| Literature DB >> 33689086 |
Angeliki Argyriou1, Kimberley A Goldsmith2, Katharine A Rimes3.
Abstract
Evidence suggests that sexual minorities (e.g., those identifying as lesbian, gay, or bisexual) experience increased rates of depression compared to heterosexual individuals. Minority stress theory suggests that this disparity is due to stigma experienced by sexual minorities. Stigma processes are proposed to contribute to reduced coping/support resources and increased vulnerability processes for mental health problems. This review provided a systematic examination of research assessing the evidence for mediating factors that help explain such disparities. A literature search was conducted using the databases PubMed, PsycINFO, and Web of Science. The review included 40 identified studies that examined mediators of sexual minority status and depressive outcomes using a between-group design (i.e., heterosexual versus sexual minority participants). Studies of adolescents and adult samples were both included. The most common findings were consistent with the suggestion that stressors such as victimization, harassment, abuse, and increased stress, as well as lower social and family support, may contribute to differing depression rates in sexual minority compared to heterosexual individuals. Differences in psychological processes such as self-esteem and rumination may also play a role but have had insufficient research attention so far. However, caution is needed because many papers had important methodological shortcomings such as the use of cross-sectional designs, inferior statistical analyses for mediation, or measures that had not been properly validated. Although firm conclusions cannot be drawn, the current evidence base highlights many factors potentially suitable for further exploration in high-quality longitudinal research or randomized studies intervening with the potential mediators.Entities:
Keywords: Depression; LGB; Mediation; Sexual minority; Sexual orientation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33689086 PMCID: PMC8035121 DOI: 10.1007/s10508-020-01862-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Sex Behav ISSN: 0004-0002
Quality assessment tool
| Item: | Score: 0/1 |
|---|---|
| 1. Did the study cite a theoretical framework? | |
| 2. Was the independent variable clearly defined, valid (face validity), and reliable, and implemented consistently across participants? | |
| 3. Were the psychometric characteristics of the mediator variable reported and were they within accepted ranges? (Computed from the present study or a reference provided) | |
| 4. Were the psychometric characteristics of the depression variable reported and were they within accepted ranges? (Computed from the present study or a reference provided) | |
| 5. Did the study report a power calculation? If so, was the study adequately powered to detect mediation? | |
| 6. Were statistically appropriate/acceptable methods of data analysis used?a | |
| 7. Did the study ascertain whether changes in the mediating variable preceded changes in the outcome variable? | |
| 8. Did the study ascertain whether changes in the predictor variable preceded changes in the mediator variable? | |
| 9. Did the study control for possible confounding factors? | |
| 10. Were all the subjects selected or recruited from the same or similar populations (including the same time period)? Were inclusion and exclusion criteria for being in the study prespecified and applied uniformly to all participants? | |
| 11. Are the individuals selected to participate in the study likely to be representative of the LGB and heterosexual population? | |
12. (a) Was 80% or more of potential participants included at point of relevant analyses? (b) If the study was longitudinal, was loss to follow-up after baseline 20% or less? |
aStudies were assigned 1 if they conducted and reported a test of significance for the mediated effect either through testing of the product of coefficients (e.g., Sobel test, bootstrapping) or joint testing of the a and b paths (MacKinnon et al., 2002). Studies were assigned a 0 if they solely used the causal steps approach (Baron & Kenny, 1986) or other approaches to mediation without testing for statistical significance of the indirect effect
Fig. 1Study flow diagram
Quality assessment
| 1. Theory | 2. Predictor | 3. Mediator | 4. Outcome | 5. Power | 6. Analysis | 7. Mediator before outcome | 8. Predictor before mediator | 9. Confounders | 10. Recruitment | 11. Representativeness | 12. Response uptake | Quality rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Almeida et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Fair |
| 2. Burns et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | Fair |
| 3. Burton et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | Good |
| 4. Donahue et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Poor |
| 5. Frisell et al. ( | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Poor |
| 6. Frost and LeBlanc ( | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Fair |
| 7. Hatzenbuehler et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Fair |
| 8. Hatzenbuehler et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Fair |
| 9. Hughes et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Poor |
| 10. Krueger et al. | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | Fair |
