Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, School of Public Health, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
Department of Psychology, 12289University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2023 Jan;38(1-2):NP1239-NP1260. doi: 10.1177/08862605221090570. Epub 2022 Apr 22.
Intersectionality and minority stress frameworks were used to guide examination and comparisons of psychological distress (depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms) and protective factors (religiosity, spirituality, social support) among 673 Black, Latinx, and White lesbian and bisexual women with and without histories of sexual assault. Participants were from Wave 3 of the 21-year longitudinal Chicago Health and Life Experiences of Women (CHLEW) study. More than one-third (38%) of participants reported having experienced adolescent or adult sexual assault (i.e., rape or another form of sexual assault) since age 14. Confirmatory factor analysis, structural equation modeling, and multivariate analyses of covariance were used to analyze the data. Results revealed that levels of religiosity/spirituality and psychological distress varied by race/ethnicity and by sexual identity (i.e., Black lesbian, Black bisexual, Latinx lesbian, Latinx bisexual, White lesbian, White bisexual). Black lesbian women reported the highest level of religiosity/spirituality whereas White lesbian women reported the lowest level. White bisexual women reported the highest level of psychological distress whereas White lesbian women reported the lowest level. We found no significant differences in reports of sexual assault or in social support (i.e., significant other, family, friend, and total social support). However, White lesbian women had higher friend, significant other, and total social support relative to the other five groups of women with minoritized/marginalized sexual identities. Future work should examine whether religiosity, spirituality, and social support serve as protective factors that can be incorporated into mental health treatment for lesbian and bisexual who have experienced sexual assault to reduce psychological distress.
采用交叉性和少数群体压力框架,对 673 名有和无性侵犯史的黑种人、拉丁裔和白人女同性恋和双性恋者的心理困扰(抑郁、焦虑、创伤后应激障碍症状)和保护因素(宗教信仰、精神信仰、社会支持)进行了检查和比较。参与者来自 21 年纵向芝加哥女性健康和生活经历(CHLEW)研究的第 3 波。超过三分之一(38%)的参与者报告称,自 14 岁以来,曾经历过青少年或成年期的性侵犯(即强奸或其他形式的性侵犯)。采用验证性因子分析、结构方程模型和多元协方差分析对数据进行了分析。结果表明,宗教信仰/精神信仰和心理困扰的水平因种族/民族和性身份而异(即黑人女同性恋、黑人双性恋、拉丁裔女同性恋、拉丁裔双性恋、白人女同性恋、白人双性恋)。黑人女同性恋者报告的宗教信仰/精神信仰水平最高,而白人女同性恋者报告的水平最低。白人双性恋女性报告的心理困扰程度最高,而白人女同性恋者报告的程度最低。我们没有发现性侵犯报告或社会支持(即重要他人、家庭、朋友和总社会支持)方面的显著差异。然而,与其他五个性身份处于少数/边缘地位的女性群体相比,白人女同性恋者在朋友、重要他人和总社会支持方面的得分更高。未来的研究应探讨宗教信仰、精神信仰和社会支持是否可作为保护因素,纳入有性侵犯经历的女同性恋和双性恋者的心理健康治疗中,以减轻心理困扰。