0130/2023 - Preconceito contra pessoa idosa LGBTQIA+ em Instituições de Longa Permanência para Idosos (ILPI): uma revisão de escopo
Prejudice against LGBTQIA+ older people in Long-Term Care Facilities (LTC): a scoping review
Autor:
• Wellington Ricardo Navarro Torelli - Torelli, W.R.N - <werinatosp@hotmail.com>ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9129-4603
Coautor(es):
• Thaíssa Araujo de Bessa - Bessa, T.A - <thaissa.bessa@usp.br>ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7326-2832
• Bibiana Graeff - Graeff, B. - <bibiana.graeff@usp.br>
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7324-7491
Resumo:
Na população idosa, pessoas LGBTQIA+ representam um dos grupos mais propensos a depender de serviços de cuidados formais, devido à vulnerabilidade socioeconômica. Contudo, o preconceito enraizado na sociedade, inclusive em profissionais da saúde e da assistência social, resulta em um modelo de atendimento cis-heteronormativo em Instituições de Longa Permanência para Idosos (ILPI). Objetivo: Investigar, descrever e analisar a produção científica sobre o preconceito contra pessoas idosas LGBTQIA+ em ILPI. Método: Revisão de escopo com buscas nas bases de dados AgeLine, Portal de Periódicos CAPES, SciELO, Portal USP e HeinOnline, sem limite temporal. Resultados: Dos 642 artigos iniciais, 31 compõem a amostra final. Foram identificadas quatro categorias e 11 subcategorias que delimitam atores, causas, efeitos e soluções encontradas nas pesquisas. Conclusão: A falta de preparo das equipes das ILPI e o histórico de preconceito durante a vida leva a comunidade LGBTQIA+ a temer a institucionalização e desejar um ambiente amigável ou exclusivo. A capacitação das equipes das ILPI torna-se imprescindível, assim como a necessidade de criação de legislações de proteção a essa população com base em pesquisas populacionais e locais.Palavras-chave:
Instituição de Longa Permanência para Idosos; Minorias Sexuais e de Gênero; Preconceito.Abstract:
Among elderly population, LGBTQIA+ people represent one of the groups most likely to depend on formal care services because of socioeconomic vulnerability. However, the prejudice rooted in society, including health and social care professionals, result in a cis-heteronormative model of care delivery in Long-Term Care Facilities for the Older People (LTC). Objective: To investigate, describe and analyze the scientific production on prejudice against LGBTQIA+ older people in LCT. Method: Scope review with searches in the databases AgeLine, Portal de Periódicos CAPES, SciELO, Portal USP and HeinOnline, with no time limit. Results: Of the 642 initial articles, the sample comprises 31 ed articles. Four categories and 11 subcategories were identified and delimit agents, causes, effects, and solutions found in the research. Conclusion: The lack of preparation of the teams of the LTC and the history of prejudice during life leads the LGBTQIA+ community to fear its institutionalization and to desire a friendly or exclusive environment. The training of LTC teams is essential, in addition to the need to create legislation to protect this population based on population and local surveys.Keywords:
Homes for the aged; Sexual and Gender Minorities; PrejudiceConteúdo:
Acessar Revista no ScieloOutros idiomas:
Prejudice against LGBTQIA+ older people in Long-Term Care Facilities (LTC): a scoping review
Resumo (abstract):
Among elderly population, LGBTQIA+ people represent one of the groups most likely to depend on formal care services because of socioeconomic vulnerability. However, the prejudice rooted in society, including health and social care professionals, result in a cis-heteronormative model of care delivery in Long-Term Care Facilities for the Older People (LTC). Objective: To investigate, describe and analyze the scientific production on prejudice against LGBTQIA+ older people in LCT. Method: Scope review with searches in the databases AgeLine, Portal de Periódicos CAPES, SciELO, Portal USP and HeinOnline, with no time limit. Results: Of the 642 initial articles, the sample comprises 31 ed articles. Four categories and 11 subcategories were identified and delimit agents, causes, effects, and solutions found in the research. Conclusion: The lack of preparation of the teams of the LTC and the history of prejudice during life leads the LGBTQIA+ community to fear its institutionalization and to desire a friendly or exclusive environment. The training of LTC teams is essential, in addition to the need to create legislation to protect this population based on population and local surveys.Palavras-chave (keywords):
Homes for the aged; Sexual and Gender Minorities; PrejudiceLer versão inglês (english version)
Conteúdo (article):
Preconceito contra pessoa idosa LGBTQIA+ em Instituições de Longa Permanência para Idosos (ILPI): uma revisão de escopoRESUMO: Na população idosa, pessoas LGBTQIA+ representam um dos grupos mais
propensos a depender de serviços de cuidados formais, devido à vulnerabilidade
socioeconômica. Contudo, o preconceito enraizado na sociedade, inclusive em profissionais da
saúde e da assistência social, resulta em um modelo de atendimento cis-heteronormativo em
Instituições de Longa Permanência para Idosos (ILPI). Objetivo: Investigar, descrever e
analisar a produção científica sobre o preconceito contra pessoas idosas LGBTQIA+ em ILPI.
