This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

The Royal College of GPs has launched a suite of e-learning resources to support GPs and other healthcare professionals to deliver the best possible care for LGBT patients.
According to the latest National LGBT survey, the community can experience inequalities when accessing healthcare. In 2017, there were an estimated 1.1 million people in the UK, aged 16 and over, who identified as LGBT.
In partnership with the Government Equalities Office (GEO), the six new online learning modules, as well as podcasts and screencasts, aim to ensure users have access to evidence-based, up-to-date information to deal with the unique health needs LGBT patients may have.
The six modules are: Inequality in healthcare provision - the current state of LGBT health: providing a current overview of LGBT health in the UK, identifying health inequalities and exploring how these could be improved; Creating an inclusive primary care environment: exploring changes that can be made both in the GP surgery and during the GP-patient consultation to have a positive impact on LGBT patient outcomes; Mental health and suicide prevention: highlighting health, wellbeing and service provision issues affecting LGBT patients and looking at how they can be addressed; Screening issues in the LGBT population: exploring issues around screening in the LGBT community, specifically best practice for the cervical smear process in trans men and non-binary people with a cervix; The older LGBT patient: exploring the unique health needs of older LGBT patients; and Sexual and reproductive needs of the LGBT community: exploring sexual and reproductive health needs of LGBT patients, including advice for LGB women who wish to conceive and the use of pre and post exposure prophylaxis to prevent HIV.
Professor Martin Marshall, Chair of the RCGP, said: "GPs are highly-trained to deliver high-quality, non-judgemental care to all our patients. We want to ensure LGBT patients receive good, safe care, and that they can access our services when they need them. We hope that the new e-learning resources – based on the latest clinical evidence – will prove valuable in supporting frontline GPs and our teams to deliver the best possible care for every LGBT patient we see."
This story was first published in digitalhealth.net
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