- minority stressors vary by current intimate relationship status;
- higher minority stressors are associated with higher depressive symptoms and alcohol-related outcomes;
- depressive symptoms and alcohol-related outcomes vary by current intimate relationship status; and
- minority stressors will mediate differences in these outcomes.
Women with single male partners and women with multiple male and female partners exhibited elevated experienced bi-negativity and differences in outness (H1). Experienced and internalized bi-negativity were associated with health outcomes, but not outness (H2). Differences in outcomes emerged by partner number and partner number/gender (H3); these differences were mediated by experienced bi-negativity (H4).
These results suggest that experiences of discrimination may underlie differences in health related to bisexual women's relationship structure and highlight the importance of evaluating women's relational context as well as sexual identification in understanding health risk behaviors.
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- 1University of Washington, Seattle, WA ; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA ; University of Illinois-Chicago, Chicago, IL.
- 2University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
- 3Brown University, Providence RI.
- 4Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA.
- 5Palo Alto University, Palo Alto, CA.
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