Método: Revisão de escopo com buscas nas bases de dados AgeLine, Portal de Periódicos
CAPES, SciELO, Portal USP e HeinOnline, sem limite temporal. Resultados: Dos 642 artigos
iniciais, 31 compõem a amostra final. Foram identificadas quatro categorias e 11 subcategorias
que delimitam atores, causas, efeitos e soluções encontradas nas pesquisas. Conclusão: A falta
de preparo das equipes das ILPI e o histórico de preconceito durante a vida leva a comunidade
LGBTQIA+ a temer a institucionalização e desejar um ambiente amigável ou exclusivo. A
capacitação das equipes das ILPI torna-se imprescindível, assim como a necessidade de criação
de legislações de proteção a essa população com base em pesquisas populacionais e locais.
PALAVRAS-CHAVE: Instituição de Longa Permanência para Idosos; Minorias Sexuais e de
Gênero; Preconceito.
Prejudice against the older LGBTQIA+ population in Long-Term Care Facilities (LTC): a scoping review
ABSTRACT: Among older people, LGBTQIA+ persons represent one of the groups most likely to depend on formal care services because of socio-economic vulnerability. However, the prejudice rooted in society, including health and social care professionals, result in a cis-heteronormative model of care delivery in Long-Term Care Facilities for older persons (LTC). Objective: To investigate, describe and analyse the scientific production on prejudice against the older LGBTQIA+ population in LTC. Method: Scoping review based on searches in the following databases: AgeLine, Portal de Periódicos CAPES, SciELO, Portal USP and HeinOnline. No time limit was set. Results: Of the initial 642 articles, 31 were selected to comprise the sample. Four categories and 11 subcategories were identified. These covered agents, causes, effects, and solutions found in the research. Conclusion: The lack of preparation of the LTC staff and the history of prejudice during life leads the LGBTQIA+ community to fear institutionalisation, when the desire is to have a friendly or exclusive environment. Training of LTC staff is essential, in addition to the need to create legislation to protect this population based on local surveys. KEYWORDS: Homes for the Aged; Sexual and Gender Minorities; Prejudice
INTRODUCTION
Although an aging population generates various challenges to public policies, older persons still suffer from social invisibility, a factor aggravated by economic inequalities, difficulty in accessing health services, and a lack of implementation of human rights (GONZALES; GAVULIC, 2020; KNAUER, 2011; SMITH et al., 2010). In old age, there are even more invisible, marginalised groups, including older lesbians, gays, bisexuals, transsexuals, queers, intersex and asexuals (LGBTQIA+).
It is considered by Article 5 of the Interamerican Convention of Human Rights of Older Persons (2005) that the older LGBTQIA+ population are victims of multiple discrimination, on the one hand, for simply being older persons, related to the stigma of vulnerability; on the other, because they clash with cis or heteronormative attitudes, suffer homophobic or gender identity threats, which implies a lonelier and constantly invisible way of life (OLIVEIRA et al., 2021).
In some countries, non-heteronormative sexual orientation or non-binary gender identity is seen as a crime (SIMPSON et al., 2015). Even in countries where there are human rights conquests and establishment of institutional organisations aimed at defence of LGBTQIA+ communities, as in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia, the statistics regarding old LGBTQIA+ are not accurate (HARDACKER et al., 2014; WEBB; ELPHICK, 2017).
Structural discrimination and prejudice make many older LGBTQIA+ people not assume their gender identity or sexual orientation, this being expressed among LGBTQIA+ as “return or stay in the closet” (WEBB; ELPHICK, 2017). Exemplifying, regarding gays and lesbians, homophobia on the part of society and internalisation (denial of one’s own identification with this sexual minority) are aggravated by the accumulation of stigmas according to the situation of the person (income, race, etc.), resulting in a discriminatory intersectionality, with the concomitant expression of, for example, ageism, racism and misogyny (BYERS; VIDER; SMITH, 2019; CRONIN; KING, 2014, KIMMEL, 2014; WEBB; ELPHICK, 2017).
