Sexual Identity Disclosure and Alcohol Experiences Among LGBTQ+ Adolescents.

Antonia E Caba, Allen B Mallory, Kay A Simon, Benton M Renley, Taylor Rathus, Ryan J Watson
Author Information
  1. Antonia E Caba: Department of Human Development and Family Sciences, University of Connecticut. ORCID
  2. Allen B Mallory: Department of Human Sciences, The Ohio State University. ORCID
  3. Kay A Simon: Department of Family Social Science, University of Minnesota. ORCID
  4. Benton M Renley: Department of Human Development and Family Sciences, University of Connecticut. ORCID
  5. Taylor Rathus: Department of Human Development and Family Sciences, University of Connecticut. ORCID
  6. Ryan J Watson: Department of Human Development and Family Sciences, University of Connecticut. ORCID

Abstract

Sexual and gender minority youth (SGMY) report greater alcohol use in comparison to their heterosexual counterparts. Prior research has found that elevated alcohol use among SGMY can be explained by minority stress experiences. Sexual identity outness may be another factor that drives alcohol use among SGMY, given that outness is associated with alcohol use among older sexual and gender minority samples. We examined how patterns of sexual identity outness were associated with lifetime alcohol use, past-30-day alcohol use, and past-30-day heavy episodic drinking. Data were drawn from the LGBTQ National Teen Survey (= 8884). Participants were SGMY aged 13 to 17 (mean age = 15.59) years living in the US. Latent class analysis was used to identify sexual identity outness patterns. Multinomial regressions were used to examine the probability of class membership by alcohol use. Six outness classes were identified: ( = 1033), ( = 1808), (= 1707), ( = 1376), ( = 1653), and (= 1307). SGMY in classes characterized by greater outness to peers, friends, and family had greater odds of lifetime alcohol use compared with SGMY in classes characterized by lower outness. These findings suggest that SGMY with greater sexual identity outness may be a target for alcohol use prevention programming. Differences in sexual identity outness may be explained by minority stress factors.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. K01 DA047918/NIDA NIH HHS
  2. L60 DA054640/NIDA NIH HHS
  3. P2C HD058484/NICHD NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Humans
Disclosure
Sexual and Gender Minorities
Gender Identity
Sexual Behavior
Alcohol Drinking

Word Cloud

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