TY - JOUR
T1 - An exploration of women's sexual and reproductive health following traumatic brain injury
AU - O'Reilly, Kate
AU - Wilson, Nathan J.
AU - Kwok, Cannas
AU - Peters, Kath
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Aims and objectives To develop a gendered understanding of sexual and reproductive health for Australian women following traumatic brain injury. Background The intersection of socialised normative expectations of sexuality and sexual health, and being a woman with a disability, can lead to inequity and a misconception that a woman with a disability is asexual. Design An equal weighting concurrent mixed methods design. Methods Twenty women participated in conversational interviews and 49 women completed an online survey. Equal priority was given to both qualitative and quantitative data which were collected concurrently. A separate analysis of data was performed and was later merged. This paper follows the Good Reporting of a Mixed Methods Study guidelines for reporting mixed methods research. Results Women reported changes in menstruation, reproduction, and sexual activity. Results identified that following traumatic brain injury, routine reproductive, and sexual health screening were neglected. Women revealed a personal reticence to discuss sexual health in a holistic sense and appeared more comfortable discussing reproductive health rather than sex for pleasure. Additionally, they perceived there was a reticence by clinicians to discuss sexual health as part of their rehabilitation. Conclusions Shifting the focus to be on women's health through periodic comprehensive health assessments is essential to the delivery of holistic health care. These results can inform the provision of sexual health, sexual safety, and sexual assertiveness education and training for women and girls within a rehabilitation framework and would be a way of addressing what women in this study identified as an unmet need. Relevance to Clinical Practice Reproductive and sexual health are important elements of routine comprehensive health screening for women. Nurses are well positioned to begin discussions regarding sexual agency, sexual, and reproductive health to ensure person-centred care.
AB - Aims and objectives To develop a gendered understanding of sexual and reproductive health for Australian women following traumatic brain injury. Background The intersection of socialised normative expectations of sexuality and sexual health, and being a woman with a disability, can lead to inequity and a misconception that a woman with a disability is asexual. Design An equal weighting concurrent mixed methods design. Methods Twenty women participated in conversational interviews and 49 women completed an online survey. Equal priority was given to both qualitative and quantitative data which were collected concurrently. A separate analysis of data was performed and was later merged. This paper follows the Good Reporting of a Mixed Methods Study guidelines for reporting mixed methods research. Results Women reported changes in menstruation, reproduction, and sexual activity. Results identified that following traumatic brain injury, routine reproductive, and sexual health screening were neglected. Women revealed a personal reticence to discuss sexual health in a holistic sense and appeared more comfortable discussing reproductive health rather than sex for pleasure. Additionally, they perceived there was a reticence by clinicians to discuss sexual health as part of their rehabilitation. Conclusions Shifting the focus to be on women's health through periodic comprehensive health assessments is essential to the delivery of holistic health care. These results can inform the provision of sexual health, sexual safety, and sexual assertiveness education and training for women and girls within a rehabilitation framework and would be a way of addressing what women in this study identified as an unmet need. Relevance to Clinical Practice Reproductive and sexual health are important elements of routine comprehensive health screening for women. Nurses are well positioned to begin discussions regarding sexual agency, sexual, and reproductive health to ensure person-centred care.
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:68572
U2 - 10.1111/jocn.16510
DO - 10.1111/jocn.16510
M3 - Article
VL - 32
SP - 901
EP - 911
JO - Journal of Clinical Nursing
JF - Journal of Clinical Nursing
IS - 45448
ER -