The fear on the part of older persons to assume an LGBTQIA+ identity spans different generations, such as the silent generation and the baby boomers, born respectively before World War II and between 1940 and 1960 (JENKINS et al., 2014). These generations experienced criminalisation of homosexuality and pathologisation of gender identities and sexual orientations that clash with heteronormativity (classified until 1990 as mental disorder by the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Health-related Problems). Another factor that contributed to the stigmatisation of the baby boomer gay generation was the advent of AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome). The correlation of the disease with the gay population at the time caused it to be characterised as "gay cancer" or "gay plague" (CANTWELL, 1998; REDMAN, 2011).
This is the history of how society formed deeply rooted prejudice, a legacy causing the LGBTQIA+ population to experience discrimination till today, and be afraid of cis-heteronormative care in the most diverse services. This situation has led the LGBTQIA+ to avoid or delay health care, and hide their gender identities or sexual orientation from care providers, the direct impact of which has been a lack of health information and assistance (HARDACKER et al., 2014; SMITH et al., 2010; STEADMAN, 2019).
In Brazil, among the assistance services offered to older persons, there are Long-term Care Institutions (LTC), which are collective homes, governmental or not, where people over 60 reside, supported or not by their families, and have freedom to come and go (Brazil, 2021).
LTC is one of the services that generate most fear in older LGBTQIA+ people, due to being afraid of receiving poor quality care, as well as suffering discrimination, isolation, verbal or physical violence from other residents and their relatives (ALBA et al., 2021; PUTNEY et al., 2021; PRICE, 2012; SMITH et al., 2010). At the same time, among older adults, LGBTQIA+ represent one of the groups with the highest probability of depending on these services, since some lose contact with their biological families early in life due to non-acceptance of their sexual orientation or gender identity, they tend not to have children (who could provide support in this phase of life), or may be in a situation of economic vulnerability caused by social marginalisation, making it impossible to achieve a good educational level and obtain employment.
There is less research related to the needs of older LGBTQIA+ people than that focused on gender, class or ethnicity in old age (SMITH et al., 2010). Until now, there are no records of studies with primary data collection regarding this population in Brazilian LTC. Therefore, this research aimed at surveying, describing and analysing the scientific production about the prejudice against older LGBTQIA+ persons in LTC.
METHOD
It is a qualitative, bibliographic, exploratory, descriptive scoping review. For the research question, the strategy of the acronym PCC was used for the population (older LGBTQIA+ people), concept (prejudice) and context (LTC or similar institutions in other countries) (PETERS et al., 2015).
The question was formulated: What is there in the scientific literature on prejudice in relation to LGBTQIA older persons in LTC? The scoping review protocol was published on the OSF Registry Platform in August 2022.
The databases accessed were: AgeLine, Portal of Periodicals CAPES, SciELO, the USP Portal and HeinOnline. There was no temporal limit on publications, and the following English descriptors and keywords: “prejudice”, “nursing home”, “sexual and gender minorities”, “LGBT*”, “homes for the aged” and “long-term care” were used in six different combinations. The Portuguese terms used were: “minorias sexuais e de gênero”, “LGBT*”, “instituição de longa permanência para idosos”, and “preconceito”, in four different combinations.
The inclusion criteria were: to address prejudice against LGBTQIA+ in LTC (or similar institutions in other countries) and older LGBTQIA+ persons concomitantly; and make the full text available online. The review included studies in Portuguese and English.
Studies in the project phase and letters to the editor were excluded. A PRISMA flowchart was used with the scoping review steps, and, for data analysis, qualitative content procedures (BARDIN, 2009; PAGE et al., 2020).
Searches were conducted on 6th September and 6th December, 2021, and on 25th February, 2022. 1,531 articles were found; of these, 811 were duplicates and 78 without full access. After superficial reading (pre-analysis) of the titles and summaries, 642 articles remained. After reading the summary and application of the inclusion/exclusion criteria, 73 articles were selected for reading in full. Of these, 31 were selected to compose the review’s final sample (Figure 1). The entire selection and evaluation process was carried out by two independent reviewers, and a third reviewer dealt with cases of disagreement (Table 2).
Figure 1
Table 1
RESULTS
The 31 articles selected for the review were published between 2006 and 2021 (Table 1), 16 of these in the last five years, which suggests an increase in interest and urgency in the debate on the theme. The research originated in 10 countries, mostly the United States (n = 19, four literature reviews). Among the others there were: the United Kingdom (n = 4), Canada (n = 2), South Africa (n = 1), Germany (n = 1), Australia (n = 1), Brazil (n = 1), Belgium (n = 1) and Spain (n = 1).
The articles were published in 22 different journals, covering studies of a qualitative and quantitative nature, bibliographic research and documentary analysis. Nine researches had LTC professionals as participants, and most of the studies about the LGBTQIA+ population did not have the participation of bisexual, transgender and non-binary persons.
