The Day

Survey collects LGBTQ+ data in state

First of its kind effort to weigh needs of population

- By TAYLOR HARTZ

Connecticu­t has launched its first statewide LGBTQ+ survey this year, an effort to collect data on LGBTQ+ residents and gain a better understand­ing of their needs, concerns and experience­s living in the state.

The LGBTQ+ Community Needs and Assessment survey is available at https://bit.ly/3siusqC. It is completely anonymous, entirely online, offered in English and Spanish and takes about 15 to 30 minutes to complete.

It’s being conducted by the state’s LGBTQ+ Health and Human Services Network, which was created by the state legislatur­e in 2019 to make recommenda­tions on health services for LGBTQ+ individual­s living in Connecticu­t.

The survey’s purpose is to identify the needs of members of the LGBTQ+ community statewide by asking questions about their needs, access to services and experience­s with dis

criminatio­n related to their basic needs, safety, housing, physical health, mental health and social support.

The network partnered with various organizati­ons and state department­s to create and conduct the survey, including the Connecticu­t Department of Public Health Office of Health Equity and The Consultati­on Center at Yale University.

Amy Griffin, director of health evaluation initiative­s at the Consultati­on Center at Yale, said she hopes the survey tells all members of the LGBTQ+ community in the state that their voice matters. The survey, she said, is an important way to provide data to lawmakers, advocates and funders.

“This survey was done in part in response to advocates that held listening sessions back in 2018 with LGBTQ+ communitie­s and the idea that we need to learn more about what LGBTQ+ people are experienci­ng in Connecticu­t,” she said.

Since the U.S. census doesn’t identify people as LGBTQ+ unless they are in a documented partnershi­p, Griffin said, this survey is one of the first attempts to get a full, accurate count of Connecticu­t’s LGBTQ+ community.

“We have no idea how many people identify as LGBTQ in Connecticu­t, so that’s our first charge. To just get an understand­ing of the number of people in the community,” she said. “Then, we want to find out what their experience­s are and just do a pulse check of where people feel like there are strengths or challenges.”

The survey data also will be made available to the public to raise awareness about issues affecting the state’s LGBTQ+ population and will help state organizati­ons better write grant applicatio­ns to support their programs.

The survey, which is open to all members of the LGBTQ+ community who are over 18, also gives participan­ts a chance to share their thoughts in an open-ended prompt. Griffin said that so far, a lot of people have used that space to express gratitude for the survey’s existence. “People seem really grateful for the opportunit­y to express their feelings,” she said.

The survey launched on Feb. 25 and is open for three more weeks. So far, about 1,500 people have completed it, but Griffin said officials are hoping thousands more will respond in order to get a diverse, accurate collection of data.

“Within every section of the LGBTQ+ community we really want to make sure that there is a good representa­tion of age, race, income, sex and county location,” she said.

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