More Access to Equitable Mental Health Care for LGBTQ People in Poverty
August 15/2018
By Françoise Makanda, Communications Officer at Dalla Lana School of Public Health
Even if barriers to accessing mental health care are overcome by LGBTQ people living in poverty, the available care remains inequitable and may even be a source of violence and oppression, according to a new study by Social and Behavioural Health Sciences researchers at DLSPH.
“Our participants described working hard to gain access to the few mental health services in Ontario that are financially accessible to people living in poverty,” said Associate Professor Lori Ross, the study’s lead author.
“Yet, even when they accomplished this, they found that services were ill-equipped to meet their specific needs produced by the intersections between their sexual orientation, gender identity, and low-income status,” said Ross.
Researchers interviewed 12 LGBTQ people from across Ontario who were living in poverty at the time of the study. Access to care, they claimed, is inadequate and when accessed, it seldom meets their needs. Much of Ontario’s mental health care is delivered through the private sector, and thus largely inaccessible for LGBTQ people who are living with low incomes. Worse, participants have access to fewer mental health providers who may have adequate competence in dealing with LGBTQ people, since such specialized care is more often available in the private sector.
Deborah (a pseudonym) who was one of the 12 participants interviewed for the study, is a bisexual, trans woman. She’s battled depression and suicidal thoughts for many years. At the height of her emotional agony, unable to accept her gender identity, her partner decidedly left their marriage. Deborah knew she needed to leave her small community.
The move left her with no emotional and financial support. Just ‘staying alive’ was a constant struggle, she said, but dealing with mental health care providers made things even worse.
“They’re [mental health providers] not so much worried about the details [about what is at the root of emotional distress]. They just want to create a category for you,” said Deborah in her interview with Ross and the DLSPH research team.
“It’s more or less – are you bipolar? Is it situational depression? Is it borderline personality disorder? Is it post-traumatic stress? Like, those have nothing to do with gender.”
Once admitted to the hospital, Deborah had other unexpected hurdles to face.
When speaking with researchers, Deborah said her trans identity did not fit into staff “protocol”. Often professionals would refer to her as “Mr.” when calling her name in the waiting room. And even in her most difficult times, Deborah had difficulty accessing shelters and crisis centers.
“[Crisis centres]– they make a big issue about which bathroom you use. I’m going to [college] right now and nobody cares which bathroom I use, you know what I mean? I’m in school with thousands of people and it’s not a problem. You go to the bathroom, you go to the bathroom. But at a [crisis centre] there are less than ten people in there and – ‘Well we’re not sure they can take you because we don’t know how to deal with the bathroom.’”
The study also finds that LGBTQ people living in poverty are working against intersectional oppressions: Discrimination associated with their various identities and experiences, including sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, race, Indigeneity, and disability. These intersectional oppressions work against them in attempting to gain and retain employment and access formal healthcare.
However, researchers also identified that LGBTQ people living in poverty are resourceful in finding creative ways to take care themselves and others, despite the major gaps in the formal health care system. Throughout the interviews, Ross said that the resourcefulness and resilience of LGBTQ people living in poverty were clear. Not only did participants find creative ways to take care of their needs and those of their families, but they also took steps to develop new resources to help ensure that other LGBTQ people in their communities were able to get the support that had been unavailable to them.
“Often, in research and policy, we focus on the need to find ways to get these folks to use expensive forms of health care, such as emergency rooms, less frequently. However, our study suggests that it is critically important to understand the failings in the system that leave LGBTQ people living in poverty – and others living at the intersection of structural oppressions – with few or no services that can adequately meet their mental health needs,” said Ross.
“It’s time to shift the focus of these discussions away from narratives of individual failures, and instead focus on system failures. We need a health care system that at the very least does not perpetuate social oppression, but even better, can understand and respond to social oppression in the ways that it fundamentally affects the health of people living in poverty.”