273therapy in affectional minorities. They found that comparatively, bisexual men, bisexual women, and gay men were less likely than lesbians to seek mental health services. Bisexual women and men are also less likely to come out to their therapists. However, because service utilization is usually measured by at least one visit in the past year, this does not necessarily speak to continued engagement in ongoing therapy. In fact, affectional and gender minority (AGM) individuals also report greater dissatisfaction in therapeutic services due to provider insensitivity, discrimination, naivete, ignorance, or practicing outside the bounds of their competence (Israel et al., 2008). Additionally, research suggests that men do not seek therapy at the same high rates as do women, perhaps due to masculine gender-role socialization that emphasizes independence, self-reliance, internal control, and toughness (Addis & Mahalik, 2003;Berger et al., 2013).Though therapy requires a nuanced approach depending on a client's gender, treatment outcomes do not vary; that is, no gender has better outcomes compared to other genders for a particular treatment or orientation. Rather, it has been posited that it is therapists' gender competence that may account for differential outcomes (Owen et al., 2009). Therapists may inadvertently communicate their biases through diagnosis, stereotyping, and role expectations