158 results on '"Pachankis JE"'
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2. Validating the syndemic threat surrounding sexual minority men’s health in a population-based study
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Bränström, R, primary and Pachankis, JE, additional
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- 2018
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3. An Intersectional Analysis of Sexual Minority Men’s HIV Risk When Migrating to or Within Europe
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Pachankis, JE, primary, Hatzenbuehler, ML, additional, Berg, RC, additional, Fernández-Dávila, P, additional, Mirandola, M, additional, Marcus, U, additional, Weatherburn, P, additional, and Schmidt, AJ, additional
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- 2018
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4. Mental health and stigma-related stress among migrants from countries with high LGBT-stigma in Sweden
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Bränström, R, primary and Pachankis, JE, additional
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- 2018
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5. Sexual orientation disparities in preventable disease: A fundamental cause perspective
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Bränström, R, primary, Hatzenbuehler, ML, additional, Pachankis, JE, additional, and Link, BG, additional
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- 2016
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6. Societal-level explanations for reductions in sexual orientation mental health disparities
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Hatzenbuehler, ML, primary, Bränström, R, additional, and Pachankis, JE, additional
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- 2016
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7. Sexual orientation disparities in mental health: the moderating and mediating role of sociodemographic and minority stress factors
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Bränström, R, primary, Hatzenbuehler, ML, additional, and Pachankis, JE, additional
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- 2016
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8. Sexual orientation differences in mental health morbidity: A population-based longitudinal study
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Bränström, R, primary, Pachankis, JE, additional, and Hatzenbuehler, ML, additional
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- 2015
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9. Sexual orientation based differences in mental health morbidity: Age effects in a population-based longitudinal study in Sweden
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Bränström, R, primary, Pachankis, JE, additional, and Hatzenhuehler, ML, additional
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- 2015
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10. Differences in physical and mental health status between sexual minorities (homo- and bisexuals) and heterosexuals in a Swedish population-based sample
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Branstrom, R, primary, Pachankis, JE, additional, and Hatzenbuehler, ML, additional
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- 2014
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11. Real-Time Exposure to Negative News Media and Suicidal Ideation Intensity Among LGBTQ+ Young Adults.
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Clark KA, Kellerman JK, Argiros AP, Phillips KL, Park EC, Cyperski M, Pachankis JE, and Kleiman E
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Importance: With a recent surge in anti-lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer (LGBTQ+) policies and associated news and media coverage, there is a need to study the association of LGBTQ+ focused news or media exposure and short-term changes in suicidal ideation (SI) among LGBTQ+ youth., Objective: To examine within-person direct and indirect associations between exposure to general and LGBTQ+ negative news or media and SI intensity through expectations of rejection., Design, Setting, and Participants: This intensive longitudinal cohort study used a smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment (EMA) protocol wherein participants responded to EMAs 3 times per day for 28 consecutive days. Young adults aged 18 to 24 years who self-identified as LGBTQ+, resided in Tennessee, and had past-year SI and at least mild depression (defined as a score ≥5 on the Patient Health Questionnaire-9) were eligible for inclusion. Participants were recruited through social media advertisements, LGBTQ+ community organizations, and mental and behavioral health clinics. Participants were recruited between March 30, 2023, and August 23, 2023, and data analyses were conducted from August 28, 2023, through April 20, 2024., Exposures: At each EMA, participants reported on recent exposure to negative news or media. A 3-level categorical exposure variable denoted (1) no news or media exposure (reference); (2) exposure to general negative news or media; and (3) exposure to LGBTQ+ negative news or media. Each EMA also assessed expectations of rejection due to LGBTQ+ identity on a scale of 0 (not at all) through 10 (very much)., Main Outcomes and Measures: Three primary outcomes assessed current (ie, "right now") intensity of active SI, passive SI, and self-harm ideation, each measured on a scale from 0 (not at all) to 10 (very strong). Multilevel modeling approaches were used to account for the hierarchical structure of EMA data, with assessments (level 1) nested within people (level 2). Linear mixed models and multilevel mediation models were used to examine within-person associations between exposure to negative news or media and the 3 primary outcomes, as well as the mediating role of expectations of rejection., Results: Of 31 total participants, 22 were assigned female sex at birth (71%), and 16 (52%) self-identified as transgender or gender diverse. The median (IQR) participant age was 21 (18-22) years, and a total of 2189 EMAs were completed, with a median (range) compliance of 90.5% (41.7%-100%). At the within-person level, recent exposure to LGBTQ+ negative news or media was significantly associated with increased active SI (estimate [b], 0.14; 95% CI, 0.04-0.25; P = .009), passive SI (b, 0.23; 95% CI, 0.04-0.41; P = .02), and self-harm ideation (b, 0.13; 95% CI, 0.02-0.23; P = .02). No statistically significant associations were detected for exposure to general negative news or media. In multilevel mediation models, heightened expectations of rejection explained some of the total effect of exposure to LGBTQ+ negative news or media on active SI (23%) and passive SI (37%)., Conclusions and Relevance: This intensive longitudinal cohort study found that SI intensity modestly increased in the hours immediately following exposure to LGBTQ+ negative news or media among LGBTQ+ young adults. These findings have timely implications for research and intervention, particularly within sociopolitical and geographic contexts where news or media coverage about LGBTQ+ topics is intensified.
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- 2024
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12. Sexual Orientation Microaggression Rating Scale (SOMRS): Development and association with alliance ruptures.
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Sergi J, Babl A, Warren JT, Pachankis JE, and Eubanks CF
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- Humans, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Sexual Behavior psychology, Professional-Patient Relations, Reproducibility of Results, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology, Aggression psychology, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods, Therapeutic Alliance
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Sexual minority clients report experiencing frequent microaggressions during therapy, however, therapists may not recognize those microaggressions or may be reluctant to self-report them. The main aim of the present study was thus to develop an observational measure of in-session therapist-committed microaggressions related to the sexual orientation of sexual minority individuals (e.g., those who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or queer). The present study further examined the association between therapist-committed sexual orientation microaggressions and ruptures in the therapeutic alliance. We hypothesized that clinically significant microaggressions would be positively associated with withdrawal ruptures in the alliance. The sample consisted of 44 gay and bisexual men who participated in a cognitive behavioral treatment designed to reduce depression, anxiety, human immunodeficiency virus-transmission-risk behaviors, and substance use. An observer-based coding measure designed for this study, the Sexual Orientation Microaggression Rating Scale (SOMRS), was utilized to capture sexual minority microaggressions in the initial sessions of treatment. Good interrater reliability was achieved for the SOMRS. Microaggressions were coded in 34% of the sessions. Within the subset of sessions with coded microaggressions, a significant association was found between withdrawal ruptures and microaggression significance ratings. The SOMRS holds potential for supporting research on microaggression as well as future efforts to help clinicians recognize and repair in-session behaviors that negatively impact sexual minority clients. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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13. Sexual Orientation Differences in Age of First Treatment for a Mental Health Diagnosis: A Population-Based Study of Childhood and Adolescence.
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Bränström R and Pachankis JE
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Objective: The aim of the current study was to identify the age at which sexual orientation disparity in mental health diagnoses can be first identified, as well as gender and sexual identity subgroup differences in such treatment, in a population-based sample., Method: Young people aged 16 to 25 (N = 10,365) participating in the probability-based Swedish National Public Health Survey in 2018 were included. This sample was linked to physician-assessed mental health care treatment history data starting when all participants were 8 years old using national health care registries., Results: Participants reporting a sexual minority identity in adolescence and young adulthood were more than 3 times as likely to have been treated for an internalizing disorder diagnosis (eg, depression, anxiety) and more than twice as likely to have been treated for a neurodevelopmental disorder diagnosis during childhood than participants reporting a heterosexual identity. Sexual minority participants overall and women in particular were more likely to have been treated for an internalizing disorder diagnosis at an early age compared with heterosexual participants, with this disparity starting at age 13. The sexual orientation disparity in likelihood of treatment for a neurodevelopmental disorder diagnosis was particularly elevated among bisexual/pansexual women with this disparity starting in early/middle adolescence., Conclusions: This population-based study linked to physician-assessed mental health diagnoses during childhood and adolescence identifies the age at which sexual orientation differences in treatment for common mental disorders emerge. The early emergence of this disparity suggests a potential benefit of interventions that facilitate social belonging for all youth., (Copyright © 2024 American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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14. Prepare Romania: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial of an intervention to promote pre-exposure prophylaxis adherence and persistence among gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men.
