| Literature DB >> 29056758 |
Amanda M Pollitt1, Joel A Muraco2, Arnold H Grossman3, Stephen T Russell4.
Abstract
Bisexual youth are at elevated risk for depression compared to lesbians and gay men. Research on bisexual stigma suggests these youth are uniquely vulnerable to stress related to sexual identity disclosure. Depression associated with this stress may be buffered by social support from parents and friends. We examined the differential influence of social support from parents and friends (Child and Adolescent Social Support Scale) on the relation between disclosure stress (LGBTQ Coming Out Stress Scale) and depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory) and differences by gender in a sample of cisgender bisexual youth (n = 383) using structural equation modeling. Parental support buffered the association between stressful disclosure to family and depressive symptoms, especially for bisexual men; bisexual women seemed not to benefit from such support when disclosure stress was high. This nuanced examination elucidates the ways family members and clinicians can best support bisexual youth sexual identity disclosure.Entities:
Keywords: Gay; and/or resiliency; bisexual; coping; depression; lesbian; social support; stress; transgender; youth/emergent adulthood
Year: 2017 PMID: 29056758 PMCID: PMC5646687 DOI: 10.1111/jomf.12418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Marriage Fam ISSN: 0022-2445