Department of Psychology,Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London,5th Floor, Bermondsey Wing,Guy's Hospital Campus,London SE1 9RT,UK.
Psychol Med. 2018 Jul;48(10):1705-1712. doi: 10.1017/S003329171700321X. Epub 2017 Nov 7.
Lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) individuals report higher levels of depression and anxiety than heterosexual people. Genetic factors may be a 'common cause' of sexual minority status and psychological distress. Alternatively, these may be correlated because of non-genetic environmental factors (e.g. minority stressors). This study investigated minority stressors and distress in monozygotic twins discordant for sexual minority status. This design provides a test of the role of non-shared environmental factors while minimizing differences due to genetics.
Thirty-eight twin pairs in which one was heterosexual and the other was LGB completed a survey. Differences between twin pairs in minority stressors, rumination, psychological distress, and gender non-conformity were examined. Associations between these variables were also tested.
Although there were no significant group differences for distress, LGB twins had higher rumination, a vulnerability factor for distress, than heterosexual co-twins. LGB twins also had higher scores than heterosexual co-twins on expectations of rejection, active concealment, self-stigma, prejudice events, childhood gender non-conformity, and lower scores on sexual orientation disclosure. Differences between twin pairs in rumination were positively associated with differences in acceptance concerns and self-stigma. Finally, self-stigma was positively associated with rumination in the full sample of heterosexual co-twins and microaggressions were positively associated with rumination when looking at exclusively heterosexual co-twins.
These results support environmental factors as a causal explanation for disparities in rumination between LGB and heterosexual individuals. These factors likely include minority stressors. Rumination may also be associated with minority stressors in heterosexual MZ co-twins of LGB individuals.
同性恋、双性恋和无性恋(LGB)个体比异性恋个体报告更高水平的抑郁和焦虑。遗传因素可能是性少数群体身份和心理困扰的“共同原因”。或者,这些可能是由于非遗传环境因素(例如少数群体压力源)相关。本研究调查了性少数群体身份不一致的同卵双胞胎中的少数群体压力源和困扰。这种设计提供了对非共享环境因素作用的检验,同时最大限度地减少了遗传差异。
38 对双胞胎中,一对是异性恋,另一对是 LGB,他们完成了一项调查。比较了双胞胎在少数群体压力源、沉思、心理困扰和性别非一致性方面的差异。还测试了这些变量之间的关联。
尽管在困扰方面没有显著的群体差异,但 LGB 双胞胎的沉思水平高于异性恋同卵双胞胎,沉思是困扰的一个脆弱因素。LGB 双胞胎比异性恋同卵双胞胎更期待被拒绝、积极隐瞒、自我污名化、偏见事件、童年性别非一致性,对性取向的披露得分较低。沉思方面双胞胎之间的差异与接受关注和自我污名化的差异呈正相关。最后,自我污名化与异性恋同卵双胞胎的沉思呈正相关,而当仅观察异性恋同卵双胞胎时,微侵犯与沉思呈正相关。
这些结果支持环境因素作为 LGB 和异性恋个体之间沉思差异的因果解释。这些因素可能包括少数群体压力源。沉思也可能与 LGB 个体的异性恋同卵双胞胎的少数群体压力源有关。