From the content analysis, four thematic categories emerged: characteristics, causes, effects and solutions, which were divided into 11 subcategories (Table 3).
Table 2
DISCUSSION
The definition of ageism adopted in international documents distinguishes stereotypes (how it is thought), prejudice (as it is felt) and discrimination (as it is acted) (PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION, 2022; WORLD HEALTH ORGANISATION, 2020). In the sample of this literature review, in relation to prejudice against older LGBTQIA+ persons, there was no clear distinction between prejudice and discrimination. No article presented a definition for the term prejudice. The works addressed characteristics, causes, effects and solutions of prejudice as well as discrimination against the older LGBTQIA+ population in LTC as interrelated phenomena.
Characteristics
Targets of Prejudice
Decades of marginalisation and oppression in relation to the LGBTQIA+ population are reflected in a community, now older, loaded with intersecting stigmas, such as the highest level of poverty (compared to the situation of the heterosexual population in the same age range), the race/ethnicity, the lowest access to education, lack of housing and the insecurity linked to the break from the family of origin (REDMAN, 2011). However, the profile of participants and targets of prejudice in the sample involved those aged 50 or older, the majority gay men and lesbians (CZAJA et Al., 2016; GABRIELSON, 2011; PUTNEY et al., 2018; RYAN; PERALTA, 2021; STEIN et al., 2010), white (CZAJA et al., 2016), residents of urban areas (STEIN et al., 2010), members of the middle or upper class (GABRIELSON, 2011; RYAN; PERALTA, 2021), and holding a university degree (GABRIELSON, 2011).
In a considerable part of the studies, participants were sought through LGBTQIA+ communities via letters, phone calls or emails, which may have limited access to low-income older people, those with less education, residents of rural areas, and members of other ethnic groups (CZAJA et al., 2016; PORTER et al., 2016; PUTNEY et al., 2018; STEIN et al., 2010). Groups, such as the transgender (PORTER et al., 2016; DONALDSON et al., 2016) transsexuals, transvestites and bisexuals showed low or no presence in the studies.
Prejudice Agents
The family (CZAJA et al., 2016; GABRIELSON, 2011), the professionals (KNAUER, 2011; PORTER et al., 2016; RYAN; PERALTA, 2021) and LTC residents themselves (AHRENDT et al., 2017; DONALDSON et al., 2014) emerge as the main agents of prejudice, discrimination, intolerant and hostile actions.
Regarding the family, matters such as distancing after “coming out of the closet”, parental rejection, financial interests and conflicts involving relatives of their partners were the main indications of discrimination (CZAJA et al., 2016; GABRIELSON, 2011).
LTC themselves are perceived as agents of prejudice by allowing and instigating discriminatory practices, disrespecting (and even separating) long-term partners, imposing barriers to fulfil health decisions presented by the family of choice, and, more cruelly, creating ghettos, by allocating/hiding old LGBTQIA+ with dementia out of sight to prevent other residents from complaining about their presence (KNAUER, 2011).
The LTC residents interviewed in the articles of the review and who are agents of prejudice follow the profile of residents in general, most of them composed of white heterosexuals, educated, over 60, and believe that LGBTQIA+ fellow residents must not have revealed their sexual orientation to be admitted to the LTC (DONALDSON et al., 2014). In contrast, some residents were favourable to coexistence with LGBTQIA+ residents, corroborated in an American study, according to which this change in attitude can be the result of increased cultural acceptance of LGB sexual activity in all age groups (AHRENDT et al., 2017).
LTC professionals were pointed out by both LGBTQIA+ residents and by co-workers as agents of prejudice. The staff that responded were composed mainly of women (AHRENDT et al., 2017; HOLMAN et al., 2020; SIMPSON et al., 2018; VILLAR et al., 2019) (in more than 80% of all samples surveyed, reflecting the worldwide reality that few men work in the care area), lie in the age range 34 - 44 (AHRENDT et al., 2017; HOLMAN et al., 2020; TOLLEY; RANZIJN, 2006; VILLAR et al., 2019), and are heterosexual (AHRENDT et al., 2017; SIMPSON et al., 2018; TOLLEY; RANZIJN, 2006), white (AHRENDT et al., 2017; BELL et al., 2010; HOLMAN et al., 2020; SIMPSON et al., 2018), with more than five years work experience in the care sector (AHRENDT et al., 2017; HOLMAN et al., 2020; PELTS; GALAMBOS, 2017; SIMPSON et al., 2018; VILLAR et al., 2019), and have secondary school education or higher (HOLMAN et al., 2020; TOLLEY; RANZIJN, 2006; VILLAR et al., 2019).
