Transcript Slide 1

LGBT Health: a case
study of politics and
data collection
APHA Conference
November 6, 2006
Boston, MA
Scout, Ph.D.
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
Abstract
The gold standard for population-based data collection is the federal surveys used to establish
morbidity and mortality benchmarks for different population groups. But these surveys often do
not collect data on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) behavior or identity. Despite
this, researchers have used a series of smaller-scale surveys or proxy markers in larger
surveys to uncover a consistent pattern of adverse health outcomes for this population group.
This presentation will explore the persistent and deleterious effects of politics on the efforts to
add LGBT data collection questions to the gold-standard federal surveys. A variety of
information will be presented, including related political opposition occurring in the federal
health arena, state success efforts at adding LGBT data collection questions, and the newest
data emerging from California debunking the myth that asking if someone is LGBT constitutes
a sensitive question (and therefore needs special extra expense management in the survey
process). The case of the CDC's efforts to add an LGBT data collection question to their Adult
Tobacco Survey will be presented to highlight the political opposition to this effort – despite the
depth of sound science supporting the need for data collection on this issue. The impact of this
political opposition will be discussed, and used as a platform to show how small population
groups are especially vulnerable to population-based assessment of health needs.
Learning Objectives:



List instances in recent past when politics influenced data collection related to LGBT health.
Analyze the impact of supressed data collection on LGBT health knowledge and interventions.
Articulate how small populations are particularly vulnerable when using population-based approaches to
identifying health disparities.
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
Story not study
 This is a rarely discussed territory
 There is no citable “evidence” of much of what
is presented here
 All gov’t officials were guaranteed anonymity
 Gov’t processes are not transparent, full
information on some events will likely never be
known
 It is necessarily anecdotal
 Many things deliberately not disclosed here
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
One investigators
story
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2000
 Historic that sexual orientation
(SO) was included in draft
version of Healthy People 2010
 Then excluded
 Community advocates
 Final inclusion
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2000
Sexual orientation
DNC, DNC, DNC
“DNC = data are not collected”
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2000-1 – Climate change
 HRSA commission of HP2010
companion document on LGBT
 First plan = government
document, like others
 Post election plan = private
document
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2001 – Climate change
 HRSA disbands LGBT liaison office
 SAMHSA puts out LGBT health
book, later LGBT information taken
off their website
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2001 HHS LGBT Strategic
Plan
 300-400 page document, over ½ yr
work by many
 Cross agency
 Listing all current activities
 Made recommendations, including
formation of office on LGBT health
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2001 HHS LGBT Strategic
Plan
 300-400 page document, over ½ yr
work by many
 Cross agency
 Listing all current activities
 Made recommendations, including
formation of office on LGBT health
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2002+
 Researchers warned to avoid “gay
or lesbian” in proposals
 “for a while they scrutinized
contracts, we couldn’t use gay or
lesbian, we had to find other words”
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2002 LGBT data catch-22
 At National Conference on Tobacco or
Health, a federal official involved in
HP2010 warns; LGBT facing expulsion
due to lack of data
 There is consistent evidence of health
disparities
 But the SO question is not asked on key
federal health surveys
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
Objections to SO data
collection
 It’s a question about sex, we need to
handle those in very special ways
 It costs over $1 million to add a question
to main survey, NHIS.
 Why do we need to? Where is the
evidence?
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2003 “Witchhunts”
 Coalition for traditional family values
creates list of “suspect” HHS research
 Including many projects on LGBT health
 Thru allied Congresspeople, they get
projects investigated + press
 Waxman + head of NIH stands by need
to let science drive research
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2003 CDC “expert panel”
on LGBT surveillance
 Convened to get best strategies for
addition of LGBT questions to Adult
Tobacco Survey (ATS)
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2004 CDC tries to test
best questions
 Why need best question? NHANES
 Planned cognitive testing to determine
best SO and gender identity (GI)
questions to add to ATS
 Testing yanked mere weeks before
occurring – could not get approval.
