Sexual and reproductive health rights are often spoken of in ways that assume a single kind of family, a single kind of relationship and a single way of being. Yet, the reality is that human beings are diverse. We love differently, we express our genders differently and we experience our bodies differently. For the LGBTQI community, sexual and reproductive health rights are not a luxury or a special request. They are an essential part of being able to live healthy, dignified and full lives.
Too often, however, access to healthcare for LGBTQI people is shaped not by compassion or science, but by stigma. Many in the community can recall the humiliation of being laughed at in a clinic, having their concerns dismissed; or being told that their identities are unnatural. A lesbian woman who goes for an HIV test may be told that she does not need it; as if she does not deserve the same right to health checks as anyone else. A transgender man who seeks reproductive care may find himself ridiculed for daring to occupy a space that is assumed to belong only to cisgender women. Gay men may be treated as though they are the sole bearers of HIV; with intersex people often forced into medical procedures, that erase their autonomy. These experiences, repeated over and over, send a painful message: LGBTQI bodies and lives are less deserving of care.
When people are treated this way, they stop going to health facilities altogether. They avoid clinics; not because they do not care about their health, but because the act of seeking help becomes a source of trauma. As a result, illnesses that could easily have been prevented or treated at an early stage are left to worsen. Mental health struggles, which are already heightened by the social rejection LGBTQI people face, go unaddressed. Preventable infections spread. Families suffer quietly because stigma has made healthcare unsafe.
It is important to remember that sexual and reproductive health rights are not privileges to be distributed at will. They are rights that belong to every person by virtue of being human. International human rights standards affirm that everyone has the right to the highest attainable standard of health and that right does not depend on whom you love or how you express your gender. For the LGBTQI community, this means having access to accurate health information, safe and respectful care; as well as the ability to make decisions about one’s own body, without coercion or judgment.
Some may ask why there is a need to emphasise LGBTQI communities when speaking about health rights. The answer lies in the reality of exclusion. When health systems are designed only for heterosexual, cisgender people, they leave out those whose needs do not fit the mold. A gay man who cannot access stigma-free HIV services does not simply suffer alone, his exclusion affects public health, as a whole. A transgender woman who turns to unsafe alternatives for hormone treatment, because clinics deny her care risks complications that place further strain on health systems. By creating inclusive services, societies not only affirm the dignity of LGBTQI people, but also strengthen healthcare for everyone. The responsibility to change this reality falls on many shoulders. Governments must create laws and policies that protect people from discrimination in healthcare settings. Health workers must be trained not only in clinical knowledge, but also in empathy, respect and an understanding of diverse identities. Communities must be engaged in reshaping the narratives that fuel stigma, so that being LGBTQI is not seen as a sickness, but simply as part of human diversity. Schools, media and civic organisations all have a role to play in challenging harmful stereotypes and promoting acceptance.
At the heart of this issue is a very simple truth: LGBTQI people are not asking for special treatment. They are asking for the same thing everyone else wants; the right to walk into a health facility and be treated with dignity. They are asking for a society where their bodies are respected, their choices honoured and their health safeguarded. To deny them this is to deny their humanity. To grant it is to affirm that health is not conditional, not selective, but universal. Our societies are strongest when no one is left behind. Ensuring that LGBTQI people can access sexual and reproductive health services without stigma is not only an act of justice, but also a step towards healthier, more inclusive communities. It is a reminder that our bodies, our choices and our health are not matters for debate, they are rights. Until those rights are fully realised for LGBTQI people, the promise of equality remains incomplete.
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