Susan's Place Logo

News:

Since its founding in 1995 Susan's Place forums have blossomed into a truly global lifeline. To date we've delivered roughly 1.4 billion page views to hundreds of millions of unique visitors, guided more than 41,000 registered members through 1,985,081 posts and 188,474 topics across 193 boards, and—most importantly—helped save tens of thousands of lives by connecting people to vital information and support at their most vulnerable moments.

Main Menu

How Does Sexual Minority Stigma “Get Under the Skin”? A Psychological Mediation

Started by Felix, December 17, 2011, 03:00:10 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Felix

Psychological Bulletin
Mark L. Hatzenbuehler
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2789474/?tool=pmcentrez

Sexual minorities are at increased risk for multiple mental health burdens compared to heterosexuals. The field has identified two distinct determinants of this risk, including group-specific minority stressors and general psychological processes that are common across sexual orientations. The goal of the present paper is to develop a theoretical framework that integrates the important insights from these literatures. The framework postulates that (a) sexual minorities confront increased stress exposure resulting from stigma; (b) this stigma-related stress creates elevations in general emotion dysregulation, social/interpersonal problems, and cognitive processes conferring risk for psychopathology; and (c) these processes in turn mediate the relationship between stigma-related stress and psychopathology. It is argued that this framework can, theoretically, illuminate how stigma adversely affects mental health and, practically, inform clinical interventions. Evidence for the predictive validity of this framework is reviewed, with particular attention paid to illustrative examples from research on depression, anxiety, and alcohol use disorders.
everybody's house is haunted
  •  

Felix

I know this is old, but I just found it and that's my excuse. Pubmed is addictive. :laugh:
everybody's house is haunted
  •