 Note – history complicated, may not have
been political, but never transparent
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2005
Request to Edit Title of Talk On Gays, Suicide Stirs Ire
HHS Is Being Accused of Marginalization
By Rick Weiss
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, February 16, 2005; Page A17
A federal agency's efforts to remove the words "gay,"
"lesbian," "bisexual" and "transgender" from the program of
a federally funded conference on suicide prevention have
inspired scores of experts in mental health to flood the
agency with angry e-mails.
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2005 CDC relaunches
testing of survey question
 But ATS has already launched, with a
“best thinking” SO question
 Report still coming from this work
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2006 – CDC refunds
tobacco networks
[Federal Register: June 2, 2000 (Volume 65, Number 107)] [Notices]
[Page 35348-35353] From the Federal Register Online via GPO
Access [wais.access.gpo.gov] [DOCID:fr02jn00-70] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- DEPARTMENT OF
HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Center for Disease Control
and Prevention [Program Announcement 00086] Cooperative
Agreements for National Networks for Tobacco Prevention and
Control; Notice of Availability of Funds A. Purpose The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announces the availability
of funds for fiscal year (FY) 2000 for cooperative agreements with
organizations that can work with the following eight (8) priority
populations: 1. African-Americans (AAs); 2. Hispanics/ Latinos
(H/L); 3. Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders (AAPIs); 4. American
Indians/Alaskan Natives (AI/AN); 5. women; 6. gays/lesbians; 7.
low socioeconomic status (SES) adults; and, 8. young people
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2006 – with a change
[Billing Code: 4163-18-P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
National Network for Tobacco Control and Prevention
Announcement Type: New
Funding Opportunity Number: DP06-602
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number: 93.283
Letter of Intent Deadline (LOI): January 19, 2006
Application Deadline: February 3, 2006
I.
Funding Opportunity Description
The purpose of the program is to prevent and reduce tobacco use and
exposure to secondhand smoke and to eliminate tobacco-related
disparities by establishing a consortium of National Networks that can
collaborate with and serve as a resource to CDC and OSH, Network
members, Network Partners, States, and other local and national
tobacco control organizations to provide culturally competent technical
assistance regarding effective tobacco use prevention and control
strategies for racial and ethnic populations, groups that demonstrate
low socio-economic status, and groups for which there is data to
support a high prevalence of tobacco use and/or burden of tobacco
related morbidity/mortality.
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
“Group for which there is
data to support…”
 2001 – CA Health Interview Survey (CHIS),
lesbians smoked at rates 75% higher than
other women, gays 56% higher
 2003 – CA LGBT Tobacco Survey, LGBT men
almost 50% higher; LGBT women, almost
200% higher
 Across all studies, in all places, it’s consistent,
LGBTs smoke ~40-200% higher than others.
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
Proud to say
 In 2006, CDC funded National LGBT
Tobacco Control Network*
 I am the Network Director
 For more information, please see our
website, www.lgbthealth.org
* A project of Fenway Community Health, Boston, MA
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2006 – Where are we now?
 At least 2 states in their Adult Tobacco
Survey
 At least 8 states in their Behavioral Risk
Factor Social Survey (BRFSS)
 At least 12 states in their Youth Risk
Behavioral Surveys (YRBS)
 NHANES
 National Survey of Family Growth
 More at www.gaydata.org
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
2006 – Current promise?
Researchers believe aggregating data from
the state surveys into larger sample
might be most promising route to
achieving large sample.
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
Impact?
 Hostile climate demoralizes advocates
and researchers
 Dissuades next generation
researchers
 Scares away needed non-LGBT
champions
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
Impact?
“…lots of demoralization
and good people leaving”
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
Impact?
 Catch 22 leaves LGBT at risk for
policy exclusion, funding exclusion
 Less known about magnitude of LGBT
health disparities
 Needed LGBT health disparity areas
(e.g. tobacco) addressed too slowly
 Can we justify being in HP2020?
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
Who are the heroes?
 The many scientists who have been
tireless in advocating for science in
the face of political opposition
 The creative members of the federal
government
 LGBT scientists who have risked their
careers to address these health
disparities
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
Acknowledgements
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092
Acknowledgements
Scout
health consultant www.scoutout.org [email protected] 401.263.5092