| 11.la Roi et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Good |
| 12. Luk et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | Good |
| 13. Luk et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | Good |
| 14. Martin-Storey and August ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | Fair |
| 15. Martin-Storey and Crosnoe ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Fair |
| 16. McLaren ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Fair |
| 17. McLaren et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | Fair |
| 18. McLaughlin et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Fair |
| 19. McNair et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Fair |
| 20. Mereish et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Fair |
| 21. Miller and Irvin ( | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Poor |
| 22. Needham and Austin ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Fair |
| 23. Oginni et al. | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | Fair |
| 24. Pakula et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Fair |
| 25. Pearson and Wilkinson ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | Good |
| 26. Przedworski et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | Fair |
| 27. Riley et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Fair |
| 28. Robinson et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Fair |
| 29. Rosario et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Fair |
| 30. Safren and Heimberg ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Poor |
| 31. Shenkman et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Fair |
| 32. Sigurvinsdottir and Ullman ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Fair |
| 33. Smith et al. ( | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Poor |
| 34. Spencer and Patrick ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | Fair |
| 35. Szalacha et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Fair |
| 36. Tate and Patterson ( | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Good |
| 37. Teasdale and Bradley-Engen ( | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | Fair |
| 38. Ueno ( | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Poor |
| 39. Wong et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Fair |
| 40. Woodford et al. ( | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | Fair |
Study design, sample, setting, and mediators tested
| Study | Design | Sample | Setting/country | Mediators tested |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Almeida et al. ( | Cross sectional | 103 LGB, 929 non-LGB | Public high schools Boston, USA | Perceived discrimination |
| 2. Burns et al. ( | Longitudinal | 149 LGB, 4675 non-LGB | Community sample of adults Australia | Major life events Social support Health and behaviors Behavioral activation and inhibition |
| 3. Burton et al. ( | Longitudinal | 55 LGB, 137 non-LGB | Adolescent medicine clinics Pennsylvania and Ohio, USA | Sexual minority specific victimization |
| 4. Donahue et al. ( | Cross sectional | 331 LGB, 3656 non-LGB | Population-based sample of adolescent twins Sweden | Victimization |
| 5. Frisell et al. ( | Cross sectional | 1241 had same-sex partners, 15,487 did not have same-sex partners | Population-based sample of adult twins Sweden | Perceived victimization Hate crime victimization |
| 6. Frost and LeBlanc ( | Cross sectional | 239 LGB, 192 non-LGB | Online study of adults USA and Canada | Nonevent stress |
| 7. Hatzenbuehler et al. ( | Longitudinal | 29 LGB, 1042 non-LGB | Middle schools Connecticut, USA | Emotional regulation: emotional awareness and rumination |
| 8. Hatzenbuehler et al. ( | Cross sectional | 151 LG, 708 BI, 13,353 non-LGB | Nationally representative sample of adolescents USA | Social isolation Degree of connectedness Social status |
| 9. Hughes et al. ( | Cross sectional | 326 L, 124 ML, 27 BI 72 MH, 1573 non-LGB | Women from two large studies (national & Chicago Metropolitan area) USA | Victimization |
| 10. Krueger et al. ( | Cross sectional | 11,756 concordant Ha, 539 LGB, 1406 MH, 515 discordanta H | Nationally representative sample of young adults USA | Perceived stress |
| 11. la Roi et al. ( | Longitudinal | 151 LGB, 1587 non-LGB | Large cohort study of adolescents Five municipalities in the north of Netherlands (urban and rural) | Peer victimization Parental rejection |
| 12. Luk et al. ( | Longitudinal | 99 LGB, 2080 non-LGB | Nationally representative sample of adolescents and young adults USA | Family satisfaction Peer support Cyberbullying victimization Unmet medical needs |
| 13. Luk et al. ( | Longitudinal | 1839 H, 37 LG, 104 BI, 32 Q | National cohort study of adolescents USA | Cyber behaviors (weekday time spent on cyber behavior, weekend time spent on cyber behavior, social media use) |
| 14. Martin-Storey and August ( | Cross sectional | 93 LGB, 158 non-LGB | University and college students Southwestern city, USA | Harassment due to gender nonconformity Harassment due to sexual minority status |
| 15. Martin-Storey and Crosnoe ( | Cross sectional | 40 LGB, 917 non-LGB | Multi-site study of adolescents USA | Harassment due to sexual minoritystatus Self-concept Self-regulation Friendship quality Parental support Quality of the school environment |
| 16. McLaren ( | Cross sectional | 184 L, 202 non-LGB | Community sample of women Victoria, Australia (urban, rural, regional areas) | Sense of belonging |
