“…Research in other areas (e.g., education, cultural studies) suggests that sexual minorities may be at risk for experiencing subtle maltreatment. For example, Woodford et al (2012) found that sexual minority college students were more likely to experience incivility at school compared to their heterosexual counterparts and Tomsen and Markwell (2009) found that sexual minorities reported experiences of threat and incivility during, and especially after, LGBT-based public events. In the microaggressions (i.e., discrimination in the form of verbal, behavioral, and environmental slights and indignities toward oppressed groups; Sue, 2010 ) literature, a number of qualitative (e.g., focus group) studies have documented sexual minorities’ experiences of subtle discrimination in the context of the university ( Nadal et al, 2011 ; Platt and Lenzen, 2013 ), community ( Nadal et al, 2011 ; Sarno and Wright, 2013 ; Bostwick and Hequembourg, 2014 ), and psychotherapy ( Shelton and Delgado-Romero, 2011 ).…”