“…There is little evidence on how professionals and patients appraise such tools and whether these are effective
• Psychological distress in this specific scenario must be accounted by sexual health professionals, given the strong comorbidity between emotional disorders and sexual dysfunction | √ | √ | | Ruprecht et al 2020 43 | USA | Patient Survey | • Marginalized populations experienced significant disparities in COVID-19 exposure, susceptibility, and treatment access, as well as in psychosocial effects of the pandemic • Notably, Black and Latinx populations reported significant difficulties accessing food and supplies (p = 0.002) • Healthcare access disparities were also visible, with Black and Latinx respondents reporting significantly lower levels of access to a provider to see if COVID-19 testing would be appropriate (p = 0.013), medical services (p = 0.001), and use of telehealth for mental health services (p = 0.001) | | √ | √ | √ |
Purtle 2020 44 | USA | Expert Commentary | • There are specific aspects of the COVID-19 pandemic that could cause it to have disproportionately adverse impacts on the mental health of racial/ethnic minorities as well as low-income populations • Socially disadvantaged groups (e.g., racial/ethnic minorities, people with low income) will experience more psychiatric morbidity related to the pandemic than advantaged groups. • The origins of these disparities are structural in nature • Historically produced arrangements of power and privilege provide socially advantaged groups with more resources to limit their exposure to, and cope with, stressors caused by disaster | | √ | √ | √ |
Ibrahimi et al 2020 45 | USA | Expert Commentary | • COVID-19 has unveiled the distressful reality of racial disparity in the US, with African Americans bearing a disproportionate burden of morbidity and mortality due to COVID-19 • Systemic racism is the primary operator of mental health disparity, which disproportionately affects African American families at all levels of the social ecological model • Programs tailored towards reducing the disproportionate detrimental effects of COVID-19 on the mental health of African Americans need to be culturally appropriate and consider the nuances of systemic racism, discrimination, and other institutionalized biases | | √ | √ | √ |
Burnett et al 2016 46 | USA | Literature Review | • Some reports suggest a relatively greater trend in African-American men than other ethnic groups toward obtaining clinical management for sexual dysfunction and experiencing psychosocial effects from it, lending additional support for the possibly greater effect of this problem in African-American men | | √ ... |
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