Rainbow Health 101

Key points:

  • Providing more inclusive care for the Rainbow Community starts with the first points of contact to your practice–your website, your waiting room, your enrolment forms, and every staff member a patient encounters.  Do the mahi and make sure your practice and your staff are well trained to provide inclusive and accessible care to our LGBTQIA+ whānau

  • Don’t make assumptions–you can’t tell someone is gay or trans just by looking at them and you also cannot assume you know their gender or pronouns either.  You must be comfortable asking questions!

  • Ask questions respectfully and for information and clarification purposes but don’t rely on your patients to educate you.  You should be doing that yourself (and that’s what we’re here for!)

  • If you’ve met one rainbow patient you’ve met…one rainbow patient.  Don’t assume that everyone thinks, feels, looks, or acts the same way.

  • Don’t confuse sexual orientation with gender identity. The former refers to the types (gender/sex) of people someone is attracted to or wants to have sexual relationships with. The latter refers to how a person identifies and experiences their own gender.

Definitions

Making your practice Rainbow-friendly

From the very first point of contact with your practice, LGBTQIA+ patients will be on the lookout for signs of safety and acceptance.  They need to know that all staff, including receptionists, nurses, doctors, and anyone else they might encounter are going to treat them with respect and have at least some awareness of how to provide appropriate care.  Unfortunately, many LGBTQIA+ patients are so accustomed to feeling marginalised, excluded, misunderstood, or outright discriminated against.