Co-lead by Whitman-Walker Institute &
The National LGBT Cancer Network


A detailed discussion of the process through which these recommendations were developed may be found in “How These Recommendations Were Developed".
The aim is to improve the effectiveness of trainings in order to increase the knowledge and improve the attitudes and skills of providers and staff. The ultimate aspiration is to improve the provider-patient relationship, improve the quality of health care provided, and to reduce the health inequities which these communities experience.
The toolkit describes the importance of cultural competence (or cultural humility) training of health care providers and staff; the need for national standards; and recognizing the need for institutional reform as well as improving the knowledge, attitudes and skills of individuals working within the system. Find more information on commonly used terms in these recommendations and the fundamental concepts informing this work.

Individual recommendations are supplemented with specific examples, drawn from experience, of best practices that illustrate or implement that recommendation. The toolkit also offers recommended resources for those wishing to explore particular topics in more depth.
The ongoing COVID pandemic has forced many if not most institutions to develop new virtual training strategies in order to keep learners engaged as full participants rather than simply being passive observers. A number of the authors of these recommendations are in the forefront of these recent developments, and this toolkit includes many examples of their innovations.
