An Intersectional Approach to Services and Care for LGBT Elders

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GE NERATIONS – Journal of the American Society on Aging

An Intersectional Approach to Services and Care for LGBT Elders By Michael Adams

Addressing the invisibility of LGBT aging concerns requires a multi-faceted approach that takes into account the heterogeneity of LGBT elders’ experience.

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n recent years, LGBT aging issues have started emerging from near uniform invisibility in the LGBT and aging sectors to achieve growing, if modest, levels of attention. Some notable indicators of progress include increased attention to LGBT cultural competence in aging service programs; the emergence of local initiatives—including elder services and housing— designed with LGBT older adults in mind; the first official LGBT delegate at the White House Conference on Aging in 2005; the first federal grants to LGBT elder service programs in the early years of the Obama Administration; the launch of the National Resource Center on LGBT Aging as a partnership between the federal Administration on Aging and Services & Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE) in 2010; and public efforts by the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development in 2015 to eradicate anti-LGBT discrimination in federally supported senior housing. The predominant narrative in today’s limited literature on LGBT elders fueling this progress focuses on the unique challenges faced by LGBT

older adults as a group relative to older Americans in general, and how those challenges link to the sociocultural context of anti-LGBT bias and practices. Generally this narrative has not dwelled on the heterogeneity and rich nuances manifest across the breadth of aging and LGBT experiences. This is due partly to a severe scarcity of data to illuminate different experiences across social positions (race, gender, gender identity, socioeconomic status, etc.) among LGBT older adults. This narrative also reflects an effort to crack the wall of invisibility that has surrounded LGBT aging by delivering a consistent, understandable message that could penetrate persistent indifference. This article calls for a new, intersectional approach that recognizes and embraces the multiple social identities and experiences that shape the lives of the more than 3 million LGBT older Americans. This approach would take into account the reality that women, people of color, transgender people, and other social groups under the LGBT umbrella have differing life experiences and different interactions with social

abstract A one-dimensional analysis of LGBT aging has increased attention to LGBT elder needs. But many elders’ lives are shaped not just by being LGBT, but also by race, gender, and other social conditions. The time has come for an intersectional approach that takes into full account all of these life experiences. This approach will prove invaluable to practitioners committed to working effectively with vulnerable older adults. It also will fuel policy progress by supporting shared agendas and advocacy based on the intersecting interests of diverse elder communities. | key words: LGBT aging, intersectional approach, diversity among LGBT populations

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Copyright © 2016 American Society on Aging; all rights reserved. This article may not be duplicated, reprinted or distributed in any form without written permission from the publisher: American Society on Aging, 575 Market St., Suite 2100, San Francisco, CA 94105-2869; e-mail: info@asaging.org. For information about ASA’s publications visit www.asaging.org/publications. For information about ASA membership visit www.asaging.org/join.


LGBT Aging

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and economic power structures that influence their needs for aging services, the resiliencies and perspectives they bring to bear as they age, and their stakes in policies that address aging. An intersectional approach has important implications for practitioners in the field of aging, for social change agents, and for policy makers.

The One-Dimensional Analysis

This vulnerability in the later years is exacerbated by health disparities as explored by Fredriksen-Goldsen and colleagues in their report on disparities and resilience (FredriksenGoldsen et al., 2011). LGBT older adults are at higher risk for poor mental health, have higher rates of disability and HIV infection (gay and bisexual men and transgender women), and more physical limitations (Fredriksen-Goldsen et al., 2014). Moreover, LGBT elders face heightened risk of financial insecurity in their later years due to historical inequities in benefits like Social Security, and lower retirement savings reflective of a lifetime of wage and benefits discrimination (SAGE and MAP, 2010; Diverse Elders Coalition [DEC], 2012).

