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Contents
- Abstract
- The Stress Concept
- Minority Stress
- Minority Stress Processes in LGB Populations
- Stress-Ameliorating Factors
- Stress and Identity
- Summary: A Minority Stress Model
- Empirical Evidence for Minority Stress in LGB Populations
- Research Evidence: Within-Group Studies of Minority Stress Processes
- Prejudice events
- Stigma: Expectations of rejection and discrimination
- Concealment versus disclosure
- Internalized homophobia
- Research Evidence: Between-Groups Studies of Prevalence of Mental Disorder
- Suicide
- Discussion
- Do LGB People Have Higher Prevalences of Mental Disorders?
- Limitations and Challenges
- The Objective Versus Subjective Approaches to the Definition of Stress
- The Minority Person as Victim Versus Resilient Actor
- Summary
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Abstract
In this article the author reviews research evidence on the prevalence of mental disorders in lesbians, gay men, and bisexuals (LGBs) and shows, using meta-analyses, that LGBs have a higher prevalence of mental disorders than heterosexuals. The author offers a conceptual framework for understanding this excess in prevalence of disorder in terms of minority stress—explaining that stigma, prejudice, and discrimination create a hostile and stressful social environment that causes mental health problems. The model describes stress processes, including the experience of prejudice events, expectations of rejection, hiding and concealing, internalized homophobia, and ameliorative coping processes. This conceptual framework is the basis for the review of research evidence, suggestions for future research directions, and exploration of public policy implications.
The study of mental health of lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) populations has been complicated by the debate on the classification of homosexuality as a mental disorder during the 1960s and early 1970s. That debate posited a gay-affirmative perspective, which sought to declassify homosexuality, against a conservative perspective, which sought to retain the classification of homosexuality as a mental disorder (Bayer, 1981). Although the debate on classification ended in 1973 with the removal of homosexuality from the second edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM; American Psychiatric Association, 1973), its heritage has lasted. This heritage has tainted discussion on mental health of lesbians and gay men by associating—even equating—claims that LGB people have higher prevalences of mental disorders than heterosexual people with the historical antigay stance and the stigmatization of LGB persons (Bailey, 1999).
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