As for LTC staff, many believe that their history of homophobia is now a thing of the past, although they claim not to have “many older LGBTQIA+ people at the moment” in their facilities, which indicates the invisibility of this population (DONALDSON et al., 2014; SIMPSON et al., 2018). In some studies, professionals believe “they treat everyone in the same way” (HOLMAN et al., 2020), with open, tolerant attitudes (VILLAR et al., 2019), confident that the quality of the treatment of older persons is, in general, the same for all (SIMPSON et al., 2018). However, even if they do not report negative attitudes towards these residents, some professionals perceive these in their co-workers (CACERES et al., 2020). In accordance with a study, the younger the professional, the greater the likelihood of having supportive reactions and positive attitudes towards older LGBTQIA+ persons (VILLAR et al., 2019). Professionals reported that they should receive training specific to the needs and stressors of older LGBTQIA+ people with a view to providing less insensitive, less heteronormative care (HOLMAN et al., 2020).
Object of the Prejudice
Most of the results focus more on prejudice and discrimination against sexual orientation than gender identity. In the case of sexual orientation, the prejudice and discrimination are referred to by the terms homophobia/biphobia and heteronormativity/heterosexism, while, in relation to gender identity, transphobia and cisgenderism are used (SIMPSON et al., 2018).
Homophobia is characterised as feelings or actions driven by hatred, fear or rejection of homosexuals (DONALDSON et al., 2014), and biphobia (referring to bisexuals) feeds hostility, prejudice and discrimination (SIMPSON et al., 2018). There is also internalised homophobia, denial or fear of revealing sexual orientation to avoid situations of embarrassment or discrimination (WHO, 2020). So, aware of this, many health professionals change their attitudes as of the revelation of sexual orientation or divergent gender identity (AHRENDT et al., 2017; GABRIELSON, 2011; KNEALE et al., 2021; SCHWINN; DINKEL, 2015; STEIN et al., 2010). Homophobic discrimination on the part of health professionals shapes the expectations of long-term care provision, making the LGBTQIA+, especially the trans population, not seek health or care services any longer (REDMAN, 2011).
Heteronormativity is a form of discourse that assumes heterosexuality as the norm; cisgenderism believes that people should correspond to the gender with which they were born/were socialised (SIMPSON et al., 2018). Heterosexism is viewed as a mechanism of institutional, systemic and cultural oppression, since it denies non-heterosexual expression (AHRENDT et al., 2017; BELL, et al., 2010; SCHWINN; DINKEL, 2015). It is substantially experienced in heteronormative policies and presumptions in LTC, which, although not always presenting openly discriminatory behaviour, discriminatory postures are adopted in admission, such as not welcoming older LGBTQIA+ persons, or culminating in oppressive attitudes, such as verbal and even physical harassment on the part of staff and residents. Such attitudes are perpetrated by veiled discrimination and lack of perception of privilege enjoyed by heterosexuals (MAHIEU et al., 2019; TOLLEY; RANZIJN, 2006; VILLAR et al., 2019).
Causes
Lack of knowledge
Lack of knowledge seems to be one of the causes of prejudice against the older LGBTQIA+ population, given that 23 of the 31 articles draw attention to the need for sensitisation training.
The mechanisms of prejudice and discrimination are perpetuated in both society and in its institutional facilities (LTC) catering for older LGBTQIA+ people (PELTS; GALAMBOS, 2017; SILVA et al., 2021), which may be of a public nature, private, philanthropic or religious (KNAUER, 2011; MAHIEU et al., 2019). The demonstrations of prejudice, discrimination or aversion practiced sometimes by professionals and staff (KNEALE et al., 2021; MAHIEU et al., 2019), and sometimes by other LTC residents (PELTS; GALAMBOS, 2017), are manifested in various ways. Residents may demonstrate prejudice, discrimination or aversion through radical and aggressive attitudes, such as insults, moral harassment and physical violence (PUTNEY et al., 2018; SCHWINN; DINKEL, 2015; VILLAR et al., 2019).
Some results suggest that it is possible that the agents of prejudice and discrimination are unaware of the reasons why they discriminate (DONALDSON et al., 2014).
In this social and care context, empathy is fundamental and appears with greater frequency in professionals when they have had previous contact with LGBTQIA+, through relatives, friends, patients or during training. They contribute most to engagement in defence of this group’s rights in the institutional environment (CACERES et al., 2020; SIMPSON et al., 2018; TOLLEY; RANZIJN, 2006). The scarce literature on barriers to this group and their demands, as well as the scarcity of technical courses or curricular disciplines in higher education, may contribute to the perpetuation of prejudice against this minority (GABRIELSON, 2011; PORTER et al., 2016).
