冲突、不被接受和歧视的经历与新加坡lgbtq人群的心理健康状况不佳有关

Gerard W. Toh, W. Koh, Jack Ho, Jackson Chia, A. Maulod, Irene Tirtajana, Peter Yang, Mathia Lee
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的许多国家都报道了影响女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、变性人和酷儿(LGBTQ)人群的健康差异。对于新加坡来说,没有发表过关于当地LGBTQ社区心理健康和福祉的大量定量研究。作者进行了一项基于社区的调查(National LGBT Census Singapore, 2013;NLCS2013),涵盖了一套全面的人口、社会和健康指标。在这里,作者调查了NLCS2013样本中的2350名LGBTQ个体的心理健康状况及其相关因素。NLCS2013是一项匿名在线调查,调查对象是居住在新加坡的自认为是LGBTQ的成年人(年龄≥21岁)。该调查将世界卫生组织幸福指数(WHO-5)作为心理健康的衡量标准,WHO-5得分低(<13/25)表明心理健康状况不佳。作者使用多变量逻辑回归分析了低WHO-5评分与一系列应答者特征之间的关系。引人注目的是,在分析的2350名答复者中,40.9%的人在世卫组织5指数得分较低,表明精神健康状况不佳。父母的不接受、家庭冲突的经历以及工作场所或教育环境中的欺凌/歧视都与心理健康状况不佳有显著关联。相反,社区参与似乎对心理健康有保护作用,因为参与LGBTQ社区组织或活动的受访者心理健康状况不佳的可能性低于非参与者。独创性/价值NLCS2013是全面和定量捕捉新加坡LGBTQ居民的社会人口和健康状况(包括心理健康状况)的首次广泛努力之一。这些研究结果证实,有必要解决新加坡LGBTQ个人的心理健康需求,并建立安全的空间和盟友关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Experiences of conflict, non-acceptance and discrimination are associated with poor mental well-being amongst LGBTQ-identified individuals in Singapore
PurposeHealth disparities affecting lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) populations have been reported in many countries. For Singapore, no large quantitative studies on mental health and well-being in the local LGBTQ community have been published. The authors conducted a community-based survey (National LGBT Census Singapore, 2013; NLCS2013) that covered a comprehensive set of demographic, social and health indicators. Here, the authors investigated mental health status and its correlates in 2,350 LGBTQ individuals within the NLCS2013 sample.Design/methodology/approachThe NLCS2013 was an anonymous online survey conducted amongst self-identified LGBTQ adults (aged ≥ 21 years) residing in Singapore. The survey included the World Health Organisation Well-being Index (WHO-5) as a measure of mental well-being, with low WHO 5 scores (<13/25) indicating poor mental well-being. The authors analysed relationships between low WHO-5 score and a range of respondent characteristics using multivariate logistic regression.FindingsStrikingly, 40.9% of 2,350 respondents analysed had low WHO-5 scores, indicating poor mental well-being. Parental non-acceptance, experience of conflict at home and bullying/discrimination in the workplace or educational environments were all significantly associated with poor mental well-being. Conversely, community participation appeared protective for mental well-being, as respondents who participated in LGBTQ community organisations or events were less likely to have poor mental well-being than non-participants.Originality/valueThe NLCS2013 represents one of the first broad-based efforts to comprehensively and quantitatively capture the sociodemographic and health profile, including mental health status, within Singapore’s resident LGBTQ population. These findings affirm the need to address the mental health needs of LGBTQ individuals in Singapore and to foster safe spaces and allyship.
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