Some strides have been made in beginning an intersectional analysis of LGBT aging. Notable contributions include the first needs assessment of Latino LGBT older adults, published by the National Hispanic Council on Aging (NHCOA) in 2014 (NHCOA, 2014); the pioneering work of Karen Fredriksen-Goldsen and her colleagues on health disparities and health equity (Fredriksen-Goldsen et al., 2014); ‘Weak support networks and communitySAGE’s groundbreaking 2013 report on based supports can result in prematurely Health Equity & LGBT Elders of Color (SAGE, 2013); and the collaborative resorting to institutional care.’ analysis of transgender aging underSocial isolation, thin support networks, taken by the National Center on Transgender health disparities, and financial insecurity reEquality (NCTE) and SAGE (2012). sult in a greater need for aging and long-term While these early efforts focus attention on support services on the part of LGBT elders. how social positions based on race and gender identity help shape the experiences of members However, these services are less available to of LGBT communities as they age, the predomi- LGBT elders because of discrimination and a lack of cultural competency on the part of sernant narrative has nonetheless largely focused vice providers. As a result, many LGBT older on a uni-dimensional analysis of LGBT elder lives. This analysis calls out unique challenges as adults report that they avoid accessing services definitional for the LGBT aging experience. The for fear of mistreatment. LGBT elders who access services sometimes decide to re-enter the analysis, while limited, still provides an initial closet in an attempt to avoid discrimination. knowledge base for practitioners and policy Weak support networks and community-based makers who historically have disregarded the supports can result in prematurely resorting to experiences and needs of LGBT older adults. institutional care (SAGE and MAP, 2010). Research and on-the-ground experience At SAGE, we repeatedly encounter LGBT show that LGBT older adults as a group are at elders for whom this situation leads to nursing high risk for severe social isolation. They are home placement far earlier than it would have as much as four times less likely to be parents, taken place if they had back-up supports in the twice as likely to be single and live alone, and significantly more likely to be disconnected from home. Without advocates, LGBT elders often are at the mercy of a healthcare system that rewards their families of origin. The relative absence of expediency over person-centered care. This is partners, adult children, and traditionally dea deeply troubling pattern, not only because it fined family members often results in thin sodenies LGBT elders the opportunity to age in cial and care networks (SAGE and MAP, 2010). Copyright © 2016 American Society on Aging; all rights reserved. This article may not be duplicated, reprinted or distributed in any form without written permission from the publisher: American Society on Aging, 575 Market St., Suite 2100, San Francisco, CA 94105-2869; e-mail: info@asaging.org. For information about ASA’s publications visit www.asaging.org/publications. For information about ASA membership visit www.asaging.org/join.

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place, but also because evidence indicates that the long-term-care sector may be the least prepared to effectively address the needs of LGBT people with culturally competent care (Justice in Aging, 2015).

