TY - JOUR
T1 - Outer-context determinants on the implementation of school-based interventions for LGBTQ+ adolescents
AU - Shattuck, Daniel
AU - Willging, Cathleen E.
AU - Peterson, Jeffery
AU - Ramos, Mary M.
N1 - © The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/1/1
Y1 - 2024/1/1
N2 - Background: Schools are critical venues for supporting LGBTQ+ youth well-being. Implementing LGBTQ-supportive practices can decrease experiences of stigmatization, discrimination, and victimization that lead to adverse mental health outcomes like anxiety, depression, and suicidality. However, schools are also subject to a wide range of outer-context pressures that may influence their priorities and implementation of LGBTQ-supportive practices. We assessed the role of emergent outer-context determinants in the context of a 5-year cluster randomized controlled trial to study the implementation of LGBTQ-supportive evidence-informed practices (EIPs) in New Mexico high schools. Method: Using an iterative coding approach, we analyzed qualitative data from annual interviews with school professionals involved in EIP implementation efforts. Results: The analysis yielded three categories of outer-context determinants that created challenges and opportunities for implementation: (a) social barriers related to heterocentrism, cisgenderism, and religious conservatism; (b) local, state, and national policy and political discourse; and (c) crisis events. Conclusions: By exploring the implications of outer-context determinants for the uptake of LGBTQ-supportive practices, we demonstrate that these elements are dynamic—not simply reducible to barriers or facilitators—and that assessing outer-context determinants shaping implementation environments is crucial for addressing LGBTQ health equity.
AB - Background: Schools are critical venues for supporting LGBTQ+ youth well-being. Implementing LGBTQ-supportive practices can decrease experiences of stigmatization, discrimination, and victimization that lead to adverse mental health outcomes like anxiety, depression, and suicidality. However, schools are also subject to a wide range of outer-context pressures that may influence their priorities and implementation of LGBTQ-supportive practices. We assessed the role of emergent outer-context determinants in the context of a 5-year cluster randomized controlled trial to study the implementation of LGBTQ-supportive evidence-informed practices (EIPs) in New Mexico high schools. Method: Using an iterative coding approach, we analyzed qualitative data from annual interviews with school professionals involved in EIP implementation efforts. Results: The analysis yielded three categories of outer-context determinants that created challenges and opportunities for implementation: (a) social barriers related to heterocentrism, cisgenderism, and religious conservatism; (b) local, state, and national policy and political discourse; and (c) crisis events. Conclusions: By exploring the implications of outer-context determinants for the uptake of LGBTQ-supportive practices, we demonstrate that these elements are dynamic—not simply reducible to barriers or facilitators—and that assessing outer-context determinants shaping implementation environments is crucial for addressing LGBTQ health equity.
KW - adolescent health
KW - health equity
KW - implementation science
KW - school health
KW - sexual and gender minority health
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85191518260&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/26334895241249417
DO - 10.1177/26334895241249417
M3 - Article
C2 - 38666140
AN - SCOPUS:85191518260
SN - 2633-4895
VL - 5
SP - 26334895241249417
JO - Implementation Research and Practice
JF - Implementation Research and Practice
ER -