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Lelutiu-Weinberger C, Filimon ML, Zavodszky AM, Lixandru M, Hanu L, Fierbinteanu C, Patrascu R, Streinu-Cercel A, Luculescu S, Bora M, Filipescu I, Jianu C, Heightow-Weidman LB, Rochelle A, Yi B, Buckner N, Golub SA, van Dyk IS, Burger J, Li F, and Pachankis JE
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- Humans, Male, Romania, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology, Counseling, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Time Factors, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Treatment Outcome, HIV Infections prevention & control, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis methods, Medication Adherence, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use
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Background: Gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM) represent a high-risk group for HIV transmission in Romania, yet they possess few resources for prevention. Despite having no formal access to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) through the health system, GBMSM in Romania demonstrate a high need for and interest in this medication. In anticipation of a national rollout of PrEP, this study tests the efficacy of a novel strategy, Prepare Romania, that combines two evidence-based PrEP promotion interventions for GBMSM living in Romania., Methods: This study uses a randomized controlled trial design to examine whether GBMSM living in Romania receiving Prepare Romania, a culturally adapted counseling and mobile health intervention (expected n = 60), demonstrate greater PrEP adherence and persistence than those assigned to a PrEP education control arm (expected n = 60). Participants from two main cities in Romania are prescribed PrEP and followed-up at 3 and 6 months post-randomization. PrEP adherence data are obtained through weekly self-report surveys and dried blood spot testing at follow-up visits. Potential mediators (e.g., PrEP use motivation) of intervention efficacy are also assessed. Furthermore, Prepare Romania's implementation (e.g., proportion of enrolled participants attending medical visits, intervention experience) will be examined through interviews with participants, study implementers, and healthcare officials., Discussion: The knowledge gained from this study will be utilized for further refinement and scale-up of Prepare Romania for a future multi-city effectiveness trial. By studying the efficacy of tools to support PrEP adherence and persistence, this research has the potential to lay the groundwork for PrEP rollout in Romania and similar contexts. Trial registration This study was registered on ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier NCT05323123 , on March 25, 2022., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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15. Reckoning With Our Past and Righting Our Future: Report From the Behavior Therapy Task Force on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity/Expression Change Efforts (SOGIECEs).
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Comer JS, Georgiadis C, Schmarder K, Chen D, Coyne CA, Gudiño OG, Kazantzis N, Langer DA, LeBeau RT, Liu RT, McLean C, Sloan DM, Williams MT, and Pachankis JE
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- Humans, Advisory Committees, Female, Sexual Behavior, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Gender Identity, Behavior Therapy methods
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Sexual orientation and gender identity/expression change efforts (SOGIECEs) are discredited practices that are associated with serious negative effects and incompatible with modern standards for clinical practice. Despite evidence linking SOGIECEs with serious iatrogenic effects, and despite support for LGBTQ+-affirmative care alternatives, SOGIECE practices persist. In the 1970s and 1980s, Behavior Therapy published articles testing and/or endorsing SOGIECEs, thereby contributing to their overall development, acceptance, and use. The Behavior Therapy Task Force on SOGIECEs was assembled to conduct a rigorous review of the SOGIECE articles published in Behavior Therapy and to decide whether, and what, formal action(s) should be taken on these articles. This report provides a detailed review of the historic SOGIECE literature published in Behavior Therapy and outlines the Task Force's deliberative and democratic processes resulting in actions to: (1) add prominent advisory information to k = 24 SOGIECE papers in the form of digital "black box" disclaimers that caution readers that the SOGIECE practices tested or described in these papers are inconsistent with modern standards, (2) offset organizational financial benefits from the publication of these papers, and (3) promote LGBTQ+-affirmative practices. SOGIECEs are not the only concerning practices across the field's history, and the pages of today's scientific journals include practices that will be at odds with tomorrow's moral standards and ethical guidelines. This report calls for precautionary measures and editorial safeguards to minimize the future likelihood and impact of problematic published scholarship, including the need to fully include those with relevant lived experiences in all aspects of clinical science and peer review., (Copyright © 2024 Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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16. Threats to social safety and neuro-inflammatory mechanisms underlying sexual orientation disparities in depression symptom severity: A prospective cohort study of young adults.
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Bränström R, Hatzenbuehler ML, Lattanner MR, Hollinsaid NL, McDade TW, and Pachankis JE
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- Humans, Male, Female, Prospective Studies, Young Adult, Adult, Sexual Behavior physiology, Sexual Behavior psychology, Interleukin-6 blood, Biomarkers blood, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha blood, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha metabolism, Adverse Childhood Experiences, Adolescent, Depression, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology, Inflammation, Heterosexuality
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Sexual minority individuals have a markedly elevated risk of depression compared to heterosexuals. We examined early threats to social safety and chronically elevated inflammation as mechanisms contributing to this disparity in depression symptoms, and compared the relative strength of the co-occurrence between chronic inflammation and depression symptoms for sexual minorities versus heterosexuals. To do so, we analyzed data from a prospective cohort of sexual minority and heterosexual young adults (n = 595), recruited from a nationally representative sample, that included assessments of early threats to social safety in the form of adverse childhood interpersonal events, three biomarkers of inflammation (i.e., CRP, IL-6, TNF-α) measured at two time points, and depression symptoms over four years. In pre-registered analyses, we found that sexual minorities experienced more adverse childhood interpersonal events, were more likely to display chronically elevated inflammation, and reported more severe depression symptoms than heterosexuals. Adverse childhood interpersonal events and chronically elevated inflammation explained approximately 23 % of the total effect of the association between sexual orientation and depression symptom severity. Further, there was an increased coupling of chronically elevated inflammation and depression symptoms among sexual minorities compared to heterosexuals. These results provide novel longitudinal, population-based evidence for the role of chronically elevated inflammation in linking threats to social safety during childhood with depression symptom severity in young adulthood, consistent with the primary tenets of the social signal transduction theory of depression. Our study extends this theory to the population level by finding that members of a stigmatized population (i.e., sexual minorities) experience a greater risk of depression because of their greater exposure to adverse childhood interpersonal events and the subsequent link to chronic inflammation, highlighting potential biopsychosocial intervention targets., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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17. "There's a lot of conflict between your queer identity and also your Muslim or Arab identity;" A qualitative exploration of the intersectional minority stressors of U.S.-born Arab sexual minority cisgender men.
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Abboud S, Chaudhry AB, Taweh O, and Pachankis JE
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Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors report no competing interests to declare.
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- 2024
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18. An mHealth Intervention for Gay and Bisexual Men's Mental, Behavioral, and Sexual Health in a High-Stigma, Low-Resource Context (Project Comunică): Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Leluțiu-Weinberger C, Filimon ML, Hoover D, Lixandru M, Hanu L, Dogaru B, Kovacs T, Fierbințeanu C, Ionescu F, Manu M, Mariș A, Pană E, Dorobănțescu C, Streinu-Cercel A, and Pachankis JE
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- Humans, Male, Romania epidemiology, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology, HIV Infections prevention & control, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections psychology, Social Stigma, Adult, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods, Motivational Interviewing methods, Mental Health, Sexual Behavior psychology, Telemedicine methods, Sexual Health education, Homosexuality, Male psychology
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Background: The World Health Organization reported that 80% of new HIV diagnoses in Europe in 2014 occurred in Central and Eastern Europe. Romania has a particularly high HIV incidence, AIDS prevalence, and number of related deaths. HIV incidence in Romania is largely attributed to sexual contact among gay and bisexual men. However, homophobic stigma in Romania serves as a risk factor for HIV infection for gay and bisexual men. The Comunică intervention aims to provide a much-needed HIV risk reduction strategy, and it entails the delivery of motivational interviewing and cognitive behavioral therapy skills across 8 live text-based counseling sessions on a mobile platform to gay and bisexual men at risk of HIV. The intervention is based on the information-motivation-behavior and minority stress models. There is preliminary evidence suggesting that Comunică holds promise for reducing gay and bisexual men's co-occurring sexual (eg, HIV transmission risk behavior), behavioral (eg, heavy alcohol use), and mental (eg, depression) health risks in Romania., Objective: This paper describes the protocol for a randomized controlled trial designed to test the efficacy of Comunică in a national trial., Methods: To test Comunică's efficacy, 305 gay and bisexual men were randomized to receive Comunică or a content-matched education attention control condition. The control condition consisted of 8 time-matched educational modules that present information regarding gay and bisexual men's identity development, information about HIV transmission and prevention, the importance of HIV and sexually transmitted infection testing and treatment, heavy alcohol use and its associations with HIV transmission risk behavior, sexual health communication, finding social support, and creating sexual health goals. Participants undergo rapid HIV and syphilis testing and 3-site chlamydia and gonorrhea testing at baseline and the 12-month follow-up. Outcomes are measured before the intervention (baseline) and at the 4-, 8-, and 12-month follow-ups., Results: The study was funded in September 2018, and data collection began in May 2019. The last participant follow-up was in January 2024. Currently, the data analyst is cleaning data sets in preparation for data analyses, which are scheduled to begin in April 2024. Data analysis meetings are scheduled regularly to establish timelines and examine the results as analyses are gradually being conducted. Upon completion, a list of manuscripts will be reviewed and prioritized, and the team will begin preparing them for publication., Conclusions: This study is the first to test the efficacy of an intervention with the potential to simultaneously support the sexual, behavioral, and mental health of gay and bisexual men in Central and Eastern Europe using motivational interviewing support and sensitivity to the high-stigma context of the region. If efficacious, Comunică presents a scalable platform to provide support to gay and bisexual men living in Romania and similar high-stigma, low-resource countries., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03912753; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03912753., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): DERR1-10.2196/52853., (©Corina Leluțiu-Weinberger, Mircea L Filimon, Donald Hoover, Mihai Lixandru, Lucian Hanu, Bogdan Dogaru, Tudor Kovacs, Cristina Fierbințeanu, Florentina Ionescu, Monica Manu, Alexandra Mariș, Elena Pană, Cristian Dorobănțescu, Adrian Streinu-Cercel, John E Pachankis. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (https://www.researchprotocols.org), 06.05.2024.)