rapidly. U.S. foreign-born older adults (ages 65 and older) increased from 3.3 million in 2000 to 4.6 million in 2010, a growth trend that is expected to continue (Population Reference Bureau [PRB], 2013). These statistics clearly demonstrate that in the decades ‘Older lesbian couples are significantly more ahead the demographics of likely to live in poverty than older heterosexual older Americans—both LGBT and non-LGBT—will shift couples and older gay male couples.’ substantially along race and ethnicity lines. This demographic shift would The predominant narrative assumes a not be so consequential for practitioners and homogeneous aging experience by LGBT older policy makers if the life experiences, service and adults, but that experience varies markedly care needs, and policy interests of the emerging depending upon race, gender, and other factors. majority of LGBT elders of color were identiA growing number of LGBT older adults, incal to those of white LGBT elders, who have cluding but not limited to LGBT elders of color, received most of the attention to date. But there elder lesbians, and transgender elders, live at is ample evidence indicating that the differing the intersection of two or more of these identisocial positions of LGBT elder sub-groups— ties. If we build an approach that focuses on which include but are not limited to people of these intersections, the analysis will be more color, women, and transgender people—link to textured and adhere more closely to the lived quite different life experiences and interactions experiences of the emerging majority of LGBT older adults. But apart from the general value of with social and economic power structures. These marked differences result in significantly shining a light on lives that have been rendered different needs and assets. invisible, why is bringing attention to the intersections so important? Disparities in financial security Poverty rates among elders of color are notably The Case for an Intersectional Approach higher than among white elders. While poverty The case for a more intersectional analysis that among white elder Americans stands at 6.8 pertakes into account LGBT elders’ heterogeneity cent, the poverty level is 63 percent for AIAN starts with demographics. elders, 18.7 percent for Latino elders, 17.3 percent for black elders, and 11.7 percent for AAPI elders Immigrant status, race, and ethnicity Approximately two in ten LGBT elders are per- (SAGE, 2013). Such disparities in financial security have sons of color; that number will grow to more been exacerbated by the effects of the Great than four in ten by 2050. Blacks make up Recession, with the median net worth of Latino approximately 9 percent of older Americans; households falling 66 percent from 2005 to 2009, that percentage will increase to 12 percent by and the median net worth for black households 2050. The comparable statistics are 7 percent falling 53 percent during the same time period. and 20 percent for Latino elders, 3 percent (By contrast, the median net worth for white and 9 percent for Asian American and Pacific households fell 16 percent during that time) Islander (AAPI) elders, and .5 percent and 1 percent for American Indian and Alaska Native (NHCOA, 2014). Poverty also tracks to gender in the United States. Data from the Williams (AIAN) older adults (SAGE, 2013). Similarly, Institute at UCLA indicate that older lesbian the number of immigrant elders is increasing

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Copyright © 2016 American Society on Aging; all rights reserved. This article may not be duplicated, reprinted or distributed in any form without written permission from the publisher: American Society on Aging, 575 Market St., Suite 2100, San Francisco, CA 94105-2869; e-mail: info@asaging.org. For information about ASA’s publications visit www.asaging.org/publications. For information about ASA membership visit www.asaging.org/join.


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have found differing dynamics and friendship networks among older women versus older men (Adams, Blieszner, and de Vries, 2000). The practice implications of this data require multiple approaches to program design. As an Disparities in Health Differential life experiences among LGBT elder example, recognizing that older lesbian- and bisexual-identified women create rich social sub-groups extend to health disparities. Black networks outside congregate settings, SAGE older adults are twice as likely as white older engaged a women’s program coordinator to act Americans to have Alzheimer’s and other deas liaison between those external networks and mentias; the rate for Latino older adults is 1.5 the organization’s group service programs. (SAGE, 2013). Latino older adults have much Assuming efforts to provide services, care, higher rates of diabetes (NHCOA, 2014). Black and Hispanic men are significantly more likely to and other opportunities to LGBT older adults seek to prioritize those elders with the greatest have HIV than white and AAPI men (NHCOA, economic and social need (a reasonable assump2014) (DEC, 2014). Lesbians and bisexual women have higher levels of obesity (Fredriksen- tion, given the prioritization of elders with greatest economic and social need by the Older Goldsen et al., 2014). Transgender older adults Americans Act), these efforts must be informed face an array of health risks and vulnerabilities and guided by an intersectional analysis that (SAGE and NCTE, 2012). LGBT aging service recognizes the distinct life experiences and practitioners recognize that translating these needs of LGBT elder sub-groups. Similarly, an disparities into effective program interventions asset-based approach to care and services that requires relevant approaches be developed for leverages the considerable resiliencies of LGBT each sub-group, and that culturally competent older adults will fall significantly short without community spaces are a critical component to an intersectional approach that recognizes positive health outcomes. the distinct resiliencies of LGBT elder subpopulations. The relevance of an intersectional Sub-groups’ range of assets, resiliencies It is not only the existence of deeper deficits that approach to LGBT aging is founded in the importance of both addressing vulnerability and makes the case for deploying an intersectional approach: recent research and experience on the leveraging resiliency. ground indicate that sub-populations also bring different assets and resiliencies that can be levImplications for Practitioners eraged in service and policy interventions. A Practitioners in the field of aging who are 2014 national SAGE study of LGBT older adults interested in addressing the needs of the most found that African American LGBT elders are vulnerable LGBT elders, and in leveraging elder three times as likely as white and Latino elders resiliencies and assets, should take an intersecto report churches or faith organizations as tional approach to their work. But what exactly part of their support system (SAGE, 2014). The does this mean? National Hispanic Council on Aging has documented heightened levels of emphasis on traA holistic approach ditional family support by Latino older adults One important component is imbuing all aging (NHCOA, 2014). Fredriksen-Goldsen and services with a holistic approach to cultural colleagues have noted larger social networks competence. With regard to LGBT aging, the among transgender people than among cisearly approach to cultural competence has gender (non-transgender) people (Fredriksenfocused on educating service and care providers Goldsen et al., 2014), while other researchers to develop a deeper understanding of the life couples are much more likely to live in poverty than older heterosexual couples and older gay male couples (Albelda et al., 2009).

