Transgender and Gender-Diverse Minority Stress and Substance Use Frequency and Problems: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

IF 2 4区 医学 Q1 Social Sciences Transgender Health Pub Date : 2025-02-10 eCollection Date: 2025-02-01 DOI:10.1089/trgh.2023.0025
Michael J Pellicane, Madison E Quinn, Jeffrey A Ciesla
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Abstract

The goal of this preregistered study was to systematically review and meta-analyze quantitative research examining relationships between minority stress (distal stress, expectations of gender-based rejection, concealment of gender identity, and internalized transphobia) and substance use (alcohol use frequency and problems, and drug use frequency and problems) in transgender and gender-diverse (TGD) samples. Searches of PsycInfo, MEDLINE, Gender Studies, and LGBTQ+ Source databases were conducted for quantitative articles that included effect sizes for cross-sectional associations between TGD-based minority stress and substance use outcomes. Random-effects meta-analyses were used to compute effect sizes for 16 minority stressor-substance use variable pairs. Moderator analyses were conducted for publication year and proportion of the sample assigned female sex at birth, identified as Black, Indigenous, or people of color (BIPOC), or identified as a sexual minority. Thirty-six studies with 76 effect sizes were included. Significant correlations were observed for relationships between distal stress and alcohol use frequency (r=0.13; 95% confidence interval [CI]=0.06 to 0.20) and problems (r=0.09; 95% CI=0.03 to 0.14), and drug use frequency (r=0.16; 95% CI=0.11 to 0.21) and problems (r=0.14; 95% CI=0.05 to 0.23). No associations for proximal minority stress-substance use variable pairs were significant. Effect sizes for associations between distal stress and alcohol use frequency were higher in samples with more BIPOC participants (z=4.27, p<0.001, R 2=0.740). Findings indicate that distal, but not proximal, minority stress was significantly associated with drug and alcohol use frequency and problems. Theoretical and clinical implications are discussed.

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跨性别和性别多样性少数民族压力和物质使用频率及问题:系统综述和荟萃分析
本预登记研究的目的是系统回顾和荟萃分析定量研究,探讨跨性别和性别多样化(TGD)样本中少数群体压力(远端压力、基于性别的拒绝预期、隐瞒性别认同和内化变性恐惧症)与物质使用(酒精使用频率和问题、药物使用频率和问题)之间的关系。在PsycInfo、MEDLINE、Gender Studies和LGBTQ+ Source数据库中搜索定量文章,包括基于tgd的少数民族压力和物质使用结果之间横断面关联的效应量。随机效应荟萃分析用于计算16个少数民族应激因子-物质使用变量对的效应大小。对出版年份和出生时被指定为女性、被认定为黑人、土著或有色人种(BIPOC)或被认定为性少数群体的样本比例进行了调节分析。共纳入36项研究,共76个效应量。远端应激与酒精使用频率之间存在显著相关(r=0.13;95%可信区间[CI]=0.06 ~ 0.20)和问题(r=0.09;95% CI=0.03 ~ 0.14),药物使用频率(r=0.16;95% CI=0.11 ~ 0.21)和问题(r=0.14;95% CI=0.05 ~ 0.23)。近端少数民族压力-物质使用变量对无显著关联。在BIPOC参与者较多的样本中,远端应激和酒精使用频率之间关联的效应值更高(z=4.27, pR 2=0.740)。研究结果表明,远端,而不是近端,少数民族压力与药物和酒精使用频率和问题显著相关。讨论了理论和临床意义。
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来源期刊
Transgender Health
Transgender Health Social Sciences-Gender Studies
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
10.00%
发文量
122
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