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Multiple Minority Stress and LGBT Community Resilience among Sexual Minority Men

机译:性少数群体男子的多重少数群体压力和LGBT社区适应力

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摘要

Minority stress theory has widespread research support in explaining health disparities experienced by sexual and gender minorities. However, less is known about how minority stress impacts multiply marginalized groups, such as lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people of color (LGBT POC). Also, although research has documented resilience in the face of minority stress at the individual level, research is needed that examines macro-level processes such as community resilience (). In the current study, we integrate minority stress theory and intersectionality theory to examine multiple minority stress (i.e., racial/ethnic stigma in LGBT spaces and LGBT stigma in one’s neighborhood) and community resilience (i.e., connection to LGBT community) among sexual minority men of different racial/ethnic groups who use a geosocial networking application for meeting sexual partners. Results showed that Black sexual minority men reported the highest levels of racial/ethnic stigma in LGBT spaces and White sexual minority men reported the lowest levels, with Asian and Hispanic/Latino men falling in between. Consistent with minority stress theory, racial/ethnic stigma in LGBT spaces and LGBT stigma in one’s neighborhood were associated with greater stress for sexual minority men of all racial/ethnic groups. However, connection to LGBT community played more central role in mediating the relationship between stigma and stress for White than POC sexual minority men. Results suggest that minority stress and community resilience processes may differ for White and POC sexual minority men. Potential processes driving these differences and implications for minority stress theory are discussed.
机译:少数群体压力理论在解释性少数群体和性别少数群体经历的健康差异方面具有广泛的研究支持。但是,对于少数群体压力如何影响众多边缘化群体(如同性恋,双性恋和变性人)的了解还很少(LGBT POC)。同样,尽管研究已经证明在面对个人层面的少数群体压力时具有抵御能力,但仍需要研究宏观层面的过程,例如社区的抵御能力()。在当前的研究中,我们整合了少数群体压力理论和交叉性理论,以研究性少数群体中的多个少数群体压力(即,LGBT空间中的种族/族裔污名和附近社区的LGBT污名)和社区弹性(即,与LGBT社区的联系)使用地理社交网络应用程序结识性伴侣的不同种族/族裔群体。结果显示,黑人少数族裔男子在LGBT空间中的种族/族裔耻辱程度最高,而白人少数族裔男子则为最低,亚裔和西班牙裔/拉丁美洲裔男子介于两者之间。与少数族裔压力理论相一致,LGBT空间中的种族/族裔污名和邻里的LGBT污名与所有种族/族裔的性少数男人的压力更大有关。然而,与POBT性少数男性相比,与LGBT社区的联系在调解白人的耻辱与压力之间的关系方面起着更重要的作用。结果表明,白人和POC性少数族裔男性的少数族裔压力和社区适应力过程可能有所不同。讨论了驱动这些差异的潜在过程以及对少数派压力理论的启示。

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