Copyright © 2016 American Society on Aging; all rights reserved. This article may not be duplicated, reprinted or distributed in any form without written permission from the publisher: American Society on Aging, 575 Market St., Suite 2100, San Francisco, CA 94105-2869; e-mail: info@asaging.org. For information about ASA’s publications visit www.asaging.org/publications. For information about ASA membership visit www.asaging.org/join.

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experiences of LGBT older adults and how to effectively and respectfully address LGBT elders’ needs. An intersectional approach extends cultural competence beyond this uni-dimensional approach to weave in race, gender, ability and-or disability, and other social positions that have important impacts on elders’ life experiences. In 2015, SAGE embarked on a racial equity initiative designed to increase cultural competence by training its staff and board of directors in a shared framework around race and white privilege, and how these social conditions play out for SAGE’s elder constituents and LGBT aging programs. This more holistic approach to cultural competence is a beginning, not an end, with much learning required along the way. It is expected to result in new program and organizational practices that will be relevant to a fuller diversity of LGBT elder communities. Tailored programs and services A second practice receiving increased attention in the LGBT aging field is the development of programs and services tailored to the specific needs of elder sub-groups and that leverage these groups’ unique assets. GRIOT Circle (see article by Kim et al., page 49), the country’s only service provider founded specifically to address the needs of LGBT elders of color, has pioneered African-influenced woodcarving classes and the Ujamaa Men’s Group for the predominantly black LGBT elder population the agency serves. SAGE Harlem has designed community-led workshops on theological reflection to capitalize on strong faith connections among many African American LGBT elders. To be effective, designs for tailored programs must be heavily informed by feedback from diverse LGBT elders. Healing Detroit and the LGBT Older Adult Coalition of Metro Detroit simultaneously held town hall meetings for LGBT elders to share dialogue about their perspectives and needs (Lipscomb and LaTosch, 2012). Healing Detroit attendees primarily were African American Detroit residents, while the LGBT Older Adult Coalition attendees predomi-

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nantly were white elders from surrounding suburbs. Certain concerns were common to both —social isolation, the need for LGBT-welcoming senior services, and financial worries. At the same time, the African American elders who attended the Healing Detroit convening put their strongest emphasis on the need to address employment challenges for older adults. Access A third consideration for practitioners involves geography and equitable access. LGBT elder services, like LGBT community-based services in general, have for the most part been located in predominantly white “gayborhoods” in urban areas or in similar locations frequented predominantly by LGBT white people. An intersectional approach to LGBT elder services recognizes that we live in a society marked by high levels of residential segregation by race, and that traveling long distances to access senior services simply is not an option for many LGBT elders. Given these realities, LGBTfriendly elder services must be readily available in neighborhoods in which many people of color reside, and these services must be available through community providers who offer linguistic and other forms of cultural competence specific to their audiences. Credibility and cultural competency, partnerships A fourth consideration for practitioners is credibility. Many LGBT elders from historically marginalized sub-groups have endured decades of negative experiences as LGBT people, as people of color, and as members of other oppressed communities. These experiences can contribute to skepticism and fear of mistreatment that frequently translate into avoidance of services and care. Practitioners who fail to demonstrate cultural competence by taking a hetero- and Anglo-normative one-size-fits-all approach to elder services reinforce the skepticism and fear held by marginalized LGBT elders of color. Demonstrable cultural competence in all aspects of service provision is critically

