Internalized Phobia, Community Connectedness, Outness, and Mental Health Risk and Protection in LGBTQ Persons.

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q1 NURSING
Nursing Research Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-17 DOI:10.1097/NNR.0000000000000759
Teresa A Graziano, Holly N Fitzgerald, José Ortiz, Christopher K Owen, Natalie J Shook
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Community connectedness, outness, and internalized phobia are potential protective and risk factors for mental health in lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) individuals. However, these interrelated factors have generally been examined in isolation and for the LGBTQ community in aggregate. As such, there may be undetected effects of factors on mental health for each LGBTQ group.

Objectives: We examined the associations between mental health (i.e., depression and anxiety) and risk/protective factors (i.e., internalized phobia, community connectedness, outness) in each LGBTQ subgroup separately.

Method: A large national U.S. sample ( N = 1,030) of individuals who identified as LGBTQ completed an anonymous Internet survey during fall 2019. Participants answered questionnaires about community connectedness, outness, internalized homophobia or transphobia, anxiety, and depression.

Results: On average, most subgroups reported symptoms of depression and anxiety above clinical cutoffs. Less outness and greater internalized phobia were associated with more severe depression and anxiety, but this pattern was not consistent across LGBTQ subgroups. Greater community connectedness was generally associated with more severe anxiety and depression.

Discussion: LGBTQ subgroups vary in how risk and protective factors relate to mental health outcomes. Our findings highlight the importance of examining LGBTQ subgroups separately and examining risk/protective factors simultaneously to identify the unique contribution of each factor. More research is needed to understand potential LGBTQ mental health risks and protective factors, and future researchers should examine the unique roles of risk and protective factors in separate LGBTQ subgroups.

LGBTQ 人士的内化恐惧症、社区联系、出柜率以及心理健康风险和保护。
背景:社区关联性、出柜率和内化恐惧症是女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、变性人和同性恋者(LGBTQ)心理健康的潜在保护因素和风险因素。然而,这些相互关联的因素一般都是单独研究的,而且是针对 LGBTQ 群体的总体研究。因此,这些因素对每个 LGBTQ 群体的心理健康可能存在未被发现的影响:我们分别研究了每个 LGBTQ 亚群体的心理健康(即抑郁和焦虑)与风险/保护因素(即内化恐怖症、社区联系、外向性)之间的关联:2019年秋季,一个大型的美国全国样本(N = 1,030)中的LGBTQ个体完成了一项匿名网络调查。参与者回答了有关社区联系、出柜率、内化的恐同症或恐变症、焦虑症和抑郁症的问卷:平均而言,大多数亚组报告的抑郁和焦虑症状高于临床临界值。较低的出柜率和较高的内化恐惧症与较严重的抑郁和焦虑有关,但这一模式在 LGBTQ 亚群中并不一致。更多的社区联系通常与更严重的焦虑和抑郁有关:讨论:LGBTQ 亚群体的风险和保护因素与心理健康结果的关系各不相同。我们的研究结果突显了分别研究 LGBTQ 亚群体和同时研究风险/保护因素以确定每个因素的独特贡献的重要性。要了解 LGBTQ 潜在的心理健康风险和保护因素,还需要进行更多的研究,未来的研究人员应分别研究 LGBTQ 亚群体中风险和保护因素的独特作用。
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
Nursing Research
Nursing Research 医学-护理
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
102
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Nursing Research is a peer-reviewed journal celebrating over 60 years as the most sought-after nursing resource; it offers more depth, more detail, and more of what today''s nurses demand. Nursing Research covers key issues, including health promotion, human responses to illness, acute care nursing research, symptom management, cost-effectiveness, vulnerable populations, health services, and community-based nursing studies. Each issue highlights the latest research techniques, quantitative and qualitative studies, and new state-of-the-art methodological strategies, including information not yet found in textbooks. Expert commentaries and briefs are also included. In addition to 6 issues per year, Nursing Research from time to time publishes supplemental content not found anywhere else.
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