The impact of fluid attraction and fluid identity on stress, anxiety, and depression

Elisabeth Counselman Carpenter, Kevin Lally, Alex Redcay, Wade Luquet
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Abstract

AbstractIntroduction This study sought to determine whether gender, fluid identity, and fluid attraction groups differed significantly in stress, depression, and anxiety among LGBTQA + sexual minorities compared to non–sexual minorities.Methods Using the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), this study conducted two-way analyses of variance to determine whether male or female sexual minorities had significantly different levels of stress, depression, and anxiety when compared to non–sexual minorities. Individuals were also placed in one of eight groups based on sexual orientation, fluid identity, and fluid attraction to determine whether fluidity played a unique role in contributing to mental health.Results Results showed that both gender and fluidity accounted for 3.7% to 9.7% of the variance in stress (R2 = 4.1%), depression (R2 = 3.7%), and anxiety (R2 = 9.7%). Non–sexual minorities who reported both fluid attraction and fluid identity also reported the highest rate of stress, anxiety, and depression, revealing that fluidity had a unique impact on mental health apart from sexual orientation. This consistent pattern did not occur among sexual minorities. Sexual minorities had varying degrees of stress, depression, and anxiety, depending on the combination of static or fluid attraction or identity.Conclusion Fluid attraction, fluid identity, and gender significantly impacted stress, depression, and anxiety regardless of sexual orientation.Keywords: LGBTQfluid identitystressanxietydepression Ethics statementRutgers University Institutional Review Board (IRB) and Bloomsburg University IRB granted exempt IRB reviews for this study.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementThe data supporting these results were derived from the following resources in the public domain: https://addhealth.cpc.unc.edu/data/#public-use.Additional informationFundingThe author(s) reported there is no funding associated with the work featured in this article.
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流体吸引力和流体特性对压力、焦虑和抑郁的影响
摘要:本研究旨在确定LGBTQA +性少数群体与非性少数群体相比,性别、流体认同和流体吸引群体在压力、抑郁和焦虑方面是否存在显著差异。方法利用国家青少年到成人健康纵向研究(Add Health),本研究进行了双向方差分析,以确定男性和女性性少数群体与非性少数群体相比是否具有显著不同的压力、抑郁和焦虑水平。研究人员还根据性取向、流体身份和流体吸引力将个体分为八组,以确定流动性是否在促进心理健康方面发挥了独特的作用。结果结果显示,性别和流动性分别占压力(R2 = 4.1%)、抑郁(R2 = 3.7%)和焦虑(R2 = 9.7%)方差的3.7% ~ 9.7%。报告流体吸引力和流体身份的非性少数群体也报告了最高的压力、焦虑和抑郁率,这表明流动性除了性取向外,对心理健康也有独特的影响。这种一致的模式在性少数群体中没有出现。性少数群体有不同程度的压力、抑郁和焦虑,这取决于静态或流动的吸引力或身份的组合。结论无论性取向如何,流体吸引、流体认同和性别对应激、抑郁和焦虑均有显著影响。关键词:lgbtq流体身份压力焦虑抑郁伦理声明罗格斯大学机构审查委员会(IRB)和布卢姆斯堡大学IRB对本研究给予豁免审查。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。数据可用性声明支持这些结果的数据来自以下公共领域的资源:https://addhealth.cpc.unc.edu/data/#public-use.Additional informationfunding作者报告没有与本文所述工作相关的资金。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
6.20%
发文量
43
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