Moral and religious beliefs
More than two thirds of the articles referred to dictates and moral norms influencing LTC residents and staff attitudes in their lives alongside an LGBTQIA+ population.
Heterosexism (CONCANNON, 2009; DONALDSON et al., 2014; NHAMO et al., 2018; RYAN; PERALTA, 2021; TOLLEY; RANZIJN, 2006; CONCANNON, 2009) appears in the majority of the articles, followed by homophobia (HENNING et al., 2015; MAHIEU et al., 2019; STEIN et al., 2010), both being present, for example, in LTC contexts catering for military veterans (CZAJA et al., 2016).
As illustrations of this prejudice, one can point to aversion to demonstrations of intimacy by same sex partners in public (BUCZAK et al., 2021; DONALDSON et al., 2016; PUTNEY et al., 2018), to the existence of a bedroom for a homo-affective couple, or to the possibility of a heterosexual resident sharing a bedroom with a LGBTQIA+ person (DONALDSON et al., 2016). Divergent sexual orientation is regarded as a threat to patriarchal family dogmas (MAHIEU et al., 2019; PORTER et al., 2016).
As for transgender people, prejudice manifests itself by cisgenderism, through, for example, the adoption of forms and treatments on the part of professionals of pronouns that are not ones the persons recognise for themselves (McINTYRE et al., 2012).
The LGBTQIA+ representing a threat was inherited from the time when even state security was taken as a justification for oppression. There was silencing and invisibility regarding divergent sexual behaviour, such as in the 1950s to the 1970s, in which homosexual sexual orientation was combated as a risk to the stability of political institutions, equated with communism (JOHNSON, 2013).
One of the stereotypes of ageism is that older persons become asexual. Ageism focuses on the LGBTQIA+ community itself, hindering intergenerational solidarity within the group (AHRENDT et al., 2017; KNAUER, 2011; MAHIEU et al., 2019).
In 14 studies, religious beliefs, sometimes related to the philanthropic nature of the LTC, (JOHNSON, 2013), were influential as much on the resident population (DONALDSON et al., 2014) as on the staff (CACERES et al., 2020; KNAUER, 2011), this being concentrated in North America and Europe. Religious influence on LTC only began to be reported in the articles published as of 2009.
Two of these studies were carried out only with managers and staff, and the remaining 12 with residents, both heterosexual and homosexual. None of the 14 studies dealt with the religious issue focused on the divergence of gender identity, leading to the hypothesis that the possible lack of coexistence makes the non-binary invisible in the eyes of people with binary religious rigour, or even that the rejection is so great the subject is avoided. Also there may be difficulties regarding divergent sexual orientation. In one emblematic case, a resident of an LTC with a religious base whose heterosexual sexuality was discovered, had his money returned and was removed; even an ensuing legal claim was lost, revealing the justice system’s tolerance of this kind of discrimination in the case of religious institutions (CZAJA et al., 2016).
Gaps and Rights Violations
The Defence of Marriage Act (DOMA), sanctioned in 1996 in the United States, but judged unconstitutional by the Supreme Court much later, in December 2022, introduced a definition of marriage as a legal union between a man and a woman and defined spouse as a person of the opposite sex, thus preventing same sex couples from receiving conjugal benefits at the Federal level, such as social security, benefits for veterans’ surviving spouses, tax relief and pensions (BELL et al., 2010; KNAUER, 2011).
According to research conducted in the United States and Europe, older LGBTQIA+ persons are more afraid of violations that can be covered up, such as the invisibility of their partners in health decisions, and the prohibition of visitors who do not have what the institution considers a “family bond” (SCHINN; DINKEL, 2015) than more visible violations, such as physical violence, already protected by law (MAHIEU et al., 2019). Researches in countries such as Spain and Canada have some laws designed to protect LGBTQIA+ from discriminatory practices (DONALDSON et al., 2016; VILLAR et al., 2019).
As for transgender and non-binary people, there are still few policies that protect their gender identity in LTC, which officially have no established criteria, such as room sharing (PORTER et al., 2016).
Effects
Reported in several studies covered by this review, discrimination, violence and invisibility are attitudinal manifestations related to prejudice against older LGBTQIA+ people in LTC. Prejudice added to these manifestations result in two main effects that are highlighted in these studies.
Fear of Institutionalisation
For older LGBTQIA+ persons, residing in an LTC corresponds to living in an environment in which heterosexuality is presupposed, that is, an environment that does not offer security to live with friends and life partners without situations of vulnerability and violence (McINTYRE et al., 2012).
