Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT, United States of America.
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
PLoS One. 2019 Jun 13;14(6):e0218084. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0218084. eCollection 2019.
Because sexual orientation concealment can exact deep mental and physical health costs and dampen the public visibility necessary for advancing equal rights, estimating the proportion of the global sexual minority population that conceals its sexual orientation represents a matter of public health and policy concern. Yet a historic lack of cross-national datasets of sexual minorities has precluded accurate estimates of the size of the global closet. We extrapolated the size of the global closet (i.e., the proportion of the global sexual minority population who conceals its sexual orientation) using a large sample of sexual minorities collected across 28 countries and an objective index of structural stigma (i.e., discriminatory national laws and policies affecting sexual minorities) across 197 countries. We estimate that the majority (83.0%) of sexual minorities around the world conceal their sexual orientation from all or most people and that country-level structural stigma can serve as a useful predictor of the size of each country's closeted sexual minority population. Our analysis also predicts that eliminating structural stigma would drastically reduce the size of the global closet. Given its costs to individual health and social equality, the closet represents a considerable burden on the global sexual minority population. The present projection suggests that the surest route to improving the wellbeing of sexual minorities worldwide is through reducing structural forms of inequality. Yet, another route to alleviating the personal and societal toll of the closet is to develop public health interventions that sensitively reach the closeted sexual minority population in high-stigma contexts worldwide. An important goal of this projection, which relies on data from Europe, is to spur future research from non-Western countries capable of refining the estimate of the association between structural stigma and sexual orientation concealment using local experiences of both.
由于性取向的隐瞒可能会对身心健康造成严重影响,并阻碍平等权利的推进,因此估计全球少数性取向人群中隐瞒性取向的比例是一个涉及公共卫生和政策的问题。然而,由于历史上缺乏跨国的少数性取向人群数据集,因此无法准确估计全球“性取向隐瞒”的规模。我们利用在 28 个国家收集的大量少数性取向人群样本,以及在 197 个国家中衡量结构性耻辱的客观指标(即影响少数性取向人群的歧视性国家法律和政策),对全球“性取向隐瞒”的规模进行了推断。我们估计,世界上大多数(83.0%)的少数性取向人群对所有人或大多数人隐瞒了自己的性取向,而国家层面的结构性耻辱感可以作为预测每个国家“性取向隐瞒”少数人群规模的有用指标。我们的分析还预测,消除结构性耻辱感将大大缩小全球“性取向隐瞒”的规模。鉴于其对个人健康和社会平等的影响,“性取向隐瞒”给全球少数性取向人群带来了相当大的负担。本研究预测,改善全球少数性取向人群健康和幸福感的最可靠途径是减少结构性不平等。然而,缓解“性取向隐瞒”对个人和社会的影响的另一种途径是开发公共卫生干预措施,在高耻辱感的背景下,敏感地接触全球“性取向隐瞒”的少数性取向人群。本研究的一个重要目标是利用欧洲的数据,激发来自非西方国家的未来研究,这些国家能够利用当地的经验,对结构性耻辱感与性取向隐瞒之间的关联进行更准确的估计。