Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA.
University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Health Educ Behav. 2024 Aug;51(4):521-532. doi: 10.1177/10901981241249973. Epub 2024 May 17.
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and other sexual and gender minority (LGBTQ+) youth and young adults (YYAs) have poorer mental health outcomes than their cisgender, heterosexual peers in large part due to multilevel stigmatization and minority stress. This was exacerbated by psychological stressors stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic; these experiences intersected with YYA unique developmental stage. Here we explored LGBTQ+ YYA's pandemic-related experiences, focusing on intersections between stigma and belonging, developmental processes, and their relationship to mental health. We conducted qualitative interviews from August to November 2021 with 34 LGBTQ+ YYA ages 14 to 24; interviews were nested within a quantitative study on YYA experiences during COVID-19. Interviews were transcribed and coded using thematic analysis. YYA described how pandemic impacts like quarantine and isolation directly impacted their mental health; these coalesced around four types of thematic shifts: shifts in (1) time, (2) living situations, (3) community supports, and (4) social and political climate. Multilevel stigmatization also created new mechanisms of norm enforcement for LGBTQ+ YYA. Interviews demonstrated how the pandemic also impacted key developmental processes including identity formation and autonomy seeking. The potential consequences of these pandemic-related shifts largely depended on YYA's experiences of stigma and/or belonging throughout the pandemic. Findings suggested that isolation from the COVID-19 pandemic intersected with existing socio-ecological structures in LGBTQ+ young people's lives. Efforts to investigate longitudinal impacts of the pandemic, as well as to intervene to reduce the stigmatization experienced by LGBTQ+ YYA, remain urgent.
女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别、酷儿和其他性与性别少数群体(LGBTQ+)青年和年轻人(YYA)的心理健康状况比顺性别、异性恋同龄人差,这在很大程度上是由于多层次的污名化和少数群体压力。这因源自 COVID-19 大流行的心理压力源而加剧;这些经历与 YYA 独特的发展阶段相交织。在这里,我们探讨了 LGBTQ+ YYA 与大流行相关的经历,重点关注污名化和归属感、发展过程以及它们与心理健康的关系之间的交集。我们在 2021 年 8 月至 11 月期间对 34 名年龄在 14 至 24 岁的 LGBTQ+ YYA 进行了定性访谈;访谈嵌套在一项关于 YYA 在 COVID-19 期间经历的定量研究中。访谈使用主题分析进行转录和编码。YYA 描述了大流行的影响,如隔离和隔离如何直接影响他们的心理健康;这些影响围绕四种类型的主题转变而聚集:(1)时间、(2)生活状况、(3)社区支持和(4)社会和政治气候的转变。多层次的污名化也为 LGBTQ+ YYA 创造了新的规范执行机制。访谈表明,大流行还如何影响包括身份形成和自主寻求在内的关键发展过程。这些与大流行相关的转变的潜在后果在很大程度上取决于 YYA 在整个大流行期间经历的污名化和/或归属感。研究结果表明,与 COVID-19 大流行的隔离与 LGBTQ+年轻人生活中的现有社会生态结构相交织。调查大流行的长期影响并采取干预措施减少 LGBTQ+ YYA 所经历的污名化的努力仍然紧迫。