Copyright © 2016 American Society on Aging; all rights reserved. This article may not be duplicated, reprinted or distributed in any form without written permission from the publisher: American Society on Aging, 575 Market St., Suite 2100, San Francisco, CA 94105-2869; e-mail: info@asaging.org. For information about ASA’s publications visit www.asaging.org/publications. For information about ASA membership visit www.asaging.org/join.


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important to counteract this dynamic and encourage elders to access services (National Resource Center on LGBT Aging [NRC] and SAGE, 2012). Thus, the NRC recommends that service and care providers undertake a comprehensive cultural competence audit of all aspects of operations—from wall decor to marketing and application language, to staff knowledge base and practices (NRC and SAGE, 2012).

are interconnected, even while the details are distinct. While specific negative effects of culturally incompetent service provision vary by sub-population, denying access to services is a shared theme. Shared themes, in turn, create the opportunity for shared action and shared agendas for systems change. Five years ago, SAGE joined with leading organizations in aging that serve people of color, like the National Hispanic Council on Aging and the National Asian Pacific ‘This more holistic approach to cultural Center on Aging, to form the Diverse competence is a beginning, not an end, with Elders Coalition (DEC), a national collaborative that engages in policy much learning required along the way.’ advocacy and community education on behalf of low-income LGBT elders and elders of This last point highlights a fifth implication color. For participating people-of-color organifor service providers—the importance of comzations, DEC’s formation represented a decision munity-based partnerships. In many instances, to formally embrace LGBT older adults and their the most effective way to provide services and needs as an important part of a diverse elder care to LGBT elders of color and other marginagenda. For SAGE, joining the DEC meant that alized elder sub-populations is in partnership issues like immigration reform, language comwith community-based organizations that have petency in aging services, and disenfranchiseearned credibility and trust through years of ment of Native American elders needed to authentic, culturally competent work. This can present challenges to large providers, as commu- become part of its advocacy agenda. When the National Indian Council on Aging nity-based organizations that have credibility and other organizations in aging that serve with marginalized LGBT elders often are marpeople of color confronted serious threats to ginalized and resource-starved, and initially elder workforce programs for their communithey may lack the business acumen and capacities, SAGE made protection of those programs ties to facilitate partnerships with large providone of its policy priorities. Similarly, these same ers. As a result, larger providers may need to organizations in the DEC have strongly supported find ways to support capacity-building within SAGE’s efforts to make the federal Older Amercommunity-based partner organizations. icans Act LGBT-inclusive. This kind of intersectional approach by social Implications for Social Change Agents and Policy Makers change agents has important implications for One of the exciting implications that an intersec- policy makers because it calls upon them to recognize the interconnections between policy tional approach brings for social change agents issues affecting different social groupings and is the opportunity to find new allies and leaders to look for opportunities for national solutions. to support our efforts to achieve greater equity One of the Surgeon General’s first steps to help for LGBT elders. Using an intersectional apimplement the Affordable Care Act was to adopt proach does not just mean identifying the disa National Prevention Strategy to guide the tinct needs and resiliencies that emerge from nation toward effective strategies to improve different social profiles and life experiences. It health and well-being. Because the DEC collecalso means recognizing the ways in which the tively flagged the importance of interconnected disadvantages of different marginalized groups Copyright © 2016 American Society on Aging; all rights reserved. This article may not be duplicated, reprinted or distributed in any form without written permission from the publisher: American Society on Aging, 575 Market St., Suite 2100, San Francisco, CA 94105-2869; e-mail: info@asaging.org. For information about ASA’s publications visit www.asaging.org/publications. For information about ASA membership visit www.asaging.org/join.