| 17. McLaren et al. ( | Cross sectional | 137 G, 136 non-LGB | Community sample of men Australia | Sense of belonging |
| 18. McLaughlin et al. ( | Cross sectional | 227 LG, 245 BI, 13,490 non-LGB | National cohort study of adolescents/young adults USA | Exposure to adversity |
| 19. McNair et al. ( | Cross sectional | 92 L, 75 BI, 634 MH, 8482 non-LB 126 L, 16 BI, 122 MH, 10,035 non-LB | Large national sample of women Australia | Stress Abuse Social support |
| 20. Mereish et al. ( | Cross sectional | 839 H, 224 MH, 66 LGB | Children and adolescents in a large county in North Carolina USA | Cyber victimization Bias-based victimization |
| 21. Miller and Irvin ( | Cross sectional | 95 LGB, 4674 non-LGB | Nationally representative sample of intimate partner violence survivors USA | Type of victimization Emotional support |
| 22. Needham and Austin ( | Cross sectional (baseline data as confounder) | 193 LG, 192 BI, 10,768 non-LGB | Nationally representative sample of adolescents and young adults USA | Parental support |
| 23. Oginni et al. ( | Cross sectional | 81 Gay, 81 H | University sample South-Western Nigeria | Family-related variables Resilience |
| 24. Pakula et al. ( | Cross sectional | 2893 LG, 2225 BI, 217,652 non-LGB | Large national multi-year sample of adults Canada | Perceived life stress |
| 25. Pearson and Wilkinson ( | Longitudinal | 770 LGB, 10,831 non-LGB | Nationally representative sample of adolescents USA | Family relationships: Perceived parental closeness Parental involvement Perceived family support |
| 26. Przedworski et al. ( | Cross sectional | 232 LGB, 4441 H | National study of medical students USA | Social stressors |
| 27. Riley et al. ( | Longitudinal | 75 LGB, 1702 H | First year university students USA | Stress Coping styles |
| 28. Robinson et al. ( | Longitudinal | 187 LGB, 3948 H | Nationally representative sample of young people UK | Victimization |
| 29. Rosario et al. ( | Longitudinal | 101, 101 BI, 611 MH, 5309 H | Cohort study of early adolescent children USA | Attachment Parental affection |
| 30. Safren and Heimberg ( | Cross sectional | 56 LGB, 48 non-LGB | Community sample of youth Philadelphia USA | Social support Coping Stress |
| 31. Sigurvinsdottir and Ullman ( | Longitudinal | 95 BI, 810 non-LGB | Community sample of bisexual and heterosexual sexual assault women survivors Chicago metropolitan area, USA | Perceived social support Frequency of social contact |
| 32. Smith et al. ( | Cross sectional | 29 LGB, 270 non-LGB | Undergraduate psychology students in a large public university Pacific Northwest, USA | Institutional betrayal |
| 33. Shenkman et al. ( | Cross sectional | 445 H, 350 LG | Online convenience/targeted sample Israel | Attachment avoidance |
| 34. Spencer and Patrick ( | Cross sectional | 66 LG, 24 BI | Online convenience sample of young adults USA | Social support Personal mastery |
| 35. Szalacha et al. ( | Cross sectional | 568 MH, 100 BI, 99 L, 8083 non-LB | National study of women Australia | Interpersonal violence |
| 36. Tate and Patterson ( | Cross sectional | 14,973 H and MH, 248 BI, 340 LG | Large national sample of young adults | Mother relationship quality Father relationship quality Perceived stress |
| 37. Teasdale and Bradley-Engen ( | Longitudinal | 787 LGB, 10,456 non-LGB | Large national sample of adolescents USA | Social stress Social support |
| 38. Ueno ( | Cross sectional | 64 had same-sex contact, 1428 did not have same-sex contact | Community sample of young adults Miami-Dade, USA | Victimization Major discrimination events Daily discrimination Negative life events Chronic strains Family support Friend support Optimism Mastery Self-esteem Mattering Fun-seeking orientation Relationship status Number of sexual relationships Early first sex Parents’ permissiveness of drug use Friends’ permissiveness of drug use Friends’ drug use |
| 39. Wong et al. ( | Cross sectional | 142 LGB, 934 H | Multi-site university sample China | Dating violence Sexual orientation concealment |
| 40. Woodford et al. ( | Cross sectional | 426 LGB, 2002 H | University students Midwest, USA | Interpersonal mistreatment |
LGB, lesbian, gay, bisexual; L, lesbian; ML, mostly lesbian; G, gay; BI, bisexual MH mostly heterosexual; H, heterosexual; Q, questioning
aConcordant H identified as heterosexual and their reported attractions and behaviors were all toward the opposite sex. Discordant H identified as heterosexual but reported same-sex attractions and/or behaviors
Statistical analysis and findings
| Study | Statistical analysis | Findingsa |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Almeida et al. ( | Series of regressions Sobel test | Perceived discrimination mediated the relation between sexual minority status and depressive symptoms. The mediation was especially pronounced for boys |
| 2. Burns et al. ( | Series of regressions | A bisexual but not a homosexual orientation was found to predict increased rates of depression compared to those with a heterosexual orientation. This association was no longer significant when other significant predictors were included in the model, including social support, physical health, smoking status, and history of sexual trauma, suggesting the potential mediating role of these variables (although the authors did not describe these as mediators) |
