Shen J, Rubin A, Cohen K, Hart E A, Sung J, McDanal R, Roulston C, Sotomayor I, Fox K R, Schleider J L
Department of Psychology, Stony Brook University, United States of America.
Department of Psychology, University of Denver, United States of America.
Internet Interv. 2023 Jun 7;33:100633. doi: 10.1016/j.invent.2023.100633. eCollection 2023 Sep.
LGBTQ+ youth face myriad adverse health outcomes due to minority stress, creating a need for accessible, mechanism-targeted interventions to mitigate these minority stress-related risk factors. We tested the effectiveness and acceptability of Project RISE, an online single-session intervention designed to ameliorate internalized stigma and improve other outcomes among LGBTQ+ youth. We hypothesized that youth assigned to RISE (versus a control) would report significantly reduced internalized stigma and increased identity pride at post-intervention and at two-week follow-up and would find RISE acceptable.
We recruited adolescents nationally through Instagram advertisements in May 2022 ( = 538; age = 15.06, age = 0.97). Participants were randomly assigned to RISE or an information-only control and completed questionnaires pre-intervention, immediately post-intervention, and two weeks post-intervention. Inclusion criteria included endorsing: (1) LGBTQ+ identity, (2) age 13-16, (3) English fluency (4) Internet access, and (5) subjective negative impact of LGBTQ+ stigma.
Relative to participants in the control condition, participants who completed RISE reported significant decreases in internalized stigma ( = -0.49) and increases in identity pride ( = 0.25) from pre- to immediately post-intervention, along with decreased internalized stigma ( = -0.26) from baseline to two-week follow-up. Participants rated both RISE and the information-only control as highly, equivalently acceptable.
RISE appears to be an acceptable and useful online SSI for LGBTQ+ adolescents, with potential to reduce internalized stigma in both the short- and longer-term. Future directions include evaluating effects of Project RISE over longer follow-ups and in conjunction with other mental health supports.
由于少数群体压力,LGBTQ+青年面临着无数不良健康后果,因此需要有针对性的、易于获得的干预措施来减轻这些与少数群体压力相关的风险因素。我们测试了“崛起计划”(Project RISE)的有效性和可接受性,这是一项在线单节干预措施,旨在改善LGBTQ+青年的内化耻辱感并改善其他结果。我们假设被分配到“崛起计划”(与对照组相比)的青年在干预后和两周随访时会报告内化耻辱感显著降低,身份自豪感增加,并且会认为“崛起计划”是可接受的。
我们于2022年5月通过Instagram广告在全国范围内招募青少年(n = 538;平均年龄 = 15.06,标准差 = 0.97)。参与者被随机分配到“崛起计划”组或仅提供信息的对照组,并在干预前、干预后立即和干预后两周完成问卷调查。纳入标准包括认可:(1)LGBTQ+身份,(2)年龄在13至16岁之间,(3)英语流利,(4)有互联网接入,以及(5)LGBTQ+耻辱感的主观负面影响。
与对照组的参与者相比,完成“崛起计划”的参与者从干预前到干预后立即报告内化耻辱感显著降低(平均差 = -0.49),身份自豪感增加(平均差 = 0.25),并且从基线到两周随访内化耻辱感也有所降低(平均差 = -0.26)。参与者对“崛起计划”和仅提供信息的对照组的评价都很高,且相当可接受。
“崛起计划”似乎是一种可接受且有用的针对LGBTQ+青少年的在线单节干预措施,有可能在短期和长期内减少内化耻辱感。未来的方向包括评估“崛起计划”在更长随访期以及与其他心理健康支持相结合时的效果。