Publication | Closed Access
Depression and Attempted Suicide among LGBTQ College Students: Fostering Resilience to the Effects of Heterosexism and Cisgenderism on Campus
151
Citations
3
References
2018
Year
Attempted SuicideHomosexualityQueer TheoryMental HealthLgbtq College StudentsMicroaggressionPsychologySocial SciencesGender IdentityGender StudiesTransgender StudyYouth Well-beingMinority StressPsychiatryLgbtq StudentsIntersectionalityDepressionSexual DiversityAlternative SexualityPsychosocial ResearchOvert DiscriminationQueer StudiesSociologySuicideInterpersonal RelationshipsMedicineSexual OrientationLgbtq+ Mental Health
Little is known is about the impacts of covert and overt discrimination and the protective factors for depression and suicide among LGBTQ students. Using multivariable regression analyses of a national sample of cisgender lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer students and trans* students (n = 776), we examined the association between mental health and microaggressions, victimization, psychological resilience, pride, and outness. In models of all risk and protective factors, interpersonal microaggressions was a risk factor for depression and attempted suicide among cisgender LGBQ students and was also a risk factor among trans* students for depression. In all but 1 model, resilience was a protective factor. Resilience moderated the microaggressions–suicide relationship among cisgender LGBQ students, whereas pride moderated the victimization– depression relationship among trans* students.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1