Popis: |
There is growing impetus within mortality surveillance to identify decedents’ sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI), but key personnel to this effort (e.g., death investigators) are not currently trained to collect SOGI information. To address this gap, we developed a training for death investigators on this topic and tested its feasibility with 114 investigators in three states. Participants completed pre- and post-training questionnaires that measured four perceived outcomes: training relevance, success of delivery, adequacy for future use, and likelihood of future use. Overall, strongly positive responses affirmed the training’s relevance, success of delivery, and adequacy for future use. Responses about attempting to identify the decedent’s sexual orientation and gender identity in future cases were not quite as positive, with close to 80%) of participants saying they were at least “somewhat likely” to collect this information. Despite design limitations, the study results support the feasibility of training death investigators to gather SOGI information. Although not systematically assessed in the study, investigators’ positive endorsement of training outcomes appeared higher in training sites where leadership strongly supported SOGI identification, suggesting the role of leadership may be key to encouraging SOGI identification among death investigators. |