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- BookKristen L. Eckstrand, Jennifer Potter, editors.Summary: This book has two goals: to educate healthcare professionals about the effect of identity-based adversity on the health of their LGBT patients, and to outline how providers can use the clinical encounter to promote LGBT patients' resilience in the face of adversity and thereby facilitate recovery. Toward this end, it addresses trauma in LGBT populations; factors that contribute to resilience both across the lifespan and in specific groups; and strategies for promoting resilience in clinical practice. Each chapter includes a case scenario with discussion questions and practice points that highlight critical clinical best practices. The editors and contributors are respected experts on the health of LGBT people, and the book will be a "first of its kind" resource for all clinicians who wish to become better educated about, and provide high quality healthcare to, their LGBT patients.
Contents:
PART 1: OVERVIEW OF TRAUMA IN LGBT POPULATIONS
1. Intersection of Trauma and Identity
2. Medical Intervention and LGBT People: A Brief History
3. Conceptualizing Trauma in Clinical Settings: Iatrogenic Harm and Bias
4. Impact of Stress and Strain on Current LGBT Health Disparities
PART 2: RESILIENCE ACROSS THE LIFESPAN
5. The Role of Resilience and Resilience Characteristics in Health Promotion
6. Childhood and Adolescence
7. Resilience Across the Lifespan: Adulthood
8. Older Adults
PART 3: RESILIENCE IN SPECIFIC POPULATIONS
9. Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Individuals
10. Understanding Trauma and Supporting Resilience with LGBTQ People of Color
11. LGBT Forced Migrants
12. Lesbian and Bisexual Women
13. Institutionalization and Incarceration of LGBT Individuals
PART 4: RESILIENCE PROMOTION IN CLINICAL PRACTICE
14. An Overview of Trauma-Informed Care
15. Screening and Assessment of Trauma in Clinical Populations
16. Patients and their Bodies: The Physical Exam
17. Motivational Interviewing for LGBT Patients
18. Promoting Healthy LGBT Interpersonal Relationships
19.Community Responses to Trauma
20. Resilience Development among LGBT Health Practitioners. - ArticleGray GR, Smith IS, Mackenzie I, Gillespie G.Gastroenterology. 1978 Feb;74(2 Pt 2):397-401.Sixty patients who had been referred for elective ulcer surgery, and in whom a remission had been induced, entered a prospective double blind controlled trial of a single daily dose of 400 mg of cimetidine given at bedtime, or placebo. Eighty per cent of patients receiving placebo suffered symptomatic relapse and recurrence of duodenal ulceration at endoscopy within 6 months. The mean interval to relapse was 10 weeks. On the other hand, only 27 percent of patients had a recurrence during the 6-month period on low dose cimetidine therapy. No significant toxic or other side effects which could be attributed to the drug were observed.