Rainbow parents and carers manage early childhood health and development like other families, but may face stigma, exclusion or assumptions in healthcare.
Some report not being recognised as parents, intrusive questions, or needing to educate practitioners about sexuality and gender identity.
GP teams can make care welcoming through inclusive forms, competency with LGBTQIA+ terminology and visual inclusion cues. Build trust by letting families lead and asking open questions.
Don’t presume: ask, “Who is in your child’s family?”, and recognise non-birthing, non-biological, separated, kinship and foster carers. Avoid questions about family formation unless clinically relevant. Ask and listen to how parents describe gender identity and pronouns, roles/responsibilities and family composition.
Listen, affirm and validate parental concerns. Connect families with affirming supports or early-intervention pathways.
Resources to support inclusive care for rainbow families
Collation of LGBTQIA+ parents and carers: inclusive resources for clinicians
Wellbeing support for LGBTIQA+ parents
Practical guide for GP supervisors, registrars and practice teams
What parents say about good GP care for transgender children
This article appeared in Practice Pulse on Wednesday, 27 May 2026. If you are a GP, practice nurse or practice manager in South Western Sydney and do not get the weekly Practice Pulse email, speak to your Practice Support Officer.