School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Arizona State University , Glendale, Arizona, USA.
Counseling and Counseling Psychology, Arizona State University , Tempe, Arizona, USA.
J Homosex. 2021 Mar 21;68(4):673-691. doi: 10.1080/00918369.2020.1868190. Epub 2021 Feb 1.
COVID-19 has had far-reaching effects on people's lives, with evidence of a disproportionate impact on marginalized groups. Given existing health disparities and research on minority stress, COVID-19 may have uniquely impacted psychological well-being among sexual minorities. In an online survey of adults in the U.S. ( = 1,007) conducted in April 2020, we examined differences between sexual minority and heterosexual participants in psychological well-being, social distancing, computer-mediated communication, and COVID-19-related worry and experiences. Sexual minorities reported lower thriving and greater psychological distress, social distancing, computer-mediated communication, and COVID-19 worry and experiences than heterosexual participants. Social distancing and distress were positively correlated among sexual minorities and more frequent computer-mediated communication predicted greater thriving across groups. Path analyses showed sexual minorities' poorer psychological well-being was mediated by their greater COVID-19 worry and social distancing, in particular. These findings shed light on the distinct impact of COVID-19 on sexual minorities.
COVID-19 对人们的生活产生了深远的影响,有证据表明它对边缘化群体的影响不成比例。鉴于现有的健康差距和对少数民族压力的研究,COVID-19 可能对性少数群体的心理健康产生了独特的影响。在 2020 年 4 月对美国成年人(=1007)进行的在线调查中,我们研究了性少数群体和异性恋参与者在心理健康、社交距离、计算机中介交流以及与 COVID-19 相关的担忧和经历方面的差异。性少数群体报告的蓬勃发展程度较低,心理困扰、社交距离、计算机中介交流以及对 COVID-19 的担忧和经历比异性恋参与者更为严重。性少数群体的社交距离和困扰呈正相关,而更频繁的计算机中介交流则预示着两组人的蓬勃发展程度更高。路径分析表明,性少数群体较差的心理健康状况是由他们对 COVID-19 的担忧和社交距离造成的,特别是社交距离。这些发现揭示了 COVID-19 对性少数群体的独特影响。