Reciprocal associations between sexual orientation concealment and mental health among LGBQ college students

IF 1.9 Q3 PSYCHIATRY
Colleen A. Kase, Jonathan J. Mohr
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Abstract

AbstractIntroduction Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer (LGBQ) individuals confront ongoing decisions about whether to reveal their sexual orientation to others. In some situations, LGBQ individuals opt for a strategy of concealment (i.e., an active effort to hide one’s sexual minority identity). A robust body of research has linked concealment to mental health challenges. However, most previous studies have been cross-sectional, limiting their ability to draw conclusions about the directionality of these associations.Method The present study used data collected at two times points four months apart to examine the reciprocal association of concealment with depressive symptoms and life satisfaction in a sample of 91 LGBQ college students. Data were analyzed using cross-lagged panel models.Results Results revealed that depressive symptoms and life satisfaction predicted concealment four months later. Concealment predicted lower levels of later life satisfaction—but not depressive symptoms—four months later. Experiences of heterosexist discrimination did not confound the associations between concealment and mental health.Conclusion Findings highlight the value of longitudinal study designs for research on LGBQ identity and have implications for the theory of identity management. In particular, general mental health variables may have a greater impact on the LGBQ identity management process than previously thought.Keywords: Sexual minorityidentity managementconcealmentmental healthLGBQ Ethics statementThis study was approved by the Human Subjects Research Board at George Mason University (Protocol #4728).Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementThe data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author, Colleen A. Kase, upon reasonable request.Additional informationFundingThe author(s) reported there is no funding associated with the work featured in this article.
LGBQ大学生性取向隐瞒与心理健康的相互关系
女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋和酷儿(LGBQ)个体一直面临着是否向他人透露自己性取向的决定。在某些情况下,LGBQ个体选择了一种隐藏的策略(即,积极地隐藏自己的性少数身份)。大量的研究将隐瞒与心理健康问题联系起来。然而,大多数先前的研究都是横断面的,限制了他们得出这些关联的方向性结论的能力。方法以91名LGBQ大学生为研究对象,采用间隔4个月两次采集的数据,考察隐蔽性与抑郁症状和生活满意度的相互关系。数据分析采用交叉滞后面板模型。结果抑郁症状和生活满意度预测4个月后的隐蔽性。隐藏预示着4个月后较低的生活满意度——但不是抑郁症状。异性恋歧视的经历并没有混淆隐藏与心理健康之间的联系。结论研究结果突出了纵向研究设计在LGBQ身份研究中的价值,并对身份管理理论具有启示意义。特别是,一般的心理健康变量对LGBQ身份管理过程的影响可能比之前认为的要大。关键词:性少数群体身份认同管理隐藏心理健康lgbq伦理声明本研究由乔治梅森大学人类受试者研究委员会批准(协议#4728)。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。数据可得性声明支持本研究结果的数据可根据合理要求从通讯作者Colleen A. Kase处获得。其他信息资金作者报告没有与本文所述工作相关的资金。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
6.20%
发文量
43
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