Sexual Orientation Identity in Relation to Minority Stress and Mental Health in Sexual Minority Women.

Autor: Puckett JA; 1 Department of Psychology, University of South Dakota , Vermillion, South Dakota., Surace FI; 2 Department of Psychology, The University of Massachusetts Boston , Boston, Massachusetts., Levitt HM; 2 Department of Psychology, The University of Massachusetts Boston , Boston, Massachusetts., Horne SG; 3 Department of Counseling and School Psychology, The University of Massachusetts Boston , Boston, Massachusetts.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: LGBT health [LGBT Health] 2016 Oct; Vol. 3 (5), pp. 350-6. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Jul 06.
DOI: 10.1089/lgbt.2015.0088
Abstrakt: Purpose: Research often erases the distinct experiences of bisexual and queer women through collapsing participants with lesbian or gay women. In addition, queer is often not included as a sexual orientation identity in research, therefore limiting the available information about how this group experiences minority stress. Given these limitations, we sought to compare groups, based on their sexual orientation identity, on experiences of minority stress and mental health to further understand between group differences that often go unaccounted for in research.
Methods: Participants (N = 249; age range 19-77; M = 38.43, SD = 12.98) completed an online survey exploring experiences of minority stress and mental health.
Results: We found that the group most at risk for encountering minority stressors depended on the specific stressor being examined. Queer and gay or lesbian women encountered greater victimization, discrimination, and expectations of discrimination than bisexual women. However, bisexual women had higher levels of identity concealment and internalized heterosexism than gay, lesbian, or queer women. While queer women tended to have fewer proximal stressors, they were similar to bisexual women in terms of psychological distress, with both groups scoring higher than gay or lesbian women.
Conclusions: These results highlight the need to examine between group differences in future research. The experiences of minority stress appear to complexly relate to psychological distress in varying ways for different groups of women, with bisexual and queer women having the highest rates of psychological distress although they vary in the types of stressors that they encounter. In addition, the experiences of queer women were divergent from those of gay, lesbian, or bisexual women across many of the stressors, indicating that there is a need to further recognize this distinct group of women in future research.
Databáze: MEDLINE