open access

Vol 6, No 3 (2021)
Research paper
Published online: 2021-07-12
Get Citation

Assessment of the homophobic attitudes of the emergency department professionals: descriptive survey study

Mehmet Murat Oktay1, Mustafa Boğan2, Mustafa Sabak3, Hasan Sultanoğlu2, Hüseyin Narcı4
·
Disaster Emerg Med J 2021;6(3):119-124.
Affiliations
  1. Vocational High School, Hasan Kalyoncu University, Gaziantep, Turkey
  2. Emergency Department of Düzce University, Düzce, Turkey
  3. Department of Emergency Medicine, Nizip State Hospital, Gaziantep, Türkiye
  4. Emergency Department of Mersin University, Mersin, Turkey, Mersin Üniversitesi Kampüsü Yenişehir, 33343 Mersin, Türkiye

open access

Vol 6, No 3 (2021)
ORIGINAL ARTICLES
Published online: 2021-07-12

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Homophobia can be defined as fear, hatred, discrimination, and even violent feelings and behaviors developed towards individuals with sexual orientations different to other individuals of the same sex. Our study was conducted to assess the levels of homophobia among emergency medicine specialists, practitioners, nurses, and other health care professionals working in the emergency department (ED).  

MATERIAL AND METHODS: This study was carried out as a descriptive survey study in Gaziantep, Turkey, between July 7, 2018 and August 30, 2018. The data was collected using a Google survey form link sent to volunteers via mobile phone.  

RESULTS: The mean age of the patients was 30.85 ± 7 (20–53) years. While 77.5% (n = 117) of the volunteers who participated in the study worked in state hospitals, 11.3% (n = 17) worked in a private hospital. The Cronbach’s Alpha value was calculated as 92.3 and the scale average score as 85.42 ± 12.33 as a result of the evaluation of the Likert-type scale. While 69 (45.7%) people were lower in homophobia, 82 (54.3%) were higher in homophobia. A difference in attitudes towards homosexuals was only observed between those who had a homosexual friend or acquaintance and those who did not (p = 0.009). Accordingly, those with homosexual friends were determined to be less homophobic. On the other hand, it was observed that those with a homosexual acquaintance and those with no homosexual acquaintances were more homophobic.  

CONCLUSION: In our study, it was shown that emergency medicine specialists and other health professionals working in the ED exhibit high levels of homophobic attitudes and behaviors. Including lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex (LGBT-I) health problems in in-service trainings may contribute to the improvement of homophobic attitudes.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Homophobia can be defined as fear, hatred, discrimination, and even violent feelings and behaviors developed towards individuals with sexual orientations different to other individuals of the same sex. Our study was conducted to assess the levels of homophobia among emergency medicine specialists, practitioners, nurses, and other health care professionals working in the emergency department (ED).  

MATERIAL AND METHODS: This study was carried out as a descriptive survey study in Gaziantep, Turkey, between July 7, 2018 and August 30, 2018. The data was collected using a Google survey form link sent to volunteers via mobile phone.  

RESULTS: The mean age of the patients was 30.85 ± 7 (20–53) years. While 77.5% (n = 117) of the volunteers who participated in the study worked in state hospitals, 11.3% (n = 17) worked in a private hospital. The Cronbach’s Alpha value was calculated as 92.3 and the scale average score as 85.42 ± 12.33 as a result of the evaluation of the Likert-type scale. While 69 (45.7%) people were lower in homophobia, 82 (54.3%) were higher in homophobia. A difference in attitudes towards homosexuals was only observed between those who had a homosexual friend or acquaintance and those who did not (p = 0.009). Accordingly, those with homosexual friends were determined to be less homophobic. On the other hand, it was observed that those with a homosexual acquaintance and those with no homosexual acquaintances were more homophobic.  

CONCLUSION: In our study, it was shown that emergency medicine specialists and other health professionals working in the ED exhibit high levels of homophobic attitudes and behaviors. Including lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex (LGBT-I) health problems in in-service trainings may contribute to the improvement of homophobic attitudes.

Get Citation

Keywords

attitude of health personnel, homophobia, emergency service, hospital

About this article
Title

Assessment of the homophobic attitudes of the emergency department professionals: descriptive survey study

Journal

Disaster and Emergency Medicine Journal

Issue

Vol 6, No 3 (2021)

Article type

Research paper

Pages

119-124

Published online

2021-07-12

Page views

6409

Article views/downloads

558

DOI

10.5603/DEMJ.a2021.0018

Bibliographic record

Disaster Emerg Med J 2021;6(3):119-124.