| 3. Burton et al. ( | Series of regressions Product of coefficients: bootstrapping | Sexual minority-specific victimization mediated the effect of reported sexual minority status and depressive symptoms, controlling for baseline depressive symptoms and demographic variables |
| 4. Donahue et al. ( | Series of regressions | Results suggested that victimization attenuated the relation between sexual minority status and depression. This possible mediation effect was decreased when controlling for unmeasured familial confounding by comparing sexual minority youth to their heterosexual same sex twin siblings |
| 5. Frisell et al. ( | Series of regressions | Adjusting for perceived discrimination and hate crime victimization reduced the relation between same-sex sexual experience and depressive symptoms, suggesting evidence for mediation (although the authors did not describe the variables as mediators). When controlling for familial confounding with the use of within-twin-pair comparisons, men with same-sex contact and those without did not differ in depression rates. For women, a significant difference based on same-sex contact remained, which disappeared when accounting for perceived discrimination and hate crime victimization |
| 6. Frost and LeBlanc ( | Series of regressions Bootstrapping | Controlling for demographic variables, greater nonevent stress (i.e., barriers to life pursuits in relationships and work) mediated the relation between sexual orientation and depression symptoms |
| 7. Hatzenbuehler et al. ( | SEM Sobel test | Greater rumination and poorer emotional awareness mediated the association between same-sex attraction and depressive symptoms, while controlling for baseline levels of depression |
| 8. Hatzenbuehler et al. ( | Series of regressions | Controlling for demographic factors, violence, and victimization, sexual minority status was no longer significantly associated with depression in boys when social isolation was included in the model. No mediation hypotheses were tested for girls, as social network variables were not found to be associated with depression in girls |
| 9. Hughes et al. ( | Series of regressions | Controlling for demographic variables and parental drinking, no differences in depression were found between heterosexual and lesbian women. However, bisexual women were found to have increased rates of depression compared to heterosexual women. After adjusting for the number of types of victimization, the difference in depression between bisexual and heterosexual women was no longer statistically significant |
| 10. Krueger et al. ( | SEM Unspecified test of significance | Perceived stress mediated the association between sexual minority status and depressive symptoms for all sexual minority groups of women when compared to heterosexuals. However, perceived stress was only related to sexual minority status for mostly heterosexual men and not gay/bisexual or discordant heterosexual men when compared to heterosexuals |
| 11. la Roi et al. ( | SEM: latent growth modeling Product of coefficients | Disparities in depression between sexual minority girls and youth of bisexual identity, present since age 11, were mediated by both victimization and parental rejection. Depression differences in boys were not found. However, peer victimization but not parental rejection mediated the association between sexual minority status and depressive symptoms for boys too. Both peer victimization and parental rejection mediated the association between bisexual identity and depressive symptoms |
| 12. Luk et al. ( | SEM: latent growth modeling Bootstrapping | Family satisfaction, cyberbullying victimization, and unmet medical needs all mediated the relation between sexual minority status and depressive symptoms. Peer support was not found to mediate the association as it was not associated with sexual minority status |
| 13. Luk et al. ( | SEM Bootstrapping | Controlling for ethnicity and family affluence, bisexual attraction in adolescence was both directly and indirectly associated with higher depressive symptoms during young adulthood through increased time spent on cyber behaviors (weekday and weekend) and social media. These mediation associations were not found when comparing to gay/lesbian and questioning groups to heterosexuals as these groups did not differ in cyber behaviors and social media use compared to heterosexual youth. Bisexual and questioning females reported higher depressive symptoms than heterosexual females, but such disparities were not found when comparing lesbian youth to heterosexual, or among sexual orientation subgroups in males |
| 14. Martin-Storey and August ( | SEM Bootstrapping | Controlling for socioeconomic status and method of recruitment, the relation between sexual orientation and depressive symptoms was mediated by harassment due to gender nonconformity |
| 15. Martin-Storey and Crosnoe ( | SEM Delta method | Controlling for demographic variables, baseline depression, and maternal depression, harassment due to sexual minority status mediated the association between sexual minority status and depression. Harassment due to sexual minority status was associated with depression via lowered sense of self-concept and negative perceptions of the school environment |
| 16. McLaren ( | Series of regressions | Controlling for demographic variables, results provide some evidence for mediation of lower sense of belonging in the relations between of sexual orientation and dysphoria in women |
