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Substance use over time among sexual and gender minority people: Differences at the intersection of sex and gender

Authors :
Flentje, Annesa
Flentje, Annesa
Sunder, Gowri
Ceja, Alexis
Lisha, Nadra
Neilands, Torsten
Aouizerat, Bradley
Lubensky, Micah
Capriotti, Matthew
Dastur, Zubin
Lunn, Mitchell
Obedin-Maliver, Juno
Flentje, Annesa
Flentje, Annesa
Sunder, Gowri
Ceja, Alexis
Lisha, Nadra
Neilands, Torsten
Aouizerat, Bradley
Lubensky, Micah
Capriotti, Matthew
Dastur, Zubin
Lunn, Mitchell
Obedin-Maliver, Juno
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Purpose: Sexual and gender minority (SGM) people are at greater risk for substance use than heterosexual and cisgender people, but most prior work is limited by cross sectional analyses or the examination of single substance use. This study examined substance use over time among SGM people to identify patterns of polysubstance use at the intersection of sex and gender. Method: Data were collected annually over four years from SGM respondents (n=11,822) in The PRIDE Study. Differences in substance use patterns (any prior 30-day use of 15 substances) by gender subgroup were examined with latent class analysis, and multinomial regression models tested relationships between gender subgroup and substance use. Results: Eight classes of substance use were observed. The three most common patterns were low substance use (49%), heavy episodic alcohol use (≥5 5 alcoholic drinks on one occasion) with some cannabis and tobacco use (14%), and cannabis use with some tobacco and declining heavy episodic alcohol use (13%). Differences observed included lower odds of patterns defined by heavy episodic alcohol use with some cannabis and tobacco use in all gender subgroups relative to cisgender men and persons with low substance use (odds ratios [ORs] 0.26-0.60). Gender expansive people assigned female at birth, gender expansive people assigned male at birth, and transgender men had greater odds of reporting cannabis use with small percentages of heavy episodic alcohol and tobacco use (ORs 1.41-1.60). Conclusion: This study suggests there are unique patterns of polysubstance use over time among gender subgroups of SGM people.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1410328051
Document Type :
Electronic Resource