性少数群体男性中的自我温暖、自我冷漠、内化的异性恋主义与抑郁症状之间的关系:调节模型

IF 2.4 4区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Journal of Homosexuality Pub Date : 2024-08-23 Epub Date: 2023-09-11 DOI:10.1080/00918369.2023.2245523
Alexander J Ristvej, Suzanne McLaren, Peter D Goldie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

抑郁症是性少数群体男性(SMM)普遍存在的心理健康问题,而基于性身份的污名化是一个关键的风险因素。自我温暖是抑郁症状的保护因素,而自我冷漠则是抑郁症状的风险因素,但这方面针对性少数群体男性的研究却很有限。在本研究中,一个由 1285 名男同性恋和 487 名双性恋组成的国际样本完成了抑郁、内化异性恋主义和自我温暖/自我冷漠的测量。多元线性回归显示,在抑郁症状中,内化异性恋解释了 0.4% 的独特方差,自我温暖解释了 0.5% 的独特方差,自我冷漠解释了 18.8% 的独特方差。在 SMM 中,自我温暖与较低的抑郁症状水平直接或间接相关。与此相反,自我冷漠直接导致男男性行为者抑郁症状水平升高,仅间接导致男同性恋者抑郁症状水平升高。研究结果应为旨在减少男同性恋、双性恋和变性者的自我冷漠从而减少抑郁症状的工作提供参考。
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The Relations Between Self-Warmth, Self-Coldness, Internalized Heterosexism, and Depressive Symptoms Among Sexual Minority Men: A Moderated-Mediation Model.

Depression is a prevalent mental health issue for sexual minority men (SMM), with the internalization of sexual identity-based stigma a key risk factor. Self-warmth is a protective factor and self-coldness is a risk factor for depressive symptoms, yet limited research in this area has focused on SMM. In the present study, an international sample of 1,285 gay and 487 bisexual men completed measures of depression, internalized heterosexism, and self-warmth/self-coldness. A multiple linear regression showed that internalized heterosexism explained 0.4% unique variance, self-warmth explained 0.5% unique variance, and self-coldness explained 18.8% unique variance in depressive symptoms. Self-warmth was directly and indirectly related to lower levels of depressive symptoms among SMM. In contrast, self-coldness was directly related to higher levels of depressive symptoms among SMM, and indirectly related to higher levels of depressive symptoms only for gay men. Findings should inform work aiming primarily to reduce self-coldness among SMM, thereby reducing depressive symptoms.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
7.70%
发文量
164
期刊介绍: The Journal of Homosexuality is an internationally acclaimed, peer-reviewed publication devoted to publishing a wide variety of disciplinary and interdisciplinary scholarship to foster a thorough understanding of the complexities, nuances, and the multifaceted aspects of sexuality and gender. The chief aim of the journal is to publish thought-provoking scholarship by researchers, community activists, and scholars who employ a range of research methodologies and who offer a variety of perspectives to continue shaping knowledge production in the arenas of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT) studies and queer studies. The Journal of Homosexuality is committed to offering substantive, accessible reading to researchers and general readers alike in the hope of: spurring additional research, offering ideas to integrate into educational programs at schools, colleges & universities, or community-based organizations, and manifesting activism against sexual and gender prejudice (e.g., homophobia, biphobia and transphobia), including the promotion of sexual and gender justice.
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