Keywords

attitude of health personnel
homophobia
emergency service
hospital

Authors

Mehmet Murat Oktay
Mustafa Boğan
Mustafa Sabak
Hasan Sultanoğlu
Hüseyin Narcı

References (28)
  1. Herek GM. Beyond "homophobia": a social psychological perspective on attitudes toward lesbians and gay men. J Homosex. 1984; 10(1-2): 1–21.
  2. Fisher AD, Castellini G, Ristori J, et al. Who has the worst attitudes toward sexual minorities? Comparison of transphobia and homophobia levels in gender dysphoric individuals, the general population and health care providers. J Endocrinol Invest. 2017; 40(3): 263–273.
  3. Transgender Task Force Report. PsycEXTRA Dataset. 2000.
  4. Sakalli N, Uğurlu O. Effects of social contact with homosexuals on heterosexual Turkish university students' attitudes towards homosexuality. J Homosex. 2001; 42(1): 53–62.
  5. Orta İM, Camgöz SMA. General Overvıew On Research On Homophobia In Turkey. DTCF Dergisi 58. 2018; 1: 409–39.
  6. Artan T, Özkan AO. Assessment Of Homophobia Levels Of Staff Employed For ASDEP. Journal of Social and Humanities Sciences Research. 2018; 5: 1501–14.
  7. Lamontagne E, d'Elbée M, Ross MW, et al. A socioecological measurement of homophobia for all countries and its public health impact. Eur J Public Health. 2018; 28(5): 967–972.
  8. Aslan F, Şahin NE, Emiroğlu ON. Turkish nurse educators knowledge regarding LGBT health and their level of homophobia: A descriptive-cross sectional study. Nurse Educ Today. 2019; 76: 216–221.
  9. Schlub SM, Martsolf DS. Orthodox Christian beliefs and homophobia in baccalaureate nursing students. Nurs Forum. 1999; 34(2): 15–22.
  10. Jones MK, Pynor RA, Sullivan G, et al. A study of attitudes toward sexuality issues among health care students in australia. J Lesbian Stud. 2002; 6(3-4): 73–86.
  11. Röndahl G, Innala S, Carlsson M. Nursing staff and nursing students' emotions towards homosexual patients and their wish to refrain from nursing, if the option existed. Scand J Caring Sci. 2004; 18(1): 19–26.
  12. Campo A, Herazo E. Homophobia among nursing students. Revista da Escola de Enfermagem da USP. 2010; 44(3): 826–30.
  13. Rose L. Homophobia among doctors. BMJ. 1994; 308(6928): 586–587.
  14. Sabin JA, Riskind RG, Nosek BA. Health Care Providers' Implicit and Explicit Attitudes Toward Lesbian Women and Gay Men. Am J Public Health. 2015; 105(9): 1831–1841.
  15. Türk Psikoloji Yazıları. .
  16. Cirakoğlu OC. Perception of homosexuality among Turkish university students: the roles of labels, gender, and prior contact. J Soc Psychol. 2006; 146(3): 293–305.
  17. Basow S, Johnson K. Sex Roles. 2000; 42(5/6): 391–404.
  18. Kroska A. Gender Ideology and Gender Role Ideology. The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology. 2007.
  19. Yertutanol FD, Candansayar S, Seydaoğlu G. Homophobia in Health Professionals in Ankara, Turkey: Developing a Scale. Transcult Psychiatry. 2019; 56(6): 1191–1217.
  20. Lewis G. Black-White Differences in Attitudes toward Homosexuality and Gay Rights. Public Opinion Quarterly. 2003; 67(1): 59–78.
  21. Brewer PR. Public Opinion About Gay Rights and Gay Marriage. International Journal of Public Opinion Research. 2014; 26(3): 279–282.
  22. Herek G. Sexual Prejudice. Encyclopedia of Human Relationships. .
  23. Smith DM, Mathews WmC. Physicians' attitudes toward homosexuality and HIV: survey of a California Medical Society- revisited (PATHH-II). J Homosex. 2007; 52(3-4): 1–9.
  24. Eaton LA, Driffin DD, Kegler C, et al. The role of stigma and medical mistrust in the routine health care engagement of black men who have sex with men. Am J Public Health. 2015; 105(2): e75–e82.
  25. Anderssen N. Does contact with lesbians and gays lead to friendlier attitudes? a two year longitudinal study. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology. 2002; 12(2): 124–136.
  26. Dinkel S, Patzel B, McGuire MJ, et al. Measures of homophobia among nursing students and faculty: a Midwestern perspective. Int J Nurs Educ Scholarsh. 2007; 4: Article24.
  27. Homosexuality. Conscience and Parliament. 2012: 32–48.
  28. Mestvirishvili M, Zurabishvili T, Iakobidze T, et al. Exploring Homophobia in Tbilisi, Georgia. J Homosex. 2017; 64(9): 1253–1282.

Regulations

Important: This website uses cookies. More >>

The cookies allow us to identify your computer and find out details about your last visit. They remembering whether you've visited the site before, so that you remain logged in - or to help us work out how many new website visitors we get each month. Most internet browsers accept cookies automatically, but you can change the settings of your browser to erase cookies or prevent automatic acceptance if you prefer.

By VM Media Group sp. z o.o., ul. Świętokrzyska 73, 80–180 Gdańsk, Poland
tel.:+48 58 320 94 94, fax:+48 58 320 94 60, e-mail: viamedica@viamedica.pl