Senegal in 2008, nine male HIV prevention workers were imprisoned for “acts against nature” prohibited by Senegalese law. Subsequent study showed that this singular event had a chilling effect on HIV prevention activities among Senegalese men who have sex with men (MSM). The majority of service providers suspended HIV prevention work with MSM out of fear for their own safety, and those who continued to provide services noticed a sharp decline in MSM participation. The study concluded that an effective response to the HIV epidemic in Senegal should include active work to decrease enforcement of this law (…or eliminate it!).

In our context, LGBT health education, a core principle is the recognition of how difficult it is to be LGBT and not feel the impact of reports of institutionalized and individual violence and discrimination, even when they take place at a great distance from home. In thinking about what we teach about LGBT health to health care organizations, schools, and other institutions, our work to improve health must start with identifying situations that jeopardize the safety and comfort of the individual to authentically express basic human desire.

It is for this reason that we cannot overstate the importance of recent statements by President Obama, Hillary Clinton, and the United Nations on this topic.

President Obama’s presidential directive International Initiatives to Advance the Human Rights of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Persons directs U.S. agencies to:

  • Combat the criminalization of LGBT status or conduct abroad.
  • Protect vulnerable LGBT refugees and asylum seekers.
  • Leverage foreign assistance to protect human rights and advance nondiscrimination.
  • Ensure swift and meaningful U.S. responses to human rights abuses of LGBT persons abroad.
  • Engage International Organizations in the fight against LGBT discrimination.
  • Report on the U.S. government’s progress

Speaking in Paris, Secretary Clinton unequivocally stated to the international community that, “Like being a woman, like being a racial, religious, tribal, or ethnic minority, being LGBT does not make you less human. And that is why gay rights are human rights, and human rights are gay rights.”

The United Nations just recently issued its first report on LGBT rights from the UN office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in Geneva. It outlines “a pattern of human rights violations… that demands a response,” and says governments have too often overlooked violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

Violence against LGBT persons tends to be especially vicious compared to other bias-motivated crimes.

 

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Happy and Healthy Holidays from Fenway

Fenway health wishes our patients, staff, and community supporters a happy, healthy holiday season and New Year

With 2011 drawing to a close, Fenway would like to wish you all a happy and health holiday season. This year has been filled with milestones, including progress in LGBT health, advances in HIV research, and many changes for Fenway as an organization. In the December issue of the Fenway Focus e-newsletter, our President and CEO Dr. Stephen Boswell looks back at some of the biggest accomplishments for our organization and our community in 2011.

Join us for the T-Social Holiday Party on December 22 at Club Cafe

We hope you’ll join us on Thursday, December 22 for the T-Social Holiday Party for the transgender and gender nonconforming members of our community and their friends and allies to celebrate the season together.

And if you’re feeling a little stressed out about the impending holidays, you’re not alone. Here are some great tips for handling holiday stress and depression from the Mayo Clinic. PFLAG (Parents, Families, and Friends of Lesbians and Gays) also has some advice for LGBT folks visiting family for the holidays. And if you need to talk to  someone, just give one of our listening lines a call.

There is much to look forward to in the new year, including announcements that  human testing on a possible HIV vaccine will begin in January; and we want to thank you for helping us make the past year an amazing one! 

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Women’s Health: A feminist issue

Kendra, Fenway Women's Health Outreach Coordinator, is proud to be a feminist.

Do you believe that people of all sex and gender identities deserve equal rights? If you answered yes, then congratulations, you are a feminist!

As a twenty-something woman, I often meet peers who are hesitant to label themselves as feminists. They express their aversion to the label in myriad ways: “I’m not a man-hater.” “I believe in equal rights but I don’t want to give up my femininity.” “We don’t need feminism any more.” These statements demonstrate some of the misconceptions surrounding the term feminist and what’s still at stake for women and gender minorities—misconceptions I believe hinder the progress of equal rights for all genders.

First of all, “feminine” and “feminist” are not opposing terms. Feminists support equal rights for all women, no matter where they fall on the gender expression spectrum. Personally, I embrace things stereotypically ultra-feminine: high heels and make-up, dresses and skirts, long hair, glitter, and girly smelling lotions. But guess what? Being a feminine feminist doesn’t make me any less of an advocate for equal rights.

As for the “man-hater” cop-out, think about it for a minute. How can you advocate for equal rights for all genders and have a personal vendetta against one? You need not worry friends, labeling yourself a feminist doesn’t mean you can’t hang with the guys. Or, if you are a guy, it doesn’t mean that you have to hate yourself in order to be a feminist. Some of my best feminist friends are men.

It really worries me when my peers think feminism went out with polyester suits and disco. Yes, great advances have been made for women over the years; and it’s true that I have more opportunity than my grandmother who had it better than my great-grandmother. But we still live in a world with a persistent gender wage gap, among other disparities.

When it comes to healthcare, women continue to face barriers to adequate care. Women’s Health USA 2011, issued by HRSA (Health Resources and Services Administration), reports that women experience more days of poor physical health per year, are more likely to have an unmet mental heath need, and lack in preconception health and preventive care. And for women of color, whose life expectancies continue to “lag about 5 years behind white women,” those barriers are especially great.

Healthy women of all sexual and gender identities is a feminist issue.

There is one more misconception about feminism I want to address. I’ve heard open-minded, educated, self-proclaimed LGBT-supportive young women who have uttered these words “everyone will think I’m a lesbian.” To which I say, if you really, truly are a supporter and advocate for the LGBT community, then it shouldn’t bother you if someone assumes you are a lesbian, no matter how unfounded their assumptions may be.

In 1973, Fenway was home to three health collectives: a gay men’s collective, an elder care collective, and a women’s health collective. Those ideals aren’t irrelevant, and they’re nothing to be shy about. Let’s not only be proud to call ourselves feminists, but let’s work to make the feminist fight even stronger by making it more inclusive to women of all sexual and gender identities. 

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