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Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Feb 12;19(4):2059. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19042059.
Substance use disproportionately affects health and psychosocial outcomes for some racial/ethnic groups, but few longitudinal studies examine the extent to which sexual and gender minority (SGM) emerging adults of different racial/ethnic groups may experience disparities in outcomes at similar levels of alcohol or cannabis use. This study used five waves of annual survey data (spanning 2015 (average age 18) to 2020 (average age 23)) from an ongoing longitudinal cohort study of emerging adults. In the subset of 359 SGM emerging adults, separate sequelae of change models assessed differences in trajectories of alcohol or cannabis use (past 30-day frequency) and multiple health and psychosocial outcomes across Hispanic, Asian, and White individuals. White SGM emerging adults showed higher baseline levels of alcohol and cannabis frequency compared to Hispanic and Asian peers, but all groups showed similar rates of change (slope) over time. We observed few racial/ethnic differences in SGM emerging adult outcomes at the same levels of alcohol or cannabis use; that is, racial/ethnic groups showed similar patterns on most health and psychosocial outcomes; however, some differences emerged. For example, Asian respondents reported less engagement in sex with casual partners after using alcohol, marijuana, or other drugs compared to their White peers, at the same levels of alcohol use (β = -0.579, = 0.03) or cannabis use (β = -0.737, = 0.007). Findings underscore a need to consider multiple outcome domains and factors beyond additive stress in examining the effects of substance use across different groups of SGM individuals. More longitudinal studies with large, contemporary, and diverse samples of SGM emerging adults are needed to better characterize similarities and differences in patterns of substance use and use-related consequences in relation to intersecting SGM, racial/ethnic, and other identities.
物质使用对某些种族/族裔群体的健康和心理社会结果产生了不成比例的影响,但很少有纵向研究探讨不同种族/族裔的性少数和性别多样化(SGM)成年初期在类似水平的酒精或大麻使用下,是否可能在结果上存在差异。本研究使用了一项正在进行的 SGM 成年初期纵向队列研究的 5 年年度调查数据(涵盖 2015 年(平均年龄 18 岁)至 2020 年(平均年龄 23 岁))。在 359 名 SGM 成年初期的亚组中,单独的序列变化模型评估了不同种族/族裔的个体在酒精或大麻使用(过去 30 天的频率)和多个健康与心理社会结果轨迹上的差异。与西班牙裔和亚裔同龄人相比,白人 SGM 成年初期显示出更高的酒精和大麻使用频率的基线水平,但所有群体在随时间推移的变化率(斜率)上表现相似。在相同水平的酒精或大麻使用下,我们观察到 SGM 成年初期的结果在种族/族裔方面几乎没有差异;也就是说,在大多数健康和心理社会结果上,种族/族裔群体表现出相似的模式;然而,也出现了一些差异。例如,与白人同龄人相比,在相同的酒精使用水平(β=-0.579,p=0.03)或大麻使用水平(β=-0.737,p=0.007)下,亚洲受访者报告在使用酒精、大麻或其他药物后与随意伴侣发生性行为的次数较少。研究结果强调,在研究不同 SGM 个体群体的物质使用的影响时,需要考虑多个结果领域和除了附加压力之外的因素。需要更多的具有大型、现代和多样化的 SGM 成年初期样本的纵向研究,以更好地描述物质使用和与使用相关的后果与 SGM、种族/族裔和其他身份相交的模式的相似性和差异。