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      Measuring Discomfort in Health Research Relative to Everyday Events and Routine Care: An Application to Sexual and Gender Minority Youth

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      Journal of Adolescent Health
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          Understanding how sexual and gender minority (SGM) youth’s comfort with research procedures compares to their comfort with everyday experiences and routine healthcare can help calibrate decisions about whether a study meets minimal risk criteria. We sought to quantify SGM adolescents’ comfort with sexual health research relative to everyday events and activities often cited as benchmarks of minimal risk. 616 SGM adolescents in the USA ( M age = 15.7, 41.7% racial/ethnic minority) completed online survey questions assessing sexual behavior, SGM identity, and a 53-item Measure of Adolescent Comfort with Clinical, Research, and Everyday Events (MACCREE) that assessed comfort on a 7-point scale (1=extremely uncomfortable; 7=extremely comfortable). The Everyday Events for Adolescents domain had the lowest mean comfort score ( M =3.49, SD =0.58) and was significantly lower than the Routine Medical and Psychological Tests domain ( M =4.43, SD =0.92) and the HIV/Sexual Health Research Procedures domain ( M =4.19, SD =0.94). Eleven out of 17 items on the HIV/Sexual Health Research Procedures domain were ranked as more comfortable than a neutral rating of “neither comfortable nor uncomfortable.” Higher levels of parental acceptance predicted greater levels of comfort across all four domains of the MACCREE. Participants who were out to their parents expressed greater comfort with both SGM Identity and Sexual Health-related procedures and events as well as HIV/Sexual Health Research Procedures. Overall participants expressed equal or more comfort with research procedures than with everyday life experiences. These findings indicate that common sexual health research procedures may meet minimal risk criteria among SGM adolescent populations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Journal of Adolescent Health
          Journal of Adolescent Health
          Elsevier BV
          1054139X
          January 2019
          January 2019
          Article
          10.1016/j.jadohealth.2018.10.293
          6478526
          30612810
          5845f596-1e18-4d21-9596-80d5019e6e2c
          © 2019

          https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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