“…Now more than ever, stigmatized youth (i.e., children, adolescents, and young adults with one or more stigmatized identities; e.g., youth of Color, girls, transgender youth) are in need of effective mental health treatment. Inequities in mental health problem severity, diagnosis, and treatment between stigmatized and privileged groups (e.g., youth of Color vs. White youth, lesbian, gay, bisexual, or other sexual minority vs. heterosexual youth) are longstanding (Alegria et al, 2010;Bui & Takeuchi, 1992;Connolly et al, 2016;Garland et al, 2005;Rodgers et al, 2021;Russell & Fish, 2016), and these gaps are widening in the ongoing pandemic (Banks, 2021;Benton et al, 2022;Bhogal et al, 2021;Fish et al, 2020;Hawke et al, 2021;Mpofu, 2022;Penner et al, 2021;Rothe et al, 2021;Saunders et al, 2021). These inequities are primarily attributable to these youth's experiences of stigma at multiple levels: (1) internalized stigma (i.e., self-stigma), or one's adoption of stigma-related beliefs resulting from exposure to stigmatizing environments or relationships (e.g., a girl believing that being assaulted was because of her physical attractiveness; Moses, 2009), (2) interpersonal stigma, which stigmatized individuals experience in interpersonal interactions (e.g., a peer saying "no homo;" sexual violence against girls; Fish, 2020;Jones & Neblett, 2017); and (3) structural stigma, or laws/policies (e.g., a state policy prohibiting gender-affirming care for transgender youth) and norms/attitudes (e.g., the belief that Black people will bring violence into neighborhoods they move into; (e.g., the belief that Black people will bring violence into neighborhoods they move into; Krieger et al, 2010) that negatively impact stigmatized people (Alvarez et al, 2021;Beccia et al, 2022;Castro-Ramirez et al, 2021;Hatzenbuehler, 2017).…”