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- 2024
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19. The Role of Shame in the Sexual-Orientation Disparity in Mental Health: A Prospective Population-Based Study of Multimodal Emotional Reactions to Stigma.
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Pachankis JE, Hatzenbuehler ML, Klein DN, and Bränström R
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Despite the prominence of shame in stigma theories, its role in explaining population-level mental health disparities between the stigmatized and non-stigmatized has not been investigated. We assessed shame explicitly (via self-report) and implicitly (via a behavioral task) in a prospective, representative cohort of sexual minority and heterosexual young adults in Sweden (baseline n =2,222). Compared to heterosexuals, sexual minorities evidenced higher explicit and implicit shame, which explained sexual orientation disparities in depression, social anxiety, and suicidal thoughts. Among sexual minorities, there was an indirect effect of shame in the association between interpersonal stigma (i.e., past-year family rejection and childhood bullying) and later experiences of adverse mental health; an indirect effect did not exist for the related construct, internalized stigma. Results suggest extending existing stigma theories to consider emotions like shame as characteristic reactions to stigma and guide the search for treatment targets focused on reducing the mental health sequelae of stigma.
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- 2024
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20. LGBQ-affirming clinical recommendations for compulsive sexual behavior disorder.
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Jennings TL, Gleason N, Pachankis JE, Bőthe B, and Kraus SW
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- Humans, Compulsive Behavior therapy, Social Stigma, Sexual Behavior, Compulsive Sexual Behavior Disorder, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology
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Background and Aims: Since the inclusion of Compulsive Sexual Behavior Disorder (CSBD) in the International Classification of Diseases (11th ed.), there has been little effort placed into developing clinical recommendations for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer (LGBQ) clients with this condition. Thus, we develop preliminary clinical recommendations for mental health professionals working with LGBQ clients who may be struggling with CSBD., Methods: The present paper synthesizes the CSBD literature with advances in LGBQ-affirming care to develop assessment and treatment recommendations. These recommendations are discussed within the context of minority stress theory, which provides an empirically supported explanation for how anti-LGBQ stigma may contribute to the development of mental health conditions in LGBQ populations., Results: Assessment recommendations are designed to assist mental health professionals in distinguishing aspects of an LGBQ client's sociocultural context from CSBD symptomology, given recent concerns that these constructs may be wrongly conflated and result in misdiagnosis. The treatment recommendations consist of broadly applicable, evidence-based principles that can be leveraged by mental health professionals of various theoretical orientations to provide LGBQ-affirming treatment for CSBD., Discussion and Conclusions: The present article provides theoretically and empirically supported recommendations for mental health professionals who want to provide LGBQ-affirming care for CSBD. Given the preliminary nature of these recommendations, future research is needed to investigate their clinical applicability and efficacy.
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- 2024
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21. Stigma and anxiety and depressive symptoms in parents of sexual and gender minority youth.
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Clark KA, Argiros AP, Dougherty LR, and Pachankis JE
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- Female, Child, Humans, Adolescent, Middle Aged, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Gender Identity, Sexual Behavior, Anxiety etiology, Parents, Depression, Sexual and Gender Minorities
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Parents of sexual and gender minority (SGM) youth play an important role in supporting their SGM child's mental health in the face of stigma. Yet, parents of SGM youth may themselves experience stigma, including discrimination/rejection, and its emotional consequences, including vicarious stigma and shame. The present cross-sectional study leveraged a national sample of parents of SGM youth to investigate associations between parents' stigma experiences and self-reported anxiety and depression symptoms. Further, we additionally explored sociodemographic and contextual correlates of parents' stigma experiences. Participants included 264 parents ( M
age = 46) who reported having at least one SGM child under age 30 ( Mage = 18). The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual-Affiliate Stigma Measure (LGB-ASM) assessed parents' experiences of discrimination/rejection (e.g., actual and anticipated rejection experiences due to having an SGM child), vicarious stigma (e.g., worry and concern for one's SGM child), and shame (e.g., feeling embarrassed for having an SGM child). Parents indicated their anxiety and depressive symptoms using respective Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System-short forms. Results showed that vicarious stigma and shame, but not discrimination/rejection, were uniquely associated with parents' increased symptoms of anxiety (vicarious stigma: β = 1.59, p < .001; shame: β = 2.15, p < .001) and depression (vicarious stigma: β = 0.90, p < .01; shame: β = 2.77, p < .001). Further, parents with more accepting religious, racial, ethnic, and/or cultural communities reported lower stigma experiences. This study advances understanding of how the psychological consequences of stigma extend beyond SGM people themselves and contribute to mental health difficulties in parents of SGM youth. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).- Published
- 2024
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22. A qualitative exploration of minority stress, mental health, and sexual health among Arab immigrant sexual minority men in the United States.
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Abboud S, Chaudhry AB, and Pachankis JE
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Objectives: To examine experiences of immigration, sexual minority stressors, and mental health and sexual health among first-generation (born outside of the United States) Arab immigrant sexual minority men (SMM) in the United States., Method: We conducted in-depth one-on-one virtual interviews with 16 cisgender men residing in different U.S. states. Interview transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis to identify the most salient themes and relationships among them., Results: The experiences of Arab immigrant SMM centered around five themes: "my whole plan was to come to the U.S. to be open to who I am," "not fitting in" (homophobia, racism, sexual racism, xenophobia), "a lot of impact on my mental health," sexual health (inconsistent condom use, multiple sexual partners, preexposure prophylaxis use, testing), and coping strategies., Conclusions: Participants reported multiple forms of stressors related to their intersectional identities that affected their mental health, sexual health, and coping strategies. Many stressors were experienced before immigrating to the United States; however, several stressors persisted, and some new ones emerged after immigration. Results call for the development of mental health interventions informed by the unique experiences of Arab immigrant SMM and integrated within community-based organizations to foster adaptive coping strategies, social support, and community belonging. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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23. Structural stigma and LGBTQ+ health: a narrative review of quantitative studies.
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Hatzenbuehler ML, Lattanner MR, McKetta S, and Pachankis JE
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- Humans, Female, Male, Gender Identity, Sexual Behavior, Social Stigma, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Sexually Transmitted Diseases
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Health disparities related to sexual orientation and gender identity exist across multiple outcomes. Scholarship has begun to evaluate whether structural stigma-ie, societal-level conditions, cultural norms, and institutional policies that constrain opportunities, resources, and wellbeing-contributes to health burdens among LGBTQ+ individuals. We conducted a comprehensive review of quantitative studies examining this hypothesis. We found 98 articles that linked objective (ie, non-self-reported) measures of structural stigma to mental (n=57), behavioural (ie, substance use; n=27; HIV/AIDS or sexually transmitted infection; n=20), and physical (n=20) health outcomes. There was generally consistent evidence that structural stigma increases risk of poor health among LGBTQ+ individuals. Several methodological strengths were identified, including the use of multiple measures (eg, laws or policies [59%, 58 of 98]), designs (eg, quasi-experiments [21%, 21 of 98]), and samples (eg, probability-based [56%, 55 of 98]). However, important gaps exist. Just over half of studies included area-level covariates or non-LGBTQ+ comparison groups, which are necessary to address alternative explanations for the observed associations. Additionally, while studies (n=90) have begun to identify candidate mechanisms, only nine (10%) formally tested mediation. We offer suggestions for future research to advance this literature, which has implications not only for the identification of structural determinants of LGBTQ+ health but also for the development of public health interventions that reduce LGBTQ+ health disparities., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests JEP receives royalties from Oxford University Press for books related to LGBTQ-affirmative mental health treatments. The other authors declare no competing interests. Editorial note: The Lancet Group takes a neutral position with respect to territorial claims in published maps and institutional affiliations., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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24. Adolescents' Sexual Orientation and Behavioral and Neural Reactivity to Peer Acceptance and Rejection: The Moderating Role of Family Support.
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Clark KA, Pachankis JE, Dougherty LR, Katz BA, Hill KE, Klein DN, and Kujawa A
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Sexual-minority adolescents frequently endure peer rejection, yet scant research has investigated sexual-orientation differences in behavioral and neural reactions to peer rejection and acceptance. In a community sample of adolescents approximately 15 years old (47.2% female; same-sex attracted: n = 36, exclusively other-sex attracted: n = 310), we examined associations among sexual orientation and behavioral and neural reactivity to peer feedback and the moderating role of family support. Participants completed a social-interaction task while electroencephalogram data were recorded in which they voted to accept/reject peers and, in turn, received peer acceptance/rejection feedback. Compared with heterosexual adolescents, sexual-minority adolescents engaged in more behavioral efforts to ingratiate after peer rejection and demonstrated more blunted neural reactivity to peer acceptance at low, but not medium or high, levels of family support. By using a simulated real-world social-interaction task, these results demonstrate that sexual-minority adolescents display distinct behavioral and neural reactions to peer acceptance and rejection., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests The author(s) declared that there were no conflicts of interest with respect to the authorship or the publication of this article.
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- 2024
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25. Mental Health Provider Training to Improve LGBTQ Competence and Reduce Implicit and Explicit Bias: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Online and In-Person Delivery.
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Lelutiu-Weinberger C, Clark KA, and Pachankis JE
- Abstract
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) individuals in most countries face strong stigma and often rely on affirmative mental health care to foster coping and resilience. We tested an LGBTQ-affirmative mental health training for psychologists and psychiatrists by comparing in-person versus online modalities and the added benefit of supervision. Participants were randomized to a two-day training either in-person ( n = 58) or via live-stream online broadcast ( n = 55). Outcomes were assessed at baseline and 5, 10, and 15 months posttraining. Optional monthly online supervision was offered ( n = 47) from months 5 to 15. Given the substantial need for LGBTQ-affirmative expertise in high-stigma contexts, the training took place in Romania, a Central-Eastern European country with some of the highest LGBTQ stigma in Europe. Participants ( M age = 35.1) were mostly cisgender female (88%) and heterosexual (85%). Trainees, regardless of whether in-person or online, reported significant decreases from baseline to 15-month follow-up in implicit and explicit bias and significant increases in LGBTQ-affirmative clinical skills, beliefs, and behaviors. LGBTQ-affirmative practice intentions and number of LGBTQ clients did not change. Participants who attended at least one supervision session demonstrated greater reductions in explicit bias and increases in LGBTQ-affirmative behaviors from baseline to 15-month follow-up than participants who did not attend supervision. LGBTQ-affirmative mental health training can efficiently and sustainably improve LGBTQ competence and reduce provider bias in high-stigma contexts. Future research can identify additional ways to encourage mental health providers' outreach to LGBTQ clients in need of affirmative care.
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- 2023
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26. Experiences of stigma, mental health, and coping strategies in Lebanon among Lebanese and displaced Syrian men who have sex with men: A qualitative study.
- Author
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Abboud S, Seal DW, Pachankis JE, Khoshnood K, Khouri D, Fouad FM, and Heimer R
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Lebanon, Middle Eastern People, Coping Skills, Mental Health, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Social Stigma
- Abstract
Background: In Lebanon, men who have sex with men (MSM) face high rates of stigma, discrimination, and violence. Minority stress, or the unique stressors related to anti-MSM stigma and discrimination, negatively impacts the mental health of MSM. These stressors are heightened for those with intersectional minority identities such as displaced Syrian MSM in Lebanon., Methods: In this qualitative study conducted in 2020-21, part of a larger study focused on the mental and sexual health risks among MSM, we collected qualitative data from Lebanese and displaced Syrian MSM living in Lebanon and analyzed reports of their experiences with stigma, mental health, and coping strategies. We conducted semi-structured, in-depth interviews with 12 displaced Syrian MSM and 13 Lebanese MSM., Results: Our findings highlight how MSM in Lebanon navigate stigma and the mental health risks that result. Common stressors among Lebanese and displaced Syrian MSM were related to finances, sexual orientation discrimination, and social isolation. Comparing the two groups, we found that stressors specific to displaced Syrian MSM were related to adverse childhood experiences, recent exposure to the Syrian war, displacement, and discrimination in Lebanon based on their intersectional identities as MSM and Syrians. For Lebanese participants, the most common stigma coping strategies were avoidance, drinking alcohol, using drugs, or having sex. As for displaced Syrian MSM, the most common stigma coping strategy was seeking the freely available mental health services offered to them through non-governmental organizations., Conclusion: Our findings suggest that increased targeted mental health and social support interventions, informed by the unique experiences of Lebanese and displaced Syrian MSM, are highly needed to improve the coping and mental health resources of all MSM in Lebanon., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no conflict of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2023
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27. Kept in the Closet: Structural Stigma and the Timing of Sexual Minority Developmental Milestones Across 28 European Countries.
- Author
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Layland EK, Bränström R, Murchison GR, and Pachankis JE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Male, Female, Social Stigma, Bisexuality, Sexual Behavior, Gender Identity, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Structural stigma's role in lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) people's attainment of identity development milestones remains unknown. In a sample of 111,498 LGB people (ages 15 to 65+) living across 28 European countries, associations were investigated between structural stigma measured using an objective index of discriminatory country-level laws and policies affecting LGB people and the timing and pacing of LGB self-awareness, coming out, and closet duration, and subgroup differences in these associations. On average, self-awareness occurred at age 14.8 years old (SD = 5.1), coming out occurred at 18.5 years old (SD = 5.7), and the closet was 3.9 years long (SD = 4.9); thereby highlighting adolescence as a key period for sexual identity development and disclosure. Greater structural stigma was associated with higher odds of never coming out, later age of coming out, and longer closet duration. Gender identity, transgender identity, and sexual identity moderated associations between structural stigma and these developmental milestones. Reducing structural stigma can plausibly promote sexual identity development among LGB populations, especially during adolescence when identity related milestones are often attained., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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28. Guided LGBTQ-affirmative internet cognitive-behavioral therapy for sexual minority youth's mental health: A randomized controlled trial of a minority stress treatment approach.
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Pachankis JE, Soulliard ZA, Layland EK, Behari K, Seager van Dyk I, Eisenstadt BE, Chiaramonte D, Ljótsson B, Särnholm J, and Bjureberg J
- Subjects
- Infant, Newborn, Humans, Female, Adolescent, Mental Health, Anxiety Disorders therapy, Internet, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Objective: LGBTQ-affirmative cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) addresses the adverse impacts of minority stress. However, this treatment has rarely been tested in randomized controlled trials with LGBTQ youth and never using an asynchronous online platform for broad reach. This study examined the feasibility, acceptability, preliminary efficacy, and multi-level stigma moderators of LGBTQ-affirmative internet-based CBT (ICBT)., Method: Participants were 120 LGBTQ youth (ages 16-25; 37.5% transgender or non-binary; 75.8% assigned female at birth; 49.2% non-Latino White) living across 38 U.S. states and reporting depression and/or anxiety symptoms. Participants were randomized to receive 10 sessions of LGBTQ-affirmative ICBT or only complete 10 weekly assessments of mental and behavioral health and minority stress; all completed measures of psychological distress, depression, anxiety, suicidal thoughts, alcohol use, and HIV-transmission-risk behavior at baseline and 4 and 8 months post-baseline; 20 LGBTQ-affirmative ICBT participants completed a qualitative interview regarding intervention acceptability., Results: Participants randomized to LGBTQ-affirmative ICBT completed, on average, 6.08 (SD = 3.80) sessions. Participants reported that LGBTQ-affirmative ICBT was helpful and engaging and provided suggestions for enhancing engagement. Although most outcomes decreased over time, between-group comparisons were small and non-significant. LGBTQ-affirmative ICBT was more efficacious in reducing psychological distress than assessment-only for participants in counties high in anti-LGBTQ bias (b = -1.73, p = 0.001, 95% CI [-2.75, -0.70]). Session dosage also significantly predicted reduced depression and anxiety symptoms., Conclusions: LGBTQ-affirmative ICBT represents a feasible and acceptable treatment. Future research can identify more efficacious approaches and modalities for engaging LGBTQ youth, especially those living under stigmatizing conditions, who might benefit most., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: John Pachankis receives royalties from Oxford University Press for books related to LGBTQ-affirmative mental health treatments., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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29. Incorporating macro-social contexts into emotion research: Longitudinal associations between structural stigma and emotion processes among gay and bisexual men.
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Hollinsaid NL, Pachankis JE, Mair P, and Hatzenbuehler ML
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Longitudinal Studies, Sexual Behavior psychology, Emotions, Social Environment, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Research into correlates and predictors of emotion regulation has focused almost exclusively on individual differences and the immediate situation. Here, we consider whether features of macro-social contexts may also shape emotion regulation. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a longitudinal study of 502 gay and bisexual men living in 269 U.S. counties that varied in the level of stigma surrounding sexual minorities. We find that gay and bisexual men living in higher- (vs. lower-) stigma counties consistently reported more suppression, which consequently explained longitudinal increases (vs. decreases) in their lack of emotional clarity over 24 months. Results were robust to demographic characteristics, stigma at the interpersonal level (i.e., sexual orientation-related discrimination), and another form of social inequality (i.e., county-level income inequality). These findings suggest that broadening the lens of emotion regulation research to include characteristics of the macro-social environment may yield new insights into determinants of emotion regulation. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2023
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30. Toward Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Sexual Minority Women: Voices From Stakeholders and Community Members.
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Scheer JR, Clark KA, McConocha E, Wang K, and Pachankis JE
- Abstract
Sexual minority women (SMW) experience an elevated risk of mental health problems compared to heterosexual women. However, knowledge gaps remain regarding whether cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) interventions meet SMW's mental health needs. Further, virtually no studies have integrated stakeholder (i.e., researchers with content expertise in SMW's health and clinical providers who work with SMW) and community member (i.e., SMW) perspectives to identify CBT approaches that address SMW-specific issues. This study used qualitative data gathered from 39 SMW who reported depression, anxiety, suicidality, and heavy drinking in the past 3 months and 16 content experts and clinical providers to obtain information relevant to enhancing CBT for SMW. In addition, we used thematic analysis to identify themes related to the adaptation and delivery of CBT for SMW. Building on prior literature, this study's findings revealed seven considerations for delivering mental health services to SMW: (1) attending to SMW's diverse gender identities and expressions; (2) focusing on SMW's nonbinary stressors; (3) formulating SMW's gender-based stressors within a feminist framework; (4) applying intersectionality frameworks; (5) incorporating issues of diversity, multiculturalism, and social justice; (6) addressing the role of trauma exposure; and (7) addressing the role of alcohol use in SMW's lives. These considerations are reviewed in terms of their implications for clinical practice, with a focus on enhancing applications of existing CBT interventions, to best respond to the unique needs of this population.
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- 2023
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31. Self-schemas and information processing biases as mechanisms underlying sexual orientation disparities in depressive symptoms: Results from a longitudinal, population-based study.
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Bränström R, Pachankis JE, Jin J, Klein DN, and Hatzenbuehler ML
- Subjects
- Young Adult, Humans, Male, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, Sexual Behavior, Cognition, Bias, Depression epidemiology, Depression psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major
- Abstract
Sexual minority individuals experience higher prevalence of major depression and more frequent depressive symptoms compared to heterosexual individuals. Although existing theories have suggested cognitive mechanisms that may explain these disparities, empirical tests are limited by a reliance on cross-sectional designs, self-reported measures, and nonprobability samples. We analyzed data from a longitudinal, population-based study of young adults ( N = 1,065; n = 497 sexual minority) who completed validated measures of depressive symptoms over a 3-year period; at Wave 2, participants completed the self-referent encoding task, a behavioral task assessing self-schemas and information processing biases. Self-schemas were measured with the drift rate, which was estimated via the composite of endorsement of positive or negative words as self-referential (or not) and the reaction time for these decisions. Information processing biases were operationalized as the total number of negative words that were both endorsed as self-referential and recalled after the task, divided by the total number of words endorsed and recalled. Compared to heterosexuals, sexual minorities displayed significantly higher negative self-schemas and recalled a significantly higher proportion of negative words endorsed as self-referential, relative to total number of words. In turn, these differences in self-schemas and information processing biases mediated the sexual orientation disparity in depressive symptoms. Moreover, among sexual minorities, perceived discrimination predicted greater negative self-schemas and information processing biases, which mediated the prospective association between discrimination and depressive symptoms. These findings provide the strongest evidence to date for cognitive risk factors that underlie sexual orientation disparities in depression, highlighting potential intervention targets. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2023
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32. Future Research Directions on "The Closet" as Metaphor and Reality.
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Pachankis JE and Jackson SD
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- 2023
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33. A Developmental Model of the Sexual Minority Closet: Structural Sensitization, Psychological Adaptations, and Post-closet Growth.
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Pachankis JE and Jackson SD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Male, Female, Social Stigma, Sexual Behavior, Disclosure, Adaptation, Psychological, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Across the lifespan, most sexual minority individuals experience the closet-a typically prolonged period in which no significant others know their sexual identity. This paper positions the closet as distinct from stigma concealment given its typical duration in years and absolute removal from sources of support for an often-central identity typically during a developmentally sensitive period. The Developmental Model of the Closet proposed here delineates the vicarious learning that takes place before sexual orientation awareness to shape one's eventual experience of the closet; the stressors that take place after one has become aware of their sexual orientation but has not yet disclosed it, which often takes place during adolescence; and potential lifespan-persistent mental health effects of the closet, as moderated by the structural, interpersonal, cultural, and temporal context of disclosure. The paper outlines the ways in which the model both draws upon and is distinct from earlier models of sexual minority identity formation and proposes several testable hypotheses and future research directions, including tests of multilevel interventions., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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34. Explicit and implicit bias among parents of sexual and gender minority youth.
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Hubachek SQ, Clark KA, Pachankis JE, and Dougherty LR
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Adult, Bias, Implicit, Sexual Behavior psychology, Parents psychology, Gender Identity, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Substance-Related Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Sexual and gender minority (SGM) youth are at disproportionate risk for poor mental health outcomes, in part due to experiences and expectations of anti-SGM bias including from their own parents. We examined explicit anti-SGM and implicit antisexual minority bias in parents of SGM youth and associations with parenting and parent and youth psychosocial functioning. Heterosexual/cisgender parents ( N = 205, M
age = 46.9 years, SD = 8.5) of SGM youth (≤ 29 years old, Mage = 19.4, SD = 4.7) completed an online study including measures of explicit anti-SGM and implicit anti-SM bias, parental acceptance and psychological control, parent-child unfinished business (unresolved negative feelings related to their child's identity), parental depression and anxiety, and youth anxiety, depression, substance use, and exposure to bullying. In models including both explicit anti-SGM and implicit anti-SM bias as predictors of parent and youth outcomes, explicit bias was uniquely associated with lower parental acceptance and greater parental psychological control, parent-child unfinished business, parental anxiety and depression, and youth substance use and exposure to bullying, whereas implicit bias was uniquely associated with greater parent-child unfinished business and parental depression. Further, the combination of high levels of both explicit and implicit bias was associated with the highest levels of parent-child unfinished business, parental depression, and youth anxiety, depression, and exposure to bullying. Results suggest that both types of bias jointly contribute to parenting and parent and youth psychosocial functioning and can help identify families at greatest risk for maladjustment. Findings can inform the development of interventions designed to reduce anti-SGM bias in parents of SGM youth. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).- Published
- 2023
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35. Moderators of LGBQ-affirmative cognitive behavioral therapy: ESTEEM is especially effective among Black and Latino sexual minority men.
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Keefe JR, Rodriguez-Seijas C, Jackson SD, Bränström R, Harkness A, Safren SA, Hatzenbuehler ML, and Pachankis JE
- Subjects
- Male, Female, Humans, Ethnicity, Minority Groups psychology, Bisexuality psychology, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer (LGBQ)-affirmative cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) focused on minority stress processes can address gay and bisexual men's transdiagnostic mental and behavioral health concerns. Identifying moderators of treatment outcomes may inform the mechanisms of LGBQ-affirmative CBT and subpopulations who may derive particular benefit., Method: Data were from a clinical trial in which gay and bisexual men with mental and behavioral health concerns were randomized to receive Effective Skills to Empower Effective Men (ESTEEM; an LGBQ-affirmative transdiagnostic CBT; n = 100) or one of two control conditions ( n = 154): LGBQ-affirmative community mental health treatment (CMHT) or HIV counseling and testing (HCT). The preregistered outcome was a comorbidity index of depression, anxiety, alcohol/drug problems, and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission risk behavior at 8-month follow-up (i.e., 4 months postintervention). A two-step exploratory machine learning process was employed for 20 theoretically informed baseline variables identified by study therapists as potential moderators of ESTEEM efficacy. Potential moderators included demographic factors, pretreatment comorbidities, clinical facilitators, and minority stress factors., Results: Racial/ethnic minority identification, namely as Black or Latino, was the only statistically significant moderator of treatment efficacy ( B = -3.23, 95% CI [-5.03, -1.64]), t (197) = -3.88, p < .001. Racially/ethnically minoritized recipients ( d = -0.71, p < .001), but not White/non-Latino recipients ( d = 0.22, p = .391), had greater reductions in comorbidity index scores in ESTEEM compared to the control conditions. This moderation was driven by improvements in anxiety and alcohol/drug use problems., Discussion: Black and Latino gay and bisexual men experiencing comorbid mental and behavioral health risks might particularly benefit from a minority stress-focused LGBQ-affirmative CBT. Future research should identify mechanisms for this moderation to inform targeted treatment delivery and dissemination. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2023
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36. Development and Validation of Two Abbreviated Intraminority Gay Community Stress Scales.
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Maiolatesi AJ, Satyanarayana S, Bränström R, and Pachankis JE
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Bisexuality psychology, Sexual Behavior psychology, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Social stressors stemming from within the gay community might render gay and bisexual men vulnerable to mental health problems. The 20-item intraminority Gay Community Stress Scale (GCSS) is a reliable measure of gay community stress, but the scale's length limits its widespread use in sexual minority mental health research. Using three independent samples of gay and bisexual men, the present research developed two abbreviated versions of the GCSS using nonparametric item response modeling and validated them. Results indicated that eight items provided maximal information about the gay community stress construct; these items were selected to form the eight-item GCSS. The eight-item GCSS reproduced the factor structure of the parent scale, and gay community stress scores obtained from it correlated with other identity-specific social stress constructs and mental health symptoms. Associations between gay community stress and mental health symptoms remained significant even after controlling for related identity-specific stressors, general life stress, and relevant demographics. A four-item version was also developed and assessed, showing good structural, convergent, criterion, and incremental validity and adequate reliability. The eight- and four-item versions of the GCSS offer efficient measures of gay community stress, an increasingly recognized source of stress for gay and bisexual men.
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- 2023
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37. Rejection Sensitivity and Sexual Minority Men's Social Anxiety Disorder: The Moderating Role of Sexual Identity Strength.
- Author
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Maiolatesi AJ, Wang K, Burton CL, Harkness A, Esserman DA, Safren SA, and Pachankis JE
- Abstract
Although gay-related rejection sensitivity (RS) is associated with social anxiety among sexual minority men, little attention has been given to the validity of gay-related RS measures and to individual differences that might moderate the association between gay-related RS and social anxiety. In a population-based sample of sexual minority men, Study 1 ( N = 114) investigated the incremental validity of gay-related RS and showed that gay-related RS scores significantly added to the prediction of social anxiety symptoms, even after controlling for personal RS scores. In a clinical sample of sexual minority men, Study 2 ( N = 254) examined interrelationships among gay-related RS, sexual identity strength, and current social anxiety symptoms and disorder diagnosis. Results revealed that the expected count of current social anxiety symptoms and the odds of social anxiety disorder diagnosis, as assessed with a structured diagnostic interview, increased as a function of gay-related RS scores. Sexual identity strength moderated these relationships, such that the associations between gay-related RS scores and interviewer-assessed social anxiety symptoms and disorder were only significant for those high, but not low, in sexual identity strength. Together, results from the present studies lend support to the incremental validity of gay-related RS scales in predicting social anxiety symptoms and suggest that sexual minority men who consider their sexual orientation to be self-defining might be particularly vulnerable to the mental health correlates of gay-related RS.
- Published
- 2023
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38. How do sexual and gender minority people acquire the capability for suicide? Voices from survivors of near-fatal suicide attempts.
- Author
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Clark KA, Salway T, McConocha EM, and Pachankis JE
- Abstract
Despite well-documented disparities by sexual and gender minority (SGM) status in suicide attempt and mortality rates, few studies have investigated the lived experiences that contribute to SGM people's disproportionate risk of suicide. Having a history of at least one near-fatal (or medically serious) suicide attempt serves as a proxy for suicide mortality, but no known study has involved SGM people who have made such an attempt. Ideation-to-action theories of suicide posit that individuals acquire the capability for suicide through repeated exposure to painful and provocative events - namely, traumatic, threatening, and risky experiences - that can diminish the pain and fear of death. Yet whether identity-specific features of acquired capability for suicide contribute to SGM people's disproportionate risk of suicide remains unknown. Drawing upon interviews with 22 SGM people who experienced a recent near-fatal suicide attempt, the current study sought to identify specific determinants of how SGM individuals acquire the capability to kill themselves, a potentially powerful, and modifiable, pathway to suicide. Results identified three SGM-specific contributors to the acquired capability for suicide: (1) identity invalidation during developmentally sensitive periods of childhood and adolescence that left participants feeling erased, invisible, and, in some cases, non-existent; (2) normalization of suicide within SGM social networks that increased acceptability and reduced the fear of suicide; and (3) structural stigma and SGM community trauma as habituating sources of pain that engendered feelings of exhaustion and positioned suicide as a reprieve from pervasive anti-SGM norms. This study demonstrates that dominant suicidology theories might need to be refined to account for the stigma-related determinants of SGM suicide. Further, this study reinforces the importance of qualitative methods for understanding the lived experience of suicide and calls for SGM-specific suicide prevention efforts to respond to stigma to support those SGM people who contemplate suicide., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
- Published
- 2022
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39. Sexual orientation-related patterns of 12-month course and severity of suicidality in a longitudinal, population-based cohort of young adults in Sweden.
- Author
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Clark KA, Hatzenbuehler ML, Bränström R, and Pachankis JE
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Sexual Behavior, Suicidal Ideation, Sweden epidemiology, Young Adult, Sexual and Gender Minorities, Suicide
- Abstract
Purpose: We assessed sexual orientation-related patterns in the 1-year longitudinal course (i.e., onset, remittance, persistence) and severity of suicidality., Method: Data were obtained from a prospective, population-based cohort representing nearly 2.4 million Swedish young adults., Results: A higher proportion of sexual minorities remitted (14.6%) compared to heterosexuals (9.5%). However, over twice as many sexual minorities (35.1%) experienced persistent suicidality as heterosexuals (15.0%). Plurisexual (e.g., bisexual, pansexual) young adults and sexual minorities aged 17-25 were at greatest risk for persistent and more severe suicidality., Conclusion: Findings call for the identification of sexual orientation-related predictors of chronic suicidality to inform responsive clinical interventions., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.)
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- 2022
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40. Mechanisms linking distal minority stress and depressive symptoms in a longitudinal, population-based study of gay and bisexual men: A test and extension of the psychological mediation framework.
- Author
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Lattanner MR, Pachankis JE, and Hatzenbuehler ML
- Subjects
- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Sexual Behavior psychology, Stress, Psychological psychology, Depression psychology, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Objective: Gay and bisexual men have significantly higher rates of depression than heterosexual men. The minority stress theory (Meyer, 2003) proposed that distal minority stressors, like interpersonal discrimination, contribute to this disparity. The psychological mediation framework (Hatzenbuehler, 2009) posited several psychosocial mechanisms through which distal minority stress creates elevations in depression among sexual minorities. Despite accumulating support for this framework, there are a number of limitations to existing research, including largely relying on cross-sectional designs; focusing on a small subset of mechanisms and moderators; and using nonprobability samples., Method: We recruited a sample of gay and bisexual men (N = 502) obtained from a population-based data set of U.S. adults. Participants completed validated measures of distal minority stress (i.e., interpersonal discrimination), psychosocial mechanisms (i.e., rumination, emotional clarity, and social support), identity-related moderators (i.e., identity centrality, stigma consciousness, and sexual orientation identity), and depressive symptoms at baseline, 6-month follow-up, and 1-year follow-up., Results: Rumination (b = 0.38, 95% CI [0.13, 0.84]), lack of emotional clarity (b = 0.43, 95% CI [0.11, 0.83]), and lack of social support (b = 0.21, 95% CI [0.04, 0.45]) each individually mediated the prospective relationship between interpersonal discrimination and depressive symptoms, controlling for initial symptoms, age, and education. These indirect effects were not moderated by identity-related characteristics or sexual identity., Conclusion: Our study provides some of the strongest empirical evidence for the psychological mediation framework to date and suggests targets for interventions focused on reducing the mental health consequences of minority stress for sexual minority men. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2022
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41. Training in LGBTQ-affirmative cognitive behavioral therapy: A randomized controlled trial across LGBTQ community centers.
- Author
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Pachankis JE, Soulliard ZA, Seager van Dyk I, Layland EK, Clark KA, Levine DS, and Jackson SD
- Subjects
- Adult, Bisexuality psychology, Cultural Competency, Female, Humans, Sexual Behavior, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Objectives: This randomized controlled trial examined whether an 11-week synchronous (i.e., real-time) online training in lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other sexual or gender diverse (LGBTQ)-affirmative cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) could lead to increased uptake of this practice at LGBTQ community centers across 20 U.S. states and internationally., Method: A total of 121 mental health providers (M
age = 37.74; 78.5% LGBTQ; 60.3% non-Hispanic/Latinx White) were randomized to receive the 11-week training either immediately (n = 61) or after a 4-month wait (n = 60). At baseline and 4 and 8 months after baseline, participants self-reported their LGBTQ-affirmative competency, cultural humility, and knowledge of the minority stress theory and practice skills underlying LGBTQ-affirmative CBT. To objectively assess uptake of LGBTQ-affirmative CBT, participants demonstrated, through simulated practice, how they would respond to two video-based clinical vignettes., Results: Compared to wait-list, participants in the immediate training condition reported greater improvements in self-reported cultural competence (d = 1.24), minority stress knowledge (d = 0.78), LGBTQ-affirmative CBT knowledge (d = 0.78), and LGBTQ-affirmative CBT skills familiarity (d = 0.91) and use (d = 0.96); effects persisted 8 months postbaseline. Cultural humility showed no significant difference by condition (d = 0.07). In objectively coded assessments of simulated practice, participants in the training condition demonstrated greater uptake of LGBTQ-affirmative practice skills (d = 0.82)., Conclusions: Findings preliminarily suggest that mental health providers can be trained to deliver LGBTQ-affirmative CBT using the low-cost, efficient reach of online training. This training can help disseminate evidence-based mental health care to LGBTQ individuals and support its implementation across practice settings. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).- Published
- 2022
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42. A Relational Framework for Engaging Latino Sexual Minority Men in Sexual and Behavioral Health Research.
- Author
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Harkness A, Rogers BG, Mayo D, Smith-Alvarez R, Pachankis JE, and Safren SA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Behavioral Medicine, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, Male, Men, Social Stigma, Young Adult, Sexual Behavior, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Latino sexual minority men (LSMM) experience sexual and behavioral health disparities. Yet, LSMM are underrepresented in sexual and behavioral health research, creating scientific inequity. There is, therefore, a need to identify the barriers and facilitators to LSMM's participation in sexual and behavioral health research, which is the gap that the current study sought to fill. We interviewed LSMM (n = 28; age 18-40, 57% US born) and key informants (n = 10) regarding LSMM's barriers and facilitators to participating in sexual and behavioral health research and suggestions for increasing participation. The research team coded the data via thematic analysis. We found that relational factors are central to understanding LSMM's participation in sexual and behavioral health research. Some relational experiences (e.g., interpersonal stigma) interfered with participation, whereas others (e.g., altruistic desires to contribute to community well-being) facilitated participation. The findings are consolidated within a new relational framework for understanding LSMM's participation in sexual and behavioral health research. Study findings highlight the centrality of relational factors in influencing LSMM's participation in sexual and behavioral health research. Relational factors can be used to inform the development of culturally relevant recruitment strategies to improve representation of LSMM in sexual and behavioral health research. Implementing these recommendations may address scientific inequity, whereby LSMM are disproportionately impacted by sexual and behavioral health concerns yet underrepresented in related research., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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43. Mental Health, Alcohol Use, and Substance Use Correlates of Sexism in a Sample of Gender-Diverse Sexual Minority Women.
- Author
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Scheer JR, Batchelder AW, Wang K, and Pachankis JE
- Abstract
Gender-based stressors (e.g., sexism) are rooted in hegemonic masculinity, a cultural practice that subordinates women and stems from patriarchal social structures and institutions. Sexism has been increasingly documented as a key driver of mental and behavioral health issues among women, yet prior research has largely focused on heterosexual women. The current study examined associations between sexism and mental health (i.e., psychological distress) and behavioral health (i.e., alcohol- and drug-related consequences) among sexual minority women (SMW). We also examined whether these associations might be more pronounced among SMW who identify as gender minorities (e.g., gender nonbinary, genderqueer) or are masculine-presenting compared to those who identify as cisgender women or are feminine-presenting. Participants included 60 SMW (ages 19-32; 55.0% queer, 43.3% gender minority, 41.7% racial and ethnic minority) who completed self-report measures of sexism, psychological distress, and alcohol- and drug-related consequences. Results indicated that sexism was positively associated with psychological distress, alcohol-related consequences, and drug-related consequences, respectively. In addition, sexism was associated with worse mental and behavioral health outcomes among SMW who identify as gender minorities or are masculine-presenting compared to SMW who identify as cisgender or are feminine-presenting. Findings provide evidence that the health impact of gender-based stressors among SMW may differ based on whether SMW identify as gender minorities and based on the extent to which SMW violate traditional gender norms.
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- 2022
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44. An Expanded Definition of Intersectional Stigma for Public Health Research and Praxis.
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Sievwright KM, Stangl AL, Nyblade L, Lippman SA, Logie CH, Veras MASM, Zamudio-Haas S, Poteat T, Rao D, Pachankis JE, Kumi Smith M, Weiser SD, Brooks RA, and Sevelius JM
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- Humans, Public Health, Social Stigma
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- 2022
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45. Transgender-based disparities in suicidality: A population-based study of key predictions from four theoretical models.
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Bränström R, Stormbom I, Bergendal M, and Pachankis JE
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Mental Health, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Suicidal Ideation, Young Adult, Suicide, Transgender Persons psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: Numerous studies have reported a high prevalence of suicidality among transgender individuals. Yet few studies have reported results from population-based samples, leaving open questions about the generalizability of existing findings. Factors proposed to explain transgender individuals' elevated risk of suicidality derive from several theoretical models (i.e., clinical model, interpersonal model, minority stress model, and societal integration model). These models identify both general risk factors (e.g., mental health risks and interpersonal risks) assumed to be elevated among transgender individuals because of transgender individuals' exposure to stigma-related disadvantage and the stigma-specific risks themselves (e.g., minority stressors such as discrimination). This is one of the first population-based studies to examine differences in suicidality between transgender and cisgender individuals and theoretically derived factors potentially explaining such differences., Methods: A sample of 533 transgender and 104,757 cisgender individuals (age 16-84) was analyzed., Results: Compared to cisgender individuals, transgender individuals were at a substantially higher risk of reporting both lifetime and past 12-month suicidality. Several factors partially mediated the increased risk of suicidality among transgender compared to cisgender individuals, including depressive symptoms, lack of social support, and exposure to discrimination., Conclusions: This study suggests that transgender people experience multiple psychosocial health threats and calls for interventions to reduce these threats., (wileyonlinelibrary.com/journal/sltb.)
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- 2022
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46. Emotion Regulation in Context: Expressive Flexibility as a Stigma Coping Resource for Sexual Minority Men.
