LGBTQ+初生成人伤害和微侵犯对人兽互动与心理适应关系的调节作用

Camie A. Tomlinson, Jennifer L. Murphy, Joanne M. Williams, R. Hawkins, Angela Matijczak, Jennifer W. Applebaum, S. McDonald
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引用次数: 4

摘要

人-动物互动(HAI)与积极的心理调节有关。虽然这些好处被假设为对那些经历逆境和社会关系受损的人最为明显,比如LGBTQ+(女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、变性人、酷儿和其他性/性别少数群体),但这一假设尚未得到验证。当前的横断面研究考察了来自伴侣动物的情感安慰与自尊和个人适应力之间的关系强度是否随着LGBTQ+人际压力源(即受害、微侵犯)的暴露而变化。我们的样本包括155名在过去一年中与狗和/或猫一起生活的LGBTQ+新兴成年人(Mage = 19.34年,SD = 1.12年)。为了验证这一假设,我们进行了简单和多重调节分析。我们发现,对于那些经历过高水平人际微侵犯的人来说,伴侣动物带来的舒适感和个人适应力之间的关联程度更大。同样,受害也调节了伴侣动物带来的舒适感和自尊之间的关系。在同一模型中加入受害行为和人际微侵犯行为只产生了一个显著的交互效应:同伴动物安慰与自尊之间的关系在受害程度高时呈正相关,在受害程度低时呈负相关。我们的研究结果表明,在LGBTQ+新兴成人中,HAI对自尊的好处只有在报告高水平的受害时才会出现。未来的研究应继续检查可能影响与HAI相关的益处和风险的因素,以确定HAI对谁以及在什么情况下是有益的。
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Testing the moderating role of victimization and microaggressions on the relationship between human-animal interaction and psychological adjustment among LGBTQ+ emerging adults
Human-animal interaction (HAI) is associated with positive psychological adjustment. Although these benefits are hypothesized to be most pronounced for individuals who experience adversity and compromised social relationships, such as LGBTQ+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other sexual/gender minority identities) individuals, this hypothesis has not been tested. The current, cross-sectional study examined whether the strength of the relationship between emotional comfort from companion animals and self-esteem and personal hardiness varies as a function of exposure to LGBTQ+ interpersonal stressors (i.e., victimization, microaggressions). Our sample included 155 LGBTQ+ emerging adults who lived with a dog and/or cat in the past year (Mage = 19.34 years, SD = 1.12 years). To test the hypothesis, we conducted simple and multiple moderation analyses. We found evidence that the magnitude of the association between comfort from companion animals and personal hardiness was greater for those who experienced high levels of interpersonal microaggressions. Similarly, victimization moderated the relation between comfort from companion animals and self-esteem. Including victimization and interpersonal microaggressions in the same model resulted in only one significant interaction effect: the relation between comfort from companion animals and self-esteem was positive at high levels of victimization and negative at low levels of victimization. Our results suggest that among LGBTQ+ emerging adults, the benefits of HAI on self-esteem were only present when high levels of victimization were reported. Future research should continue to examine factors that may influence the benefits and risks associated with HAI to identify for whom and under what circumstances HAI is beneficial.
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