If We Ask, What They Might Tell: Clinical Assessment Lessons from LGBT Military Personnel Post-DADT

Type
Summary
Following repeal of the Don’t Ask Don’t Tell Policy, nearly one million lesbian, gay, and bisexual veterans and service members may increasingly seek access to Veterans Affairs services (G. Gates, 2004; G. J. Gates, 2010). Limited data exist regarding lesbian, gay,bisexual, transgender (LGBT) military personnel posing a unique challenge to clinicians and healthcare systems serving veterans with evidence-based and culturally relevant practice. In an effort to fill this information void, participatory program evaluation is used to inform recommendations for LGBT-affirmative health care systems change in a post-DADT world.
Citation
Ramirez, M. H., Rogers, S. J., Johnson, H. L., Banks, J., Seay, W. P., Tinsley, B. L., & Grant, A. W. (2013). If we ask, what they might tell: clinical assessment lessons from LGBT military personnel post-DADT. Journal of homosexuality, 60(2-3), 401-418.