Perceived Social Isolation Among Older Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Heterosexual Adults: The Role of Relationship Status.

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY
Haoming Song, Yuanchang Zhao
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The intersection of LGBTQ+ aging, family, and social isolation remains understudied. The study examines perceived social isolation (loneliness) among older lesbian, gay, bisexual, and heterosexual adults, focusing on the role of relationship status. Drawing on minority stress theory, queer family scholarship, and gerontology research, we test whether: (1) relationship status mediates sexual identity gaps in perceived isolation, and (2) the association between relationship status and isolation varies by sexuality. Analyses are stratified by gender. Using representative data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (N = 93,109), logistic regressions show that: (1) gay and bisexual men reported more perceived isolation than heterosexual men while bisexual women, but not lesbian women, reported more isolation than heterosexual women; (2) relationship status mediated more of the isolation gap between gay and heterosexual men; and (3) moderation by sexuality was generally absent, except among gay men. Findings underscore elevated isolation among aging sexual minority population, particularly bisexual and previously married adults.

老年女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋和异性恋成年人的社会孤立感:关系状态的作用。
LGBTQ+老龄化、家庭和社会孤立的交集仍未得到充分研究。该研究调查了年长的女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋和异性恋成年人的社会孤立感(孤独感),重点关注关系状态的作用。利用少数民族压力理论、酷儿家庭学术研究和老年学研究,我们检验了:(1)关系状态是否介导了感知孤立的性别认同差距,以及(2)关系状态与孤立之间的关系是否因性别而异。分析按性别分层。利用行为风险因素监测系统(N = 93,109)的代表性数据,logistic回归分析表明:(1)男同性恋和双性恋男性比异性恋男性更容易被孤立,而双性恋女性比异性恋女性更容易被孤立;(2)关系状态在男同性恋和异性恋男性之间的隔离差距中起更大的中介作用;(3)除了男同性恋者之外,人们普遍缺乏对性行为的节制。研究结果强调,在年龄较大的性少数群体中,尤其是双性恋和已婚成年人中,孤独感加剧。
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来源期刊
Research on Aging
Research on Aging GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
59
期刊介绍: Research on Aging is an interdisciplinary journal designed to reflect the expanding role of research in the field of social gerontology. Research on Aging exists to provide for publication of research in the broad range of disciplines concerned with aging. Scholars from the disciplines of sociology, geriatrics, history, psychology, anthropology, public health, economics, political science, criminal justice, and social work are encouraged to contribute articles to the journal. Emphasis will be on materials of broad scope and cross-disciplinary interest. Assessment of the current state of knowledge is as important as provision of an outlet for new knowledge, so critical and review articles are welcomed. Systematic attention to particular topics will also be featured.
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