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health disparities across marginalized subpopulations of elders, the intersection of those elder health needs was highlighted in the Surgeon General’s strategy.

Conclusion A uni-dimensional analysis of the unique challenges facing LGBT older adults as a whole has contributed to a gradual increase in attention to the needs of this population in both the aging and LGBT sectors. But this narrative’s efficacy is limited because it does not take into account the texture and nuanced experiences of elders whose lives have been shaped not just by being LGBT, but also by other important identities based on race, gender, and other social conditions. Especially given the rapidly changing demographics of the country’s older population,

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the time has come to replace this one-dimensional analysis with an intersectional approach that takes into full account the differing life experiences across social identities. Such an intersectional approach will prove invaluable to practitioners committed to addressing the needs of the most vulnerable older adults. Not only will it leverage this population’s considerable strengths and resiliencies, but this approach also will fuel new opportunities for social and policy progress by creating shared agendas and collaborative action founded on the intersecting needs and interests of diverse elder communities. Michael Adams, J.D., M.A., is the chief executive officer of Services & Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE), headquartered in New York City. He can be contacted at madams@sageusa.org.

References Adams, R. G., Blieszner, R., and de Vries, B. 2000. “Definitions of Friendship in the Third Age: Age, Gender, and Study Location Effects.” Journal of Aging Studies 14(1): 117–33.

Fredriksen-Goldsen, K., et al. 2014. “The Health Equity Promotion Model: Re-conceptualization of LGBT Health Disparities.” American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 84(6): 653–3.

Albelda, A., et al. 2009. Poverty in the Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Community. Los Angeles, CA: Williams Institute, UCLA School of Law.

Justice in Aging. 2015. LGBT Older Adults in Long-Term-Care Facilities: Stories from the Field. Oakland, CA: Justice in Aging.

Diverse Elders Coalition (DEC). 2012. Securing Our Future: Advancing Economic Security for Diverse Elders. New York: DEC.

Lipscomb, C., and LaTosch, K. 2012. “Exploring the Needs of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Elders in Metro Detroit.” Detroit, MI: LGBT Detroit.

DEC. 2014. Eight Policy Recommendations for Improving the Health and Wellness of Older Adults with HIV. New York: DEC. Fredriksen-Goldsen, K., et al. 2011. The Aging and Health Report: Disparities and Resilience among Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Older Adults. Seattle, WA: Institute for Multigenerational Health.

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National Hispanic Council on Aging (NHCOA). 2014. In Their Own Words: A Needs Assessment of Hispanic LGBT Older Adults. Washington, DC: NHCOA. National Resource Center on LGBT Aging (NRC) and Services & Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE). 2012. Inclusive Services for LGBT Older Adults: A Practical Guide to Creating Welcoming Agencies. New York: NRC and SAGE.

NRC and SAGE. 2015. LGBT Programming for Older Adults: A Practical Step-by-Step Guide. New York: NRC and SAGE. Population Reference Bureau (PRB). 2013. Elderly Immigrants in the United States. Washington, DC: PRB. SAGE and Movement Advancement Project (MAP). 2010. Improving the Lives of LGBT Older Adults. New York: SAGE and MAP. SAGE and National Center for Transgender Equality (NCTE). 2012. Improving the Lives of Transgender Older Adults. New York: SAGE and NCTE. SAGE. 2013. Health Equity and LGBT Elders of Color. New York: SAGE. SAGE. 2014. Out & Visible: The Experiences and Attitudes of LGBT Older Adults, Ages 45–75. New York: SAGE.

Copyright © 2016 American Society on Aging; all rights reserved. This article may not be duplicated, reprinted or distributed in any form without written permission from the publisher: American Society on Aging, 575 Market St., Suite 2100, San Francisco, CA 94105-2869; e-mail: info@asaging.org. For information about ASA’s publications visit www.asaging.org/publications. For information about ASA membership visit www.asaging.org/join.


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