| 17. McLaren et al. ( | Series of regressions | Controlling for demographic variables, results provide some evidence for mediation of lower sense of belonging in the association between sexual orientation and dysphoria in men |
| 18. McLaughlin et al. ( | Series of regressions Sobel test | Controlling for demographic variables, exposure to early life adversity was a significant mediator of the association between gay and lesbian orientation and depression |
| 19. McNair et al. ( | Series of regressions | Controlling for demographic variables, results suggested that for the younger cohort, all sexual minority women (mainly heterosexual, bisexual, and exclusively/mainly homosexual) had higher rates of depression than heterosexual women and that stress, abuse, and lower social support attenuated these associations. For the older cohort of women, only the mainly heterosexual group had higher depression rates compared to the heterosexual group, and this difference disappeared when stress, abuse, and lower social support were added to the model |
| 20. Mereish et al. ( | Series of regressions Bootstrapping | Controlling for demographic variables, cyber and bias-based victimization mediated the relation between sexual orientation and depression outcomes in Black American young people |
| 21. Miller and Irvin ( | Series of regressions Sobel test | Controlling for demographic variables, lower emotional support mediated the relation between sexual orientation and depression for victims of intimate partner violence. The type of abuse experienced (verbal, physical, and sexual) did not mediate the relation |
| 22. Needham and Austin ( | Series of regressions | Bisexual women but not lesbian women had elevated depressive symptoms compared to heterosexual women. Controlling for demographic variables, results were consistent with the suggestion that the association between bisexual identity and depressive symptoms was attenuated when parental support was included in the model. Gay and bisexual men were not found to differ to heterosexual men in depression rates |
| 23. Oginni et al. ( | Series of regressions | The family-related variables examined resulted in an attenuation in the relation between sexual orientation and depressive symptoms, but this attenuation was not significant. Entering resilience in the model resulted in a significant attenuation in the relations between sexual orientation and depressive symptoms, suggesting the mediating role of resilience (although the authors did not describe it as a mediator) |
| 24. Pakula et al. ( | Series of regressions Product of coefficients: bootstrapping | After controlling for demographic variables, greater life stress significantly mediated the associations between sexual identity and mood disorders for both gay/lesbian and bisexual respondents |
| 25. Pearson and Wilkinson ( | Series of regressions Sobel test | For girls, perceived closeness with parents and family support mediated the association between same-sex attraction and depressive symptoms. For boys, perceived parental closeness mediated the association of same-sex attraction and depressive symptoms. Results suggested that poorer family relationships were a stronger mediator for girls than for boys |
| 26. Przedworski et al. ( | Series of regressions | After controlling for demographic variables, results suggested that social stressors decreased the magnitude of the association between sexual minority status and depression |
| 27. Riley et al. ( | Series of regressions Bootstrapping | After controlling for demographic and baseline levels of depression, stress and coping styles (denial, blame, reframing and religion) were not found to mediate the association between sexual identity and depression |
| 28. Robinson et al. ( | SEM Unspecified test of significance | In both girls and boys, peer victimization mediated the disparities in indicators of depressive distress |
| 29. Rosario et al. ( | Series of regressions | After controlling for demographic variables and sibling clustering, less secure maternal attachment attenuated the relation between sexual orientation and depressive symptoms for bisexual and mostly heterosexual youth compared to heterosexual youth. For lesbian and gay youth, the association disappeared once attachment was entered in the model. There was no evidence that maternal affection mediated depression disparities between the sexual minority subgroups and heterosexuals |
| 30. Safren and Heimberg ( | Series of regressions | Sexual minority status was related to potential mediators (although the authors did not describe these as mediators) stress and social support, but not acceptance coping. Sexual minority status was related to depression in a univariate model, but this was no longer the case when the stress, social support, and acceptance coping variables were added into the model |
| 31. Sigurvinsdottir and Ullman ( | Series of regressions Sobel test | Heterosexual women survivors of sexual assault had lower depressive symptoms than bisexual women survivors. Lower perceived social support mediated the association between sexual orientation and depressive symptoms |
| 32. Smith et al. ( | Series of regressions | Results suggested that greater self-reported institutional betrayal attenuated the relation between sexual minority status and depression |
