We should expect research about inequities in health and health care associated with gender, sex, and sexuality to involve and prioritize the voices of LGBTQ+ people in all stages of the research process. Expanding the measurement of gender, sex, and sexual orientation How we, as health services researchers, conceptualize, and operationalize gender and sexuality and the methods we use matter. In this view, gender and sexuality become depoliticized categories, and inequities in health and health care may become justified based on gender and sexuality. Lastly, we need to prioritize research that examines the structural mechanisms through which gender, sex, and sexuality result in inequities in health and health care, including a focus on broader social policy. [Extracted from the article]