Sexual Identity Continuity and Change in a U.S. National Probability Sample of Sexual Minority Adults: Associations With Mental Health and Problematic Substance Use.

IF 15.1 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Evan A Krueger, Meg D Bishop, Allen B Mallory, Ankur Srivastava, Stephen T Russell
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Abstract

Objective: Sexual minority disparities in behavioral health (e.g., mental health and substance use) are well-established. However, sexual identity is dynamic, and changes are common across the life course (e.g., identifying with a monosexual [lesbian or gay] label and later with a plurisexual [queer, pansexual, etc.] label). This study assessed whether behavioral health risks coincide with sexual identity change among sexual minority people.

Methods: Associations in a 3-year U.S. national probability sample of sexual minority adults were assessed between sexual minority identity change (consistently monosexual [N=400; 44.3% weighted], consistently plurisexual [N=239; 46.7% weighted], monosexual to plurisexual [N=19; 4.2% weighted], and plurisexual to monosexual [N=25; 4.8% weighted]) and five behavioral health indicators (psychological distress, social well-being, number of poor mental health days in the past month, problematic alcohol use, and problematic use of other drugs), controlling for demographic characteristics and baseline behavioral health.

Results: Among female participants, monosexual-to-plurisexual identity change (vs. consistently monosexual identity) was associated with greater psychological distress (B=3.41, SE=1.13), lower social well-being (B=-0.61, SE=0.25), and more days of poor mental health in the past month (B=0.69 [Bexp=1.99], SE=0.23). Among male participants, plurisexual-to-monosexual identity change (vs. consistently plurisexual identity) was associated with lower social well-being (B=-0.56, SE=0.25), and identity change (regardless of type) was generally associated with increased problematic use of alcohol and other drugs.

Conclusions: Sexual identity change is an important consideration for sexual minority behavioral health research, with changes (vs. consistency) in identity being an important risk factor for compromised behavioral health. Prevention and treatment interventions may need to tailor messaging to sexual minority men and women differently.

美国全国性少数群体成年人概率样本中性身份的连续性和变化:与心理健康和有问题药物使用的关系》。
目标:性少数群体在行为健康(如心理健康和药物使用)方面的差异已得到公认。然而,性身份是动态的,在整个生命过程中经常会发生变化(例如,认同单性恋[女同性恋或男同性恋]标签,后来又认同多性[同性恋、泛性恋等]标签)。本研究评估了行为健康风险是否与性少数群体的性身份变化相吻合:方法:对性少数群体成年人进行为期 3 年的美国全国概率抽样调查,评估性少数群体身份变化(始终为单性恋[N=400;44.3% 加权]、始终为双性恋[N=239;46.7% 加权]、单性恋到双性恋[N=19;4.2% 加权]、双性恋到单性恋[N=25;4.8% 加权])与五种行为健康风险之间的关联。结果显示,在女性参与者中,单性到双性[N=19;4.2% 加权]和双性到单性[N=25;4.8% 加权]的比例分别为 1.6%、1.6% 和 1.6%:在女性参与者中,单性身份转变为双性身份(与始终保持单性身份相比)与更大的心理压力(B=3.41,SE=1.13)、更低的社会幸福感(B=-0.61,SE=0.25)以及过去一个月中更多的心理健康不良天数(B=0.69 [Bexp=1.99],SE=0.23)相关。在男性参与者中,多性身份转变为单性身份(与持续的多性身份相比)与较低的社会福利有关(B=-0.56,SE=0.25),身份转变(无论类型如何)通常与酗酒和使用其他药物的问题增加有关:性身份的改变是性少数群体行为健康研究的一个重要考虑因素,身份的改变(相对于一致性)是损害行为健康的一个重要风险因素。预防和治疗干预措施可能需要以不同的方式向性少数群体的男性和女性传递信息。
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
American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
22.30
自引率
2.80%
发文量
157
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Psychiatry, dedicated to keeping psychiatry vibrant and relevant, publishes the latest advances in the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness. The journal covers the full spectrum of issues related to mental health diagnoses and treatment, presenting original articles on new developments in diagnosis, treatment, neuroscience, and patient populations.
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