Gatanaga Ohshue S, Kwak Daniel, Lim Sahnah, Gloria Christian T
Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia Mailman School of Public Health.
Social Intervention Group, Columbia School of Social Work.
Psychol Sex. 2025;16(2):390-404. doi: 10.1080/19419899.2024.2436426. Epub 2024 Dec 2.
LGBTQ+ Asians are an under-researched population and face higher risk for mental health problems than heterosexual individuals due to intersectional discrimination and minority stress. This exploratory, mixed-methods study sought to understand associations between minority stress, intersectional discrimination, and mental health outcomes among LGBTQ+ Asians. Between 2022 and 2023, convenience sampling was used to survey 136 LGBTQ+ Asian residents of New York City. Controlling for demographics, logistic regression was used to compare the proportion of individuals with clinically-significant symptoms for major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and suicide risk by self-reported measures of discriminatory and microaggressive experiences towards LGBTQ+ people of color. A subsample of 24 individuals participated in semi-structured interviews that were conducted in English. Thematic content analysis was utilized to understand contextual factors and discriminatory experiences influencing LGBTQ+ Asian mental health. Individuals with higher levels of everyday discrimination had higher odds of exhibiting clinically-significant depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, and suicide risk. Individuals with higher levels of racialized and LGBTQ-related microaggressions had higher odds of exhibiting clinically-significant depressive and anxiety symptoms. Among interviewed participants, predominant themes include social isolation, anticipated stigma attributed to discriminatory experiences within both LGBTQ+ and Asian communities, and pervasive impacts of racial and LGBTQ+ discrimination on mental health and self-worth. Findings reveal disparities in mental health outcomes among LGBTQ+ Asians, with differences based on levels of self-reported discrimination and targeted microaggressions towards LGBTQ+ racial/ethnic minorities. More research is needed to understand the causal and temporal mechanisms by which intersectional discrimination impacts LGBTQ+ Asians' mental health.
LGBTQ+亚裔群体是一个研究不足的人群,由于交叉歧视和少数群体压力,他们面临心理健康问题的风险比异性恋者更高。这项探索性的混合方法研究旨在了解LGBTQ+亚裔群体中少数群体压力、交叉歧视与心理健康结果之间的关联。在2022年至2023年期间,采用便利抽样的方法对136名纽约市的LGBTQ+亚裔居民进行了调查。在控制人口统计学因素的情况下,使用逻辑回归来比较通过自我报告的针对有色人种LGBTQ+群体的歧视和微侵犯经历的测量方法,患有重度抑郁症、广泛性焦虑症和自杀风险的具有临床意义症状的个体比例。24名个体的子样本参与了用英语进行的半结构化访谈。采用主题内容分析来了解影响LGBTQ+亚裔心理健康的背景因素和歧视经历。日常歧视程度较高的个体出现具有临床意义的抑郁症状、焦虑症状和自杀风险的几率更高。种族化和与LGBTQ相关的微侵犯程度较高的个体出现具有临床意义的抑郁和焦虑症状的几率更高。在接受访谈的参与者中,主要主题包括社会隔离、LGBTQ+群体和亚裔社区内歧视经历所带来的预期耻辱感,以及种族和LGBTQ+歧视对心理健康和自我价值的普遍影响。研究结果揭示了LGBTQ+亚裔群体在心理健康结果方面的差异,这些差异基于自我报告的歧视程度以及针对LGBTQ+种族/族裔少数群体的针对性微侵犯。需要更多的研究来了解交叉歧视影响LGBTQ+亚裔心理健康的因果和时间机制。