Individuals mostly attracted
to other-sex but also to same-sex partners are a distinct and common sexual
orientation group with possibly increased levels of health problems. The
current study examined whether mostly heterosexual individuals differed in mental
health and substance use from lesbian/gay individuals and whether sexual
minority risk and protective factors offer an explanation in a sample of 528
Dutch young adults (16 to 25 years old, M = 21.2 years).
Mostly heterosexual
participants reported higher levels of psychological distress, suicidality,
drug use, and smoking than lesbian/gay participants and equal levels of binge
drinking. They also reported higher levels of internalized negativity to
same-sex attractions, less openness to family members and others, less
community involvement, and lower numbers of lesbian/gay/bisexual friends.
However, bootstrapped mediation analysis showed that the differences in
minority stress risk and protective factors did not mediate most of the
differences in mental health and substance use with one exception: higher
levels of psychological distress were mediated by the higher levels of
internalized negativity to same-sex attractions.
The limited explanatory power
of the minority stress factors combined with the elevated level of problems of
mostly heterosexual individuals call for future studies examining other risk
and protective factors.
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at: http://goo.gl/WWHZOj
By: Lisette Kuypera* & Henny Bosb
a Department of Education, Minorities, and
Methodologies, The Netherlands Institute for Social Research
b Research Institute of Child Development
and Education, University of Amsterdam
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