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LGBTQ+ Loss and Grief in a Cis-Heteronormative Pandemic: A Qualitative Evidence Synthesis of the COVID-19 Literature

Version 2 2024-06-05, 07:15
Version 1 2023-02-08, 05:03
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-05, 07:15 authored by James LucasJames Lucas, Stephane BouchouchaStephane Bouchoucha, R Afrouz, Kirk ReedKirk Reed, SL Brennan-Olsen
LGBTQ+ people are no stranger to loss and grief, particularly during times of pandemic such as the 1980s–90s HIV/AIDS pandemic and now, the COVID-19 pandemic. Current COVID-19 loss and grief research remains relatively silent on LGBTQ+ peoples’ loss and grief experiences. The aim of this research was to conduct a qualitative evidence synthesis of LGBTQ+ people’s COVID-19 loss and grief experiences reported in the literature. A systematic search and inclusion strategy identified 22 relevant articles for review. Inductive thematic synthesis resulted in five loss-focused themes across the articles: (1) loss of work and livelihood, (2) loss of social and kinship connection, (3) loss of LGBTQ+ community connection, (4) loss of physical and mental health supports and (5) loss of LGBTQ+ identity authenticity, affirmation and visibility. Discussion of these themes highlights the many layered and often disenfranchised nature of LGBTQ+ people’s loss during the COVID-19 pandemic.

History

Journal

Qualitative Health Research

Volume

32

Pagination

2102-2117

Location

United States

ISSN

1049-7323

eISSN

1552-7557

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

14

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC