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Supporting Sexual Minority Youth: Protective Factors of Adverse Health Outcomes and Implications for Public Health

Authors :
Alberto Valido
Katherine M. Ingram
Sasha Mintz
Dorothy L. Espelage
Ashley Woolweaver
Tomei Kuehl
Matthew Rivas-Koehl
Source :
The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine. 69(6)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Purpose Sexual and gender minority (SGM) youth (e.g., gay, lesbian, bisexual, questioning, transgender) are systemically impacted by victimization and poor mental health because of discrimination in society. To prevent adverse outcomes, we must understand factors that help communities support and protect SGM youth. This study examined to what extent protective factors longitudinally predict outcomes 2 years later in an effort to inform more sensitive prevention efforts. Methods Students from nine Colorado high schools (N = 2,744) completed surveys across four consecutive school semesters (T1 to T4). Structural equation modeling was conducted to determine the longitudinal associations between baseline protective factors (access to medical and counseling services, help-seeking beliefs, trusted adults, family support, peer support, spirituality) and distal adverse outcomes (substance use, depression, suicidal ideation, peer victimization, bullying perpetration, sexual violence victimization and perpetration, homophobic name-calling victimization, and perpetration), by sexual orientation. Results All protective factors examined, except for access to medical services, were associated with lower likelihood of adverse outcomes. Associations differed across sexual orientations. For students identified as questioning or something other than heterosexual, lesbian, gay, or bisexual, family support is a notable protective factor of depression, peer victimization, bullying perpetration, and sexual violence perpetration. Family support was not significantly protective for these outcomes among heterosexual, lesbian, gay, and bisexual students. Conclusions There is no singular protective factor or universally impactful intervention for public health. Public health initiatives should recognize intersectional identities of young people and build strategies that are relevant to specific identities to create more comprehensive and effective programing.

Details

ISSN :
18791972
Volume :
69
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ea38ccd3ed8b4590ee5ad797c303a6ec