Anticipation of the effects of homophobia are manifested by the old LGBTQIA+’s feeling of uncertainty about who will look after them when they cannot live independently any more (STEIN et al., 2010). Resorting to an LTC is not always a matter of choice. In an American study, while 75% of the heterosexual participants said they would resort to a family member if they needed care, only 53% of LGBTQIA+ participants reported they would do the same (HENNING et al., 2015).
There is also the history of negative experiences when visiting LGBTQIA+ partners and friends in LTC, which culminate in fear of institutionalisation and unwelcomeness due to sexual orientation or gender identity (BUCZAK et al., 2021; STEIN et al., 2010). In the LTC, professionals and staff can have attitudes such as micro aggression (AHRENDT et al., 2017), inferior quality of service, abuse (HENNING et al., 2015), blackmail to reveal the condition of LGBTQIA+ (RITTER, 2010), and even refusal of contact with people identified as LGBTQIA+ (JOHNSON, 2013). Homophobia and heterosexism in LTC involved, among other fears, those of social isolation, abuse, ostracism (STEIN et al., 2010), insecurity (PUTNEY et al., 2018) and concerns related to care in case of being unable to disguise their sexual orientations due to some cognitive impairment (BUCZAK et al., 2021; MAHIEU et al., 2019).
The Return to the Closet
In the LTC reception, there is reluctance to ask about sexual orientation and gender identity, the justification being they are personal, private matters, assuming that a heterosexual individual may be offended (BELL et al., 2010; HAFFORD et al., 2018). This omission reinforces the vulnerability of LGBTQIA+ people by aggravating the lack of staff awareness and sensitivity (DONALDSON et al., 2016; HAFFORD et al., 2018; REDMAN, 2011). Even those who had chosen to live openly, end up hiding or denying their gender identity or sexual orientation, that is, they return to the closet in search of more security and protection (KNAUER, 2011; PUTNEY et al., 2018; REDMAN, 2011; STEIN et al., 2010; KNEALE et al., 2021; MAHIEU et al., 2019; SILVA JR et al., 2021; JOHNSON 2013).
The return to the closet forces the person to be constantly attentive to avoid behaviour and speech that could reveal their identities (RITTER, 2010). This can be especially devastating for transgender and non-binary people, forced to return to gender expressions that do not match their own, a plan for suicide being one of the possibilities raised by these populations to escape prejudice and discrimination in LTC (PORTER et al., 2016). However, a Belgian systematic review indicated that some people expressed resistance to the idea of hiding their identity, even in the face of the risk of discrimination (MAHIEU et al., 2019).
Solutions
Staff as our Equals
The existence of LGBTQIA+ staff or supporters of the group was pointed out by three researches as a possible solution for combating prejudice in LTC. In this regard, older LGBTQIA+ persons, especially lesbians, pointed out that having LGBTQIA+ staff in LTC would be a guarantee of not being discriminated or suffering abuse (CACERES et al., 2020; STEIN et al., 2010).
Inside the Rainbow
The preference for LTC exclusively aimed at the LGBTQIA+ was found in almost half of the selected articles. This perspective only appears in the articles since 2009, in European and North America countries. Only one of these studies had professionals46 as participants, and six studies had LGBTQIA+ aged over 55.
Five researches pointed out the desire of middle-aged participants to have exclusive environments for this minority in old age (BUCZAK et al., 2021; DONALDSON et al., 2016; GABRIELSON, 2011; RYAN; PERALTA, 2021; STEIN et al., 2010).
One of the advantages of these facilities would be the reception of affective families, since, in conventional institutions, there is a preference for decisions taken by biological families, even though many of these have no affective link with the respective older LGBTQIA+ individual due to religious or moral incompatibility (RYAN; PERALTA, 2021). In the traditional institutions, partners or lifelong partners are denied a bedroom in common or privacy for internal reasons (philanthropic and religious) of the institutions, unprepared to deal with homo-affective couples (CONCANNON, 2009).
The existence of an exclusive LTC revives the Stonewall solidarity of diverse categories of the LGBTQIA+ community, allowing interaction in the same space along with the freedom to express themselves, in addition to promoting the expansion of networks, visits by affective families and joint work with associations and communities defending the rights of these populations (RYAN; PERALTA, 2021).
In contrast, in a systematic review, with studies from Spain, Belgium, Australia and the United Kingdom, there was no consensus among the older LGBTQIA+ persons on the alternative to live in an exclusive environment, since these spaces can reproduce the reality of ghettos or exclude the possibility of cohabitation with sympathisers. In addition, the existing specific institutions are mostly for people with high purchasing power, and they do not cater for much of the population of these communities (JOHNSON, 2013; RITTER, 2010).
