Giraud Charlie, Newcomb Michael E, Whitton Sarah W
Department of Psychology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Department of Medical Social Sciences, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
LGBT Health. 2025 May-Jun;12(4):278-285. doi: 10.1089/lgbt.2024.0135. Epub 2024 Oct 28.
Sexual and gender minority (SGM) individuals often face minority stressors that negatively affect their mental health, making it important to identify protective factors against the adverse psychological effects of minority stress. We investigated the potential protective effect of trait resilience in SGM individuals assigned female at birth (SGM-AFAB), who are understudied despite being at particularly high risk for mental health problems. As part of an ongoing longitudinal cohort study, 452 SGM-AFAB young people (age 16-31 years) completed measures of resilience, minority stressors (victimization, microaggressions, internalized heterosexism, and cisgenderism), and mental health (depression, anxiety, suicidal ideation) in 2017-2018. Moderating effects of resilience on associations between the minority stressors and mental health outcomes were tested using regression analyses. Resilience attenuated the positive associations of microaggressions with both depression and anxiety and of internalized cisgenderism with depression (in transgender and gender-diverse participants), suggesting protective effects. Resilience did not moderate any other associations. These findings suggest that resilience serves as a protective factor against depressive and anxiety symptoms following experiences of microaggressions and against depressive symptoms following internalized cisgenderism among diverse SGM-AFAB individuals. These results underscore the importance of identifying factors that bolster resilience and developing intervention strategies aimed at promoting resilience within SGM-AFAB individuals, especially following experiences of microaggressions and internalized cisgenderism.
性与性别少数群体(SGM)个体常常面临少数群体压力源,这些压力源会对他们的心理健康产生负面影响,因此识别出能够抵御少数群体压力带来的不良心理影响的保护因素非常重要。我们调查了出生时被指定为女性的SGM个体(SGM-AFAB)中特质复原力的潜在保护作用,尽管这一群体存在心理健康问题的风险特别高,但此前却未得到充分研究。作为一项正在进行的纵向队列研究的一部分,452名年龄在16至31岁之间的SGM-AFAB年轻人在2017年至2018年期间完成了复原力、少数群体压力源(受害、微侵犯、内化的异性恋主义和顺性别主义)以及心理健康(抑郁、焦虑、自杀意念)的测量。使用回归分析测试了复原力对少数群体压力源与心理健康结果之间关联的调节作用。复原力减弱了微侵犯与抑郁和焦虑之间以及内化的顺性别主义与抑郁之间(在跨性别和性别多样化参与者中)的正相关,表明具有保护作用。复原力没有调节任何其他关联。这些发现表明,复原力可作为一种保护因素,抵御微侵犯经历后出现的抑郁和焦虑症状,以及不同SGM-AFAB个体内化顺性别主义后出现的抑郁症状。这些结果强调了识别增强复原力的因素以及制定旨在促进SGM-AFAB个体复原力的干预策略的重要性,尤其是在经历微侵犯和内化顺性别主义之后。