To celebrate Pride Month 2022, we’ve teamed up with DigitalHealth.London NHS Navigator Brett Hatfield to look at some practical steps anyone working in health and care can take to make health tech more accessible and inclusive to the LGBTQI+ community.
Whether you are a clinician or commissioner, member of the LGBTQI+ community yourself or aspiring ally, any person working in the health and care system can contribute to making health and care technology better for people who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer or intersex.
In this blog we’ll be looking at 5 steps anyone can take to get started with LGBTQI+ inclusive innovation – if you’ve got additional ideas or resources we’d love to hear from you.
1. Learn about the health experiences of LGBTQI+ people
People from the LGBTQI+ community have faced – and continue to face – specific barriers and challenges when it comes to health. In recent years, progress has been made on understanding some of these challenges and starting to address some of the underlying issues that have resulted in health inequalities.
• Read Stonewall’s “LGBT in Britain Health Report” (PDF)
On the other side of the therapeutic relationship, many LGBTQI+ NHS staff also sadly continue to experience discrimination, with one recent survey revealing that more than a quarter of lesbian, gay or bisexual staff had received bullying or poor treatment from their colleagues.
• Read The King’s Fund blog “Supporting LGBTQ+ NHS Staff”
2. Join a community
We’ve listed a handful of relevant communities below, but many more can be found by searching the web:
• Intertech
• Lesbians who Tech
• Guy’s and St Thomas’ LGBT+ Network
• Pride in STEM
• LGBT+ Future NHS workspace
3. Be data-savvy
Monitoring refers to the collection of consistent data about service users to help identify population health risks, inequalities, or opportunities for service improvement. In many instances, having information about characteristics such as sex, gender or sexual orientation provides vital insight that makes a real difference to service users.
Whilst monitoring (or data collection for other purposes, such as for clinical risk management) is important, the way that this monitoring is conducted is also important to consider for inclusive services. For example, if required, methods for collecting data around sex and gender should be designed inclusively to avoid excluding people who identify as trans or non-binary.
• Read “If we’re not counted, we don’t count” (PDF), a guide from the LGBT Foundation about monitoring best practice
• Read NHS Digital guidance on monitoring
• Read “Let’s talk about sex*”, a blog from former NHS Digital service designer Emma Parnell about how her personal connection to the trans community helped to shape a more inclusive Covid-19 vaccination booking service
4. Get inspired
• LVNDR, who are pioneering a new approach to inclusive and personalised healthcare that integrates with existing services
• Love Positive, who are exploring new approaches to more inclusive and body positive relationship and sex education programmes
• Plume, who are improving access to gender-affirming therapies and supporting trans people in the US
• Helsa Helps, who deliver Empathy VR (virtual reality) training combined with psychological mechanisms to immerse users in stories depicting stigma and discrimination towards minority people, experienced through the eyes of the stigmatised, addressing homophobia, transphobia, racism, and sexism
• Kalda, who offer a smartphone app for LGBTIQ+ mental wellbeing. They provide users with access to on-demand LGBTQIA+ courses and mindfulness sessions addressing some of the stressors that come with being LGBTQIA+
Note: these apps and services may have not been formally evaluated or assessed by the Health Innovation Network and their inclusion in this article should not be considered an endorsement for use.
Don’t forget that if you’re an innovator looking for support, you can get in touch with us!
5. Challenge yourself
• Read “Challenging the default“, an NHS Employers blog from Dr Michael Brady
• Read “Why pronouns matter“, an NHS Confed blog from Dr Jamie Willo
• Read “7 ways you can be an LGBTQ ally at work“, an article from Stonewall












