Two cross-sectional survey studies were conducted to examine the relationships between minority stressors, protective factors and mental health outcomes in lesbian, gay and bisexual people (LGB) in the United Kingdom (UK). A convenience sample of 156 LGB people in the UK participated in Study 1. Multiple regression analyses showed that victimization and sexuality-related identity threat were positively associated with anxiety and that identity resilience, social support and degree of outness were negative correlates; and that rejection was positively associated with depression while identity resilience and social support were negative correlates. In Study 2, based on a convenience sample of 333 gay men, our structural equation model showed that ethnic minority status, lower identity resilience and higher identity threat were associated with greater distress; ethnic minority status was associated with less social support and more internalized homonegativity; being single was associated with less social support and more internalized homonegativity; identity resilience was positively associated with social support and negatively associated with internalized homonegativity; identity threat was associated with less social support and more internalized homonegativity; internalized homonegativity was negatively associated with social support; and social support was negatively associated with distress while internalized homonegativity was positively associated with distress. Findings show differential effects of particular stressors on particular mental health outcomes in LGB people and the significance of promoting identity resilience, social support and degree of outness as protective factors.
KeywordsMinority stress; identity resilience; identity threat; internalized homonegativity; social support; mental health stressors and protective factors relate to particular mental health outcomes and how they operate collectively as part of a social psychological system of factors determining psychological health. In two survey studies, we focus on the social psychological determinants of three mental health outcomes: distress, anxiety and depression.
Minority stress and identity processesThe two studies reported in this article are guided by a theoretical framework consisting of minority stress theory (Meyer, 2003) and identity process theory (IPT) (Breakwell, 2015; Jaspal & Breakwell, 2014).Minority stress theory postulates that, as stigmatized minorities, LGB people are exposed to distal stressors, which are external and directed at them by other people, and proximal stressors, which are internal processes arising primarily through exposure to distal stressors. Exposure to these stressors has been found to undermine mental health (Meyer, 2003). Yet, the theory also posits that factors, such as access to social support, can operate protectively against these stressors and minimize their capacity to undermine mental health (Feinstein et al., 2014). In Study 1, we focus on the associations with anxiety and depression of dista...