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Wang K, Maiolatesi AJ, Burton CL, Scheer JR, and Pachankis JE
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Although expressive flexibility (i.e., the ability to engage in expressive enhancement and suppression in accordance with situational demands) has been increasingly recognized as an important source of resilience, its role in the context of stigma coping remains under-investigated. The present research examined the role of expressive flexibility as a potential buffer in the association between perceptions of sexual orientation-related discrimination and psychological distress among sexual minority men, a population facing significant mental health problems driven by stigma-related stress. A U.S. sample of sexual minority men ( N = 377) completed self-report measures of perceived sexual orientation-related discrimination, expressive flexibility, and psychological distress. Cross-sectional analyses revealed that perceived sexual orientation-related discrimination was positively associated with psychological distress, but the relationship was attenuated for participants with high levels of expressive flexibility. Longitudinal analyses further showed that the association between discrimination and psychological distress measured one year later was significant for sexual minority men with very low levels of expressive flexibility. These findings highlight the role of expressive flexibility as an important resource for coping with sexual orientation-related discrimination and underscore the potential utility of enhancing expressive flexibility in stigma coping interventions that seek to improve sexual minority men's mental health.
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- 2022
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47. LGBQ-affirmative cognitive-behavioral therapy for young gay and bisexual men's mental and sexual health: A three-arm randomized controlled trial.
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Pachankis JE, Harkness A, Maciejewski KR, Behari K, Clark KA, McConocha E, Winston R, Adeyinka O, Reynolds J, Bränström R, Esserman DA, Hatzenbuehler ML, and Safren SA
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- Adolescent, Adult, Ethnicity, Homosexuality, Male psychology, Humans, Male, Minority Groups psychology, Sexual Behavior psychology, Young Adult, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, HIV Infections prevention & control, HIV Infections therapy, Sexual Health, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Objective: Effective Skills to Empower Effective Men (ESTEEM) represents the first intervention to address the psychological pathways through which minority stress undermines young sexual minority men's (SMM's) mental and sexual health using transdiagnostic cognitive-behavioral therapy. This study compared the efficacy of ESTEEM against two existing interventions., Method: Participants were young HIV-negative SMM ( N = 254; ages = 18-35; 67.2% racial/ethnic minority) experiencing a depression, anxiety, and/or stress-/trauma-related disorder and past-90-day HIV transmission risk behavior. After completing HIV testing and counseling, participants were randomized to receive 10-session ESTEEM ( n = 100); 10-session community-based LGBQ-affirmative counseling ( n = 102); or only HIV testing and counseling ( n = 52)., Results: For the primary outcome of any HIV transmission risk behavior at 8 months, ESTEEM was not significantly associated with greater reduction compared to HIV testing and counseling (risk ratio [RR] = 0.89, p = .52). Supportive analyses of the frequency of HIV transmission risk behavior at 8 months showed a nonsignificant difference between ESTEEM compared to HIV testing and counseling (RR = 0.69) and LGBQ-affirmative counseling (RR = 0.62). For secondary outcomes (e.g., depression, anxiety, substance use, suicidality, number of mental health diagnoses) at 8 months, ESTEEM had a larger effect size than the two comparison conditions, but these comparisons did not reach statistical significance when adjusting for the false discovery rate. Observed effect sizes for condition comparisons were smaller than the effect sizes used to power the study. In exploratory analyses, ESTEEM showed promise for reducing comorbidity., Conclusions: Because the control conditions were associated with stronger effects than anticipated, and given the heterogeneous nature of transdiagnostic outcomes, the study possessed insufficient power to statistically detect the consistently small-to-moderate benefit of ESTEEM compared to the two control conditions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2022
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48. Gender-based Structural Stigma and Intimate Partner Violence Across 28 Countries: A Population-based Study of Women Across Sexual Orientation, Immigration Status, and Socioeconomic Status.
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Scheer JR, Pachankis JE, and Bränström R
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- Female, Humans, Emigration and Immigration, Risk Factors, Sexual Behavior, Sexual Partners, Social Class, Intimate Partner Violence, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Reducing structural drivers of intimate partner violence (IPV), including gender inequity in education, employment, and health, surrounding women worldwide represents a clear public health priority. Within countries, some women are at disproportionate risk of IPV compared to other women, including sexual minority women, immigrant women, and women in poverty. However, limited research has assessed women's IPV risk and related circumstances, including police involvement following IPV experiences and IPV-related worry, across sexual orientation, immigration status, and socioeconomic status in a population-based survey of women across countries. Further, few studies have examined IPV against minority women as a function of gender-based structural stigma. This study aimed to determine whether gender-based structural stigma is associated with IPV and related circumstances among European women; examine minority-majority IPV disparities; and assess whether structural stigma is associated with IPV disparities. We used the population-based 2012 Violence Against Women Survey ( n = 42,000) administered across 28 European Union countries: 724 (1.7%) identified as sexual minority, 841 (2.0%) as immigrant, and 2,272 (5.4%) as living in poverty. Women in high gender-based structural stigma countries had a greater risk of past-12-month IPV (AOR: 1.18, 95% CI = 1.04, 1.34) and IPV-related worry (AOR: 1.09, 95% CI = 1.04, 1.15) than women in low structural stigma countries. All minority women were at disproportionate risk of IPV and IPV-related worry compared to majority women. Associations between gender-based structural stigma and IPV and related circumstances differed across minority status. Country-level structural stigma can possibly perpetuate women's risk of IPV and related circumstances. Associations between structural stigma and IPV and related circumstances for sexual minority women, immigrant women, and women in poverty call for research into the IPV experiences of minority populations across structural contexts.
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- 2022
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49. Coming out under fire: The role of minority stress and emotion regulation in sexual orientation disclosure.
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Seager van Dyk I, Aldao A, and Pachankis JE
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- Adult, Disclosure, Female, Humans, Male, Minority Groups psychology, Sexual Behavior psychology, Emotional Regulation, Sexual and Gender Minorities
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Minority stress is hypothesized to interfere with sexual orientation disclosure and sexual minority wellbeing. In this study, we investigated whether minority stress is causally linked to reduced disclosure in sexual minorities, and whether emotion regulation, a potentially adaptive form of stigma coping, can intervene to promote disclosure even following exposure to minority stress. Sexual minority adults in the US (N = 168) were recruited online and randomized to a 2 x 2 between-subjects experimental design, where they: 1) received either emotion regulation instructions that asked them to either distance themselves from an emotionally evocative film clip or immerse themselves in the clip, and then 2) viewed either an affirming or a minority stress film clip. Following the film clip, participants completed a written reflection task in which they reflected on the film clip they viewed, which allowed research assistants to subsequently code for participants' spontaneous disclosures of sexual orientation. Participants who viewed the minority stress clip were significantly less likely to spontaneously disclose their sexual orientation in the written task compared to those who viewed the affirming film clip, OR = 3.21, 95% CI [1.14, 9.05], p = .03. Although the emotion regulation manipulation was successful, there was no effect on sexual orientation disclosure. To our knowledge, this is the first study to demonstrate a causal link between minority stress and disclosure in sexual minorities, and thus highlights an important mechanism underlying minority stress's effects on sexual minority wellbeing. Results demonstrate the importance of interventions that affirm marginalized identities and promote safe sexual orientation disclosure. Future research is needed to determine the circumstances under which effective emotion regulation can buffer against the negative emotional effects of minority stress to promote healthy approach behaviors like disclosure in safe contexts., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2022
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50. Rejection sensitivity across sex, sexual orientation, and age: Measurement invariance and latent mean differences.
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Maiolatesi AJ, Clark KA, and Pachankis JE
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Heterosexuality, Humans, Male, Psychometrics, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Personality Disorders, Sexual Behavior
- Abstract
Intergroup differences in personality might be determined by systematic variation in social status and social experiences across groups. Because of its close association with social experiences, rejection sensitivity (RS)-a tendency toward anxious expectations of, and hypersensitivity to, interpersonal rejection-represents one such personality disposition that might differ across social groups, with implications for understanding mental health disparities. After first evaluating measurement invariance of the Adult Rejection Sensitivity Questionnaire (A-RSQ), the present research sought to assess whether latent mean differences in RS emerged across sex, sexual orientation, and age in a population-based sample of Swedish young adults (age 18-36; N = 1,679). Analyses revealed that the scale achieved full configural, metric, and scalar invariance across sex and sexual orientation and partial scalar invariance across age. As expected, tests of latent mean differences indicated that women, sexual minorities, and people 18-29 years old exhibited significantly higher RS levels than men, heterosexuals, and people 30-36 years old, respectively. Findings from the present research highlight the utility of attending to group differences in maladaptive personality dispositions and information processing styles and their potential role in contributing to persistent mental health hardships uniquely affecting women, sexual minorities, and younger people. Implications for scale administration and future research into the social causes and consequences of RS are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2022
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