AETNA first health insurer to link to gay medical directory
10.20.2008 4:09pm EDT
(San Francisco, California) Aetna has become the first health benefits company in the U.S. to link its online provider directory - DocFind- to the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association’s online database of more than 1,200 health care providers. The database includes primary care providers, specialists, therapists, and dentists who welcome LGBT patients.
In addition, Aetna has awarded GLMA a $50,000 grant as the diamond sponsor of GLMA’s 26th Annual Conference scheduled for Oct. 22-25 in Seattle. The conference will feature presentations and workshops on HIV/AIDS; lesbian, gay, transgender and bisexual health; substance abuse; aging; families and relationships; and legal issues.Joel Ginsberg, GLMA’s executive director, said he hopes to see other insurance companies follow Aetna’s lead by linking to the database.
“This is a valuable tool that allows LGBT individuals to find LGBT-friendly health care providers whom they can trust,” said Ginsberg.
“All patients must feel comfortable speaking candidly with their health care providers so that the care delivered is appropriate and effective, and patients can take greater control of their health and well-being,” said Troyen Brennan, M.D., Aetna’s chief medical officer.
“Aetna and the GLMA share a similar goal of eliminating disparities in health care, including unequal health care access and outcomes that critically challenge the American health care system today.”
Openness between patients and their health care providers can be an issue for the LGBT community and can impact their quality of care. A study released in July by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene showed that men who disclose having sex with men to their physicians were twice as likely as those who did not to have been tested for HIV (63 percent vs. 36 percent).
The study also revealed in a survey of 452 New York City men who have sex with other men that 39 percent had not disclosed their sexual orientation to their doctors.
Any provider who is willing to affirm their commitment to providing a welcoming environment for LGBT patients and clients is invited to join the GLMA Provider Directory, the association said. GLMA also has resources available for providers on how to meet the unique health care needs of LGBT individuals, which includes creating an environment where patients can feel comfortable talking openly.
Aetna said it will alert its participating health care providers of the link between the DocFind tool and GLMA’s database to raise additional awareness of GLMA among providers.
Aetna has earned the top rating of 100 percent in the 2009 Corporate Equality Index by the Human Rights Campaign. This is the seventh consecutive year that Aetna has received a perfect score for its service to LGBT employees and consumers.



Just another little step forward.
Hopefully, with the death of the old backwards bigots, America will change. There is the big political battle, and there is also the everyday in everyway little successes that will eat out the roots of the homophobia plants, nourished by sick and hateful religions whose only goal is power and money.
We recently showed Trembling before God at our local Reform Jewish Synagogue here in MD. It is about being Orthodox Jew and gay, and how that branch of our religion plays the same game the Catholic church plays with gays, denying them the right to have a partner and a meaningful relationship because of what I call ancient historical garbage written thousands of years ago. Our Rabbi said he was amazed how the gay Jewish Orthodox people were so stuck on their Orthodox religion that they couldn’t drop it completely and just walk away. Just another example of people so brainwashed by religion that they forget that that when their cousins went up hitler’s smokestacks, their ashes were mixed with the gays of Germany as well.
And maybe we all understand why going to the temple, even a liberal one, is a chore, that I occasionally do, just to keep my female partner of 40 years happy.