RAND Corporation, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
LGBT Health. 2020 Aug/Sep;7(6):283-291. doi: 10.1089/lgbt.2019.0352. Epub 2020 Jun 15.
Lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) racial/ethnic minority individuals experience minority stress due to both their sexual identity and race/ethnicity and may be at elevated substance use risk (relative to heterosexuals) compared with their White LGB peers. We examined differences in the presence and magnitude of substance use disparities among LGB adults across race/ethnicity. Using data on 168,560 adults (including 11,389 LGB adults) from the 2015-2018 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, we examined disparities in cigarette smoking, heavy episodic drinking (HED), and marijuana use by race/ethnicity (White, Black, Hispanic, and other race/multiracial). Analyses compared lesbian/gay and bisexual adults, respectively, with heterosexual adults of the same gender and race/ethnicity. We also tested the magnitude of racial/ethnic minority disparities relative to the corresponding White disparity. Significant disparities in smoking, HED, and marijuana use were observed for lesbian/gay and bisexual women across nearly all racial/ethnic groups. Disparities were consistently greater in magnitude for Black and Hispanic LGB women compared with White LGB women. Few disparities were observed among men; the magnitude of observed disparities did not differ by race/ethnicity. Disparities were most pronounced among racial/ethnic minority LGB women, which may reflect their unique experiences of discrimination at the intersection of multiple minority idenities. However, racial/ethnic minority gay and bisexual men were not at elevated risk relative to their White counterparts. Future research on substance use disparities among LGB individuals using an intersectional framework is warranted to elucidate differential minority stress processes that contribute to the observed heterogeneity across race/ethnicity, sexual identity, and gender.
女同性恋、男同性恋和双性恋(LGB)的少数族裔个体由于其性身份和种族/族裔而经历少数群体压力,并且与他们的白人 LGB 同龄人相比,他们可能处于更高的物质使用风险(相对于异性恋者)。我们研究了不同种族/族裔的 LGB 成年人中物质使用差异的存在和程度。 使用 2015-2018 年全国药物使用和健康调查中 168560 名成年人(包括 11389 名 LGB 成年人)的数据,我们检查了种族/族裔(白人、黑人、西班牙裔和其他种族/多种族)之间吸烟、重度 episodic 饮酒(HED)和大麻使用的差异。分析分别比较了女同性恋/男同性恋和双性恋成年人与同性别和种族/族裔的异性恋成年人。我们还测试了相对于相应的白人差异,少数族裔差异的程度。 在几乎所有种族/族裔群体中,女同性恋/男同性恋和双性恋女性的吸烟、HED 和大麻使用都存在显著差异。黑人和西班牙裔 LGB 女性的差异程度始终大于白人 LGB 女性。在男性中观察到的差异很少;观察到的差异程度不因种族/族裔而异。 这些差异在种族/族裔少数族裔 LGB 女性中最为明显,这可能反映了她们在多种少数族裔认同的交叉点上经历的独特歧视。然而,种族/族裔少数族裔同性恋和双性恋男性与他们的白人同龄人相比并没有处于更高的风险。未来使用交叉框架研究 LGB 个体中物质使用差异的研究,以阐明导致观察到的种族/族裔、性身份和性别异质性的不同少数群体压力过程是必要的。