Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2012 Sep;73(5):783-93. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2012.73.783.
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) youth are at increased risk for alcohol misuse, but little is known about the psychosocial and demographic factors that are associated with these differences over time. The purpose of this study was to investigate change in alcohol use across development. We aimed to describe group/demographic differences in alcohol use, the effects of psychosocial variables on drinking within persons (i.e., psychological distress, sexual orientation-based victimization, and perceived family support), and the interactions between demographic differences and longitudinal psychosocial variables in predicting rates of alcohol use.
The current study used data from the longest running longitudinal study of LGBT youth. Hierarchical linear modeling was used to examine both demographic differences and psychosocial predictors of alcohol use in an ethnically diverse sample of 246 LGBT youth (ages 16-20 years at baseline) across five time points over 2.5 years.
Drinking increased significantly over time in a linear fashion, although it tended to increase more rapidly among male LGBT youth compared with females. Analyses of group differences revealed lower average rates of drinking for African American and female LGBT youth, and there were no differences between bisexual youth and gay/lesbian youth. Psychological distress and sexual orientation-based victimization were associated with increased alcohol use at each wave of data collection for female LGBT youth only. Perceived family support at each wave was negatively associated with alcohol use for all LGBT youth.
Findings indicate that there is significant heterogeneity in the etiological pathways that lead to alcohol use in LGBT youth and that correlates of drinking are similar to those found in general populations. These crucial findings indicate that existing alcohol interventions also may be effective for LGBT youth and open up a wider array of prevention and treatment options for this at-risk population.
女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋和跨性别(LGBT)青年饮酒过量的风险增加,但对于随着时间的推移与这些差异相关的心理社会和人口统计学因素知之甚少。本研究的目的是调查跨发展阶段的饮酒变化。我们旨在描述群体/人口统计学差异在饮酒方面的差异、心理社会变量对个体饮酒的影响(即心理困扰、基于性取向的受害和感知家庭支持),以及人口统计学差异与预测饮酒率的纵向心理社会变量之间的相互作用。
本研究使用了最长的 LGBT 青年纵向研究的数据。使用分层线性建模来检查 246 名 LGBT 青年(基线时年龄为 16-20 岁)在 2.5 年内跨越五个时间点的跨发展阶段的酒精使用的人口统计学差异和心理社会预测因素。
饮酒量呈线性显著增加,尽管男同性恋、双性恋和跨性别青年的增长速度似乎比女性更快。群体差异分析显示,非裔美国人和女性 LGBT 青年的平均饮酒率较低,而双性恋青年和同性恋/女同性恋青年之间没有差异。仅对女性 LGBT 青年来说,在每个数据收集阶段,心理困扰和基于性取向的受害与饮酒量增加相关。在每个阶段感知到的家庭支持与所有 LGBT 青年的饮酒量呈负相关。
研究结果表明,导致 LGBT 青年饮酒的病因途径存在显著异质性,且饮酒的相关性与一般人群相似。这些关键发现表明,现有的酒精干预措施也可能对 LGBT 青年有效,并为这一高危人群提供更广泛的预防和治疗选择。