Another suggestion from participants in four surveys was that there should be more publications for older LGBTQIA+ people in these facilities, such as films and signs pointing out that the place is friendly to this group (MAHIEU et al., 2019; McINTYRE et al., 2012; PUTNEY et al., 2018; SCHWINN; DINKEL, 2015). Inclusive procedures were suggested, such as specific medical care - STDs/AIDS, hormonisation (RITTER, 2010), use of the appropriate pronouns in the treatment language that includes the transgender (CACERES et al., 2020; DONALDSON et al., 2016), and sensitisation regarding the history of prejudice (CONCANNON, 2009; PELTS; GALAMBOS, 2017).
Training for a different look
23 articles encompassed the suggestion of staff training in LTC to care for LGBTQIA+: seven devised with technical staff, eight made with LGBTQIA+ populations aged 50 and over, and the others were legal articles and literature reviews. The studies were representative of countries from all continents except Asia.
Combating heterosexism was the principal motivation for the LTC staff training, which consider that contact with LGBTQIA+ and the inclusion of specific LGBTQIA+ health content in vocational training curricula can contribute to mitigation of heteronormativity among the professionals (BELL et al., 2010; CONCANNON, 2009; DONALDSON et al., 2016; HAFFORD et al., 2018; TOLLEY; RANZIJN, 2006; MAHIEU et al., 2019).
It has been pointed out that training helps to reduce the distrust of professionals when an LGBTQIA+ resident considers the decision to reveal his/her identity (NHAMO et al., 2018), and increases sensitisation of the specific needs of the group (HAFFORD et al., 2018; PUTNEY et al., 2018; STEIN et al., 2010). The professional category indicated for this training was that of nurses (GABRIELSON, 2011), LTC managers, psychologists and social workers (GABRIELSON, 2011; PORTER et al., 2016; RITTER, 2010).
The training gap in care is so great that a national inquiry into discrimination against transgender people in the United States (GRANT et al., 2011) revealed cases in which transgender people themselves needed to teach professionals how to proceed in their service (PORTER et al., 2016). Two U.S. studies (CACERES et al., 2020; SCHWINN; DINKEL, 2015) pointed out the low number of class hours and discontinuity of care courses about LGBTQIA+ for health and social assistance professionals (GABRIELSON, 2011). Another gap was the absence of this discipline in the curriculum grid of higher education, even in advanced countries where LGBTQIA+ rights have been achieved, such as Canada and the United States (PORTER et al., 2016; WILSON et al., 2019).
Studies highlight the need for involvement and guidance from family members and visitors (McINTYRE et al., 2012; SIMPSON et al., 2018) about older LGBTQIA+ persons rights and respect through content and consulting of entities upholding these (DONALDSON et al., 2016; HOLMAN et al., 2020).
It is necessary to extend this training beyond the metropolitan regions, since, in rural regions, this can be essential to mitigate conservative customs in the community (SIMPSON et al., 2018).
Limitations
This study had limitations due to the profile, size and type of samples found, which were not aimed at ensuring representative sampling in relation to the LGBTQIA+ population. The scarcity of research in Latin American countries makes discussion difficult, as it is based on local realities.
FINAL CONSIDERATIONS
Although publication on this matter is increasing in international scope, in the whole of Latin America only one article was found, that referring to Brazil, which suggests that, in this region, the theme is little explored. This emphasises the need for Latin American research to consider the growing demand for long-term care services due to accelerating longevity and cultural specificities in European and North American countries
Although the searches in the databases were directed by words like “prejudice/harm”, the articles presented data regarding both prejudice and discrimination. No definition was found for the term prejudice in the sample analysed, which indicates that there is no precision or rigour in the conceptual distinction in the treatment of this theme. Homophobia and heterosexism were defined by some authors. It was seen that most of the studies deal more with prejudice in relation to homosexuals than prejudice against the gender identity of bisexuals and other LGBTQIA+ minorities.
The religious and moral beliefs of residents and their families, plus the lack of knowledge on the part of professionals about old age among the LGBTQIA+, are the predominant causes of prejudice in the LTC against this group. The evidence of this review shows that the effects of this prejudice happened before, during and after institutionalisation.
The solutions identified involve empathy: hiring of staff who themselves are LGBTQIA+, which is a request presented by the group to contribute to the feeling of security and confidence; permanent training of LTC staff, a solution pointed out by older persons and the LTC professionals themselves; and equity and security, with the existence of specific LTC or ones friendly to LGBTQIA+, in order to expand their networks and welcome decisions from their families of choice.
This study is expected to shed light on the long-term care debate regarding this older population, leading to future research that could take into account the specificities of several groups of the LGBTQIA+ community, and seek to define prejudice and discrimination more precisely to achieve a better understanding of the distinction and relationship of these concepts.
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