Li Michael J, DiStefano Anthony S, Thing James P, Black David S, Simpson Kelsey, Unger Jennifer B, Milam Joel, Contreras Robert, Bluthenthal Ricky N
Department of Family Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles.
Division of Infectious Diseases, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles.
Psychol Sex Orientat Gend Divers. 2019 Dec;6(4):408-419. doi: 10.1037/sgd0000338. Epub 2019 Apr 18.
Racial/ethnic and sexual minorities may experience excess stress from social prejudice and structural disadvantage, which is associated with family relationship problems and poorer psychosocial health. There is increasing evidence that certain positive psychological processes can attenuate these negative outcomes at the individual and interpersonal levels; however, the mechanisms of these effects remain poorly understood. Based on previous research and two extant conceptual frameworks, we constructed a preliminary model of how dispositional mindfulness operated in the context of minority stress among Latino/a sexual minority young adults and their families. We then conducted semi-structured interviews in a life history format with 21 Latino/a sexual minority young adults and 15 family members to test our preliminary model and refine it. We mixed content analysis and grounded theory techniques, whereby we initially used deductive coding with pre-established codes based on our preliminary model, and subsequently used inductive coding to account for novel categories in the interview data that could not be explained by the preliminary model. The refined model revealed pathways by which five constructs of dispositional mindfulness (act with awareness, observe, describe, non-judge, non-react) buffered negative effects of minority stress on psychosocial health in young adults, and were qualitatively associated with compassion, acceptance of sexual minorities, and closeness among family members. Young adults reporting deficiencies in mindfulness reported greater suffering and negative coping related to minority stress. Our model provides a framework to explore modes of resilience and adaptation to minority stress, and offers a basis for further refinement in other affected populations.
种族/族裔和性少数群体可能会因社会偏见和结构性劣势而承受额外压力,这与家庭关系问题及较差的心理社会健康状况相关。越来越多的证据表明,某些积极的心理过程能够在个体和人际层面减轻这些负面结果;然而,这些影响的机制仍未得到充分理解。基于先前的研究和两个现有的概念框架,我们构建了一个初步模型,以探究性取向正念在拉丁裔性少数青年及其家庭的少数群体压力背景下是如何发挥作用的。然后,我们采用生活史形式对21名拉丁裔性少数青年和15名家庭成员进行了半结构化访谈,以检验并完善我们的初步模型。我们结合了内容分析和扎根理论技术,最初基于初步模型使用预先设定的代码进行演绎编码,随后使用归纳编码来处理访谈数据中初步模型无法解释的新类别。完善后的模型揭示了性取向正念的五个构成要素(有意识地行动、观察、描述、不评判、不反应)减轻少数群体压力对青年心理社会健康负面影响的途径,并且在性质上与同情心、对性少数群体的接纳以及家庭成员之间的亲密程度相关。报告正念不足的青年表示,他们因少数群体压力而承受了更多痛苦并采用了消极的应对方式。我们的模型提供了一个框架,用于探索应对少数群体压力的恢复力和适应模式,并为在其他受影响人群中进一步完善该模型提供了基础。