Pride and Purpose
The LGBTQ community finds a welcoming health care environment.
For its service to the LGBTQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer/Questioning) community, Saint Barnabas Medical Center (SBMC) has been designated a Leader in LGBTQ Healthcare Equality by the Human Rights Campaign Foundation. But what does that mean in practice?
The initiative is wide-ranging, according to Leslie Wright-Brown, MS, RN-BC, Director of Diversity and Inclusion at SBMC. It encompasses initiatives such as patient and employment non-discrimination policies, as well as an equal visitation policy and an employee resource group.
Staff education is a priority. “All employees complete an annual online LGBTQ education module that focuses on definitions as well as ways to provide culturally conscious care so everyone can be respectful and sensitive,” Wright-Brown explains.
TREATING TRANSGENDER PATIENTS
A special area of focus is the transgender community. “It’s one thing to cognitively understand what a person does medically to transition to another gender. But it also challenges our social norms, which can be difficult,” Wright-Brown says. “What does transitioning the body do to the mind and spirit as well? We want to understand those issues so we can implement the highest standards of care.”
Transgender people can expect medical as well as moral support at SBMC. Earlier this year, Jonathan Keith, MD, a plastic surgeon who specializes in microvascular surgery, performed a phalloplasty—the creation of a functioning penis—for a transitioning patient at SBMC. It was the first surgery of its kind in New Jersey. “The power of gender affirmation surgery is that it helps patients live as they want and not feel anxious, depressed and even suicidal,” says Dr. Keith, who is the co-founder of the Rutgers Center for Transgender Health. “The words they use to describe how they feel are ‘whole’ and ‘complete.’ They feel they’ve been given a new life.”
That kind of outcome inspires and motivates SBMC health care professionals as they serve the LGBTQ community, as well as other minority communities. “Throughout our organization, there’s a heightened sense of awareness,” Wright-Brown says, “and a true desire to be educated and respectful.”
To learn more about Saint Barnabas Medical Center or for a referral to a physician, call 888-724-7123.