| 33. Spencer and Patrick ( | Series of regressions | The association between sexual orientation and depressive symptoms disappeared when personal resources of social support and mastery were entered into the model. Both social support and personal mastery uniquely contributed to depression variance |
| 34. Shenkman et al. ( | Series of regressions Bootstrapping | Controlling for demographic variables, attachment avoidance mediated the association between being gay or lesbian and depressive symptoms |
| 35. Szalacha et al. ( | Series of regressions | Having a lesbian or bisexual sexual identity was not found to predict depression, while a mainly heterosexual sexual identity was. Despite the number of types of interpersonal violence emerging as the strongest predictor of depression in the model, no evidence for mediation was found |
| 36. Tate and Patterson ( | SEM Bootstrapping | Controlling for sociodemographic variables, higher perceived stress and lower relationship quality with fathers mediated the relation between lesbian, gay, and bisexual identities and depressive symptoms. Lower relationship quality with mothers and higher perceived stress mediated the relation between sexual minority status and depressive symptoms in women but not in men. For men, there was no difference in relationship quality with mothers among sexual orientation groups |
| 37. Teasdale and Bradley-Engen ( | Series of regressions | Controlling for demographic variables, results suggested that greater social stress (including victimization, witness victimization, forced sexual encounters, and suicide of a friend) and lower social support (perceived care and social acceptance by peers, parents, and teachers) attenuated the relation between sexual minority status and depressive outcomes |
| 38. Ueno ( | Series of regressions | Victimization and daily discrimination attenuated the relation between same-sex contact and depressive symptoms. Negative life events and chronic strain also attenuated the association independently. Similarly, family relationships decreased the association, as well as psychological resources (mastery, self-esteem, and mattering). When all the hypothesized mediators were simultaneously entered in the model the difference between those with same-sex contact and those without was greatly reduced but was still significant. There was no evidence that self-exploratory attitudes (fun-seeking orientation, number of sexual partners, and early sexual initiation) explained the association between same-sex contact and depressive symptoms. The variables of major discrimination, friend support, relationship status, and optimism were not tested for mediation as there were no differences between the groups on these factors |
| 39. Wong et al. ( | SEM Bootstrapping and Sobel test | After controlling for demographic variables and adverse childhood experiences, dating violence and sexual orientation concealment both independently mediated the relation between sexual minority status and depressive outcomes |
| 40. Woodford et al. ( | Series of regressionsBootstrapping | After controlling for demographic variables, more experiences of interpersonal mistreatment (incivility and heterosexist harassment) mediated the relation between sexual minority status and depression |
aTerms such as “boys,” “girls,” “men,” and “women” are used to report the findings of studies in line with the terms used in the papers; generally, the authors did not report how they assessed sex/gender/gender identity
| Study | Sample characteristics | Measures for mediator(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Almeida et al. ( | Age: 13–19 years ( Gender: 58.3% females, 41.7% males Ethnicity: 30.7% Hispanic, 44.8% non-Hispanic Black, 10.8% Asian/Pacific Islander/biracial/multiracial/other | Perceived discrimination: single yes/no item |
| 2. Burns et al. ( | Age: 48.5% of the sample were between 20 and 24 years, 51.5% of the sample were 40–44 years Gender: 47.9% females, 52.1% males | Major life events: Age first moved away from the parental home; age first moved in with first partner; age of first sex; measure of traumatic life events Social support: Estimated from a factor analysis of the Health and behaviors: Continuous Short Form-12 Physical Health Component Score that was computed following the RAND scoring (Hays, Sherbourne, & Mazel, Behavioral activation and inhibition: |
| 3. Burton et al. ( | Age: 14–19 years ( Gender: 70% females, 20% males Ethnicity: 31% White, 63% African-American, 3% other | Sexual-minority specific victimization: Victimization due to actual or perceived sexual minority status assessed via four items |
| 4. Donahue et al. ( | Age: 18 years Gender: 59.3% females, 40.7% males | Victimization: Dichotomous variable based on reports of experiencing emotional abuse, physical abuse/neglect, sexual abuse/assault |
| 5. Frisell et al. ( | Age: 20 to 47 years ( Gender: 39.8% females, 60.2 males Education: 4.4% low, 47.3% medium, 45.7% high, 2.6% missing Currently in relationship: 73.5% yes, 25.3% no, 1.2% missing | Perceived victimization: Self-report of ever having been “discriminated against in an insulting or disparaging way.” Hate crime victimization: Single item asking whether respondents have experienced violence due to their “race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, or religion” |
