“…Generally, discrimination has been measured separately by race, gender, and/or sexual orientation, and often these different forms of discrimination have been examined simultaneously in an additive model. Of the identified studies with sexual minority women of color that have reported results of bivariate analyses, all forms of discrimination examined have been significantly related to psychological distress (i.e., racism and heterosexism, Szymanski & Meyer, 2008; sexism, DeBlaere & Bertsch, 2013; racism, sexism, and heterosexism, DeBlaere et al, 2014). However, when multiple forms of discrimination have been considered simultaneously along with other variables relative to mental health outcomes in sexual minority women of color, typically only one form, if any, has been found to account for unique variance (e.g., racism, when considered with heterosexism, Szymanski & Meyer, 2008; heterosexism, when considered with racism and sexism, DeBlaere et al, 2014; neither sexism nor heterosexism when considered together, Selvidge et al, 2008).…”