| 6. Frost and LeBlanc ( | Age: Gender: 69.4% females, 30.6% males Ethnicity: 71% White, 14% Black, 6% Latino, 6% Asian, 2% Native American, 1% Pacific Islander, 7% other Education: 57% some college or more, 43% high school diploma or less Employment: 52 full-time, 20 part-time, 14 unemployed, 36 student Relationship status: 43% single, 57% in a relationship | Nonevent stress: assessed in the form of perceived barriers to participants’ pursuit and achievement of personal projects. Barriers to project pursuit were measured with the |
| 7. Hatzenbuehler et al. ( | Age: 11–14 years Grades: 31.8% in sixth grade, 33.9% in seventh grade, 34.3% in eighth grade Gender: 48.8% females, 51.2% males Ethnicity: 13.2% non-Hispanic White, 11.8% non-Hispanic Black, 56.9% Hispanic, 2.2% Asian/Pacific Islander, 0.2% Native American, 0.8% Middle Eastern, 9.3% biracial or multiracial, 4.2% members of other racial/ethnic groups, 1.3% unspecified racial/ethnic background Household: 27.4% lived in single-parent households | Emotional regulation: emotional awareness and rumination: Emotional awareness subscale of the |
| 8. Hatzenbuehler et al. ( | Age: 12–18 years (Grades 7 to 12) Gender: 51% females, 49% males | Social network variables based on peer nominations with 3 indicators: Social isolation: Two measures of social isolation were calculated: (a) in-degree (b) out-degree Degree of connectedness: The total number of students the participant could reach in three steps in the participant’s network Social status: Bonacich’s ( |
| 9. Hughes et al. ( | Age: Ethnicity: 65.3% non-Hispanic White, 20% non-Hispanic Black, 11.6% Hispanic, 3.1% other Education: 37% high school or less, 31.9% some college, 16.8% college degree, 14.2% graduate/professional degree Residence: 59.9% urban, 15.7% rural, 24.4% Chicago metropolitan | Victimization: A measure of cumulative victimization that summed the number of types of victimization experienced across the lifespan was created including different types of childhood abuse and adult victimization and intimate partner violence. |
| 10. Krueger et al. ( | Age: 24–34 years Gender: 53.3% females, 46.7% males Ethnicity: ~ 11.8% Hispanic, ~ 15.7% non-Hispanic Black, 3.25% non-Hispanic Asian, ~ 69.1% non-Hispanic White | Perceived stress: Four-item version of the Cohen Perceived Stress Scale (Cohen, Kamarck, & Mermelstein, |
| 11. la Roi et al. ( | Age: wave 1: Gender: 54.8% females, 45.2% males | Peer victimization: Single item on bullying and three items on relational victimization ( Parental rejection: Self-reported parental rejection from the |
| 12. Luk et al. ( | Age: From 11th grade to 3 years after high school, Gender: 56.2% females, 43.8% males Ethnicity: 58.8% White, 17.3 African-American, 19.7% Hispanic, 4.3% other SES: 23.1% low, 50% middle, 27% high | Family satisfaction: Single item on self-reported satisfaction with the relationships in their families. Responses coded as low, moderate, high, or very high Peer support: Participants nominated up to 6 of their closest male and female friends and the indicated whether they have talked with each of the friends about a problem in the last week Cyberbullying victimization: Single item on cyberbullying Unmet medical needs: Single yes/no item |
| 13. Luk et al. ( | Age: wave 2: Gender: 59.4% females, 40.6% males Ethnicity: 58.9% White, 19.7% African-American, 17.2% Hispanic, 4.3% other Family affluence: 23.1% low, 49.7% medium, 27.2% high | Cyber behaviors: Two items (weekday, weekend time) assessed the number of hours per day participants usually use a computer, the Internet, or a cell phone for chatting online, e-mailing, texting, tweeting, or social networking. Final items ranged from 0 (none at all) to 7 (about 7 or more hours a day) Social media use: Participants reported frequency of engagement in seven different activities on a social networking site in the past three months. Response options ranged from 0 (never) to 5 (multiple times a day) ( |
| 14. Martin-Storey and August ( | Age: non-LGB Gender: 58% females, 42% males Ethnicity: 19.5% Asian, 4.4% Black/African-American, 61% White, 10% Hispanic, 5% unspecified Family-of-origin income: Incomes were distributed over the range presented, with 7.2% of the sample having families with incomes of $20,000 yearly or less Residence: 36% grew up in a city, 53% in a suburb, 11% in a rural area Education: 91% attended a university, 9% attended a community college | Harassment due to gender nonconformity: Frequency with which had experienced victimization events “because other people think that the way they act or dress does not match the sex they were assigned at birth, or their gender nonconformity” ( Harassment due to sexual minority status: Frequency with which had experienced victimization events “because of their actual sexual orientation or their perceived sexual orientation.” ( |
| 15. Martin-Storey and Crosnoe ( | Age: 15 years Gender: 50.9% females, 49.1% males Ethnicity: 81% White, 12% African-American, 1% Asian or Pacific Islander, 5% other Family structure: 63% had father present at home | Harassment due to sexual minority status: Experiences of harassment in the past year because of their sexual orientation Self-concept: Identity subscale of the Self-regulation: both primary caregiver’s and youths’ reported self-control from the subscale of the Friendship quality: Perception of friendship quality with a best friend based on Parental support: Scale assessing the youth’s perceptions of their primary caregiver’s caring and attentive behavior, with higher scores reflecting greater maternal warmth ( Quality of the school environment: Latent factor that combined school attachment ( |
| 16. McLaren ( | Relationship status: 55% heterosexuals/57% lesbians were married or in a committed relationship Education: 48% of heterosexual women and 29% of lesbians had completed secondary school; 25% of the heterosexual women, and 47% of the lesbians had completed a university degree | Sense of belonging: The Psychological subscale of the |
| 17. McLaren et al. ( | Age: Relationship status: 41% gay men/23% heterosexual men were single, 48% gay men/68% heterosexual men were married or in a committed relationship, 10% gay men/9% heterosexual men were separated or divorced, and 1% of gay men/0% of heterosexual men were widowed Education: 64% gay men/51% heterosexual men had a university degree Residence: 73% gay men/63% heterosexual men leaved in an urban setting; 27% gay men/37% heterosexual men leaved in a rural setting Income: heterosexual men had a higher average income than gay men | Sense of belonging: The Psychological subscale of the |
| 18. McLaughlin et al. ( | Age: 18–27 years Gender: 47% females, 53% males Ethnicity: 66% non-Hispanic White, 16% non-Hispanic Black, 12% Hispanic, 7% other Education: 52% enrolled or completed college, 48% no college | Exposure to adversity: Aggregate dichotomous variable based on whether respondents scored positively on any of the following: Single item on childhood physical abuse by caregivers; single item on childhood sexual abuse from caregivers; 2 items assessing housing-related adversity; 3 items on intimate partner violence |
| 19. McNair et al. ( | Two subsamples included: younger cohort/older cohort Age: 22–27 (younger cohort), 50–55 years (mid-age cohort) Residence: random sampling from Australian population register; oversampling from rural and remote areas | Stress: The Abuse: Single item on childhood or adulthood physical, mental, emotional or sexual abuse or violence Social support: The degree of social support was assessed by a modified version of the |
| 20. Mereish et al. ( | Age: 10–18 years (26.2% in Grade 6, 21.6% in Grade 8, 27.8% in Grade 10, 22.1% in Grade 12) Gender: 51.7% female, 47.2% male | Cyber victimization: assessed with one item: “During the past 12 months, how often have you been electronically bullied by someone?” Bias-based victimization: assessed with single item: “During the past 12 months, how often were you bullied for any of the following reasons? race, ethnicity, or national origin; religion; gender; because you are gay, lesbian, or bisexual, or someone thought you were; a physical or mental disability; because of your language or accent; and any other reason ( |
| 21. Miller and Irvin ( | Age: Gender: 78% females, 22% males Ethnicity: 71% White; 11% Black; 3% Hawaiian/Asian; 2% Native American; 4% Hispanic; 8% multiracial; 1% other Income: 26% low; 40% medium; 15% medium high; 19% high Education: 9% less than high school; 28% high school graduate; 32% some college; 30% college graduate | Type of victimization: Measured with three items addressing sexual abuse by a partner, threats of physical abuse by a partner and physical abuse by a partner Emotional support: Single item: “How often do you get the social and emotional support you need?” |
| 22. Needham and Austin ( | Age: 18–26 years at wave 3, Gender: 51% females, 49% males | Parental support: The measure combines respondents’ reports of maternal and paternal emotional support during young adulthood. Support is the sum of responses to three items for each parent: how close respondents feel to their parent, whether their parent is warm and loving, and whether they enjoy doing things with their parent. ( |
| 23. Oginni et al. ( | Age: Gender: All male sample Ethnicity: tribe: 77.45% Yoruba, 30.25% other Marital Status: Gay: 87.7% never married, 12.3% married. Heterosexual: 93.8% never married, 6.2% married | Family-related variables: included the marital status of the participants’ parents; a single question assessing the experience of neglect by parents in childhood; gender atypical behavior in childhood and the response of parents to it Resilience: assessed with the Positive Ideation subscale of the |
| 24. Pakula et al. ( | Age: 27.5% 18–29 years, 22.5% 30–39 years, 25.7% 40–49 years, 24.4% 50–59 years Gender: 50.1% females, 49.9% males Education: 9.3% less than secondary school, 17.6% secondary school, 8.7% some post-secondary education, 64.3% post-secondary education Racialized minority: 21.9% yes, 78.1% no Marital status: 37.4% single/widowed/divorced, 62.6% married/common law Residence: 17% rural; 83% urban | Perceived life stress: Single item: “Thinking about the amount of stress in your life, would you say that most days are: not at all stressful, not very stressful or a bit stressful, quite a bit stressful, or extremely stressful?” Responses were recoded into a binary variable |
| 25. Pearson and Wilkinson ( | Age: 12–18 years (Grades 7 to 12) Gender: 51.9% females, and 48.1% males Ethnicity: ~ 66% non-Latino White, 15% Black, 11% Latino, 3% Asian/Pacific Islander, 3% other | Family relationships: Items asking questions about each of the respondents’ relationship with their parents, e.g., “How close do you feel to your mother/father?”. Responses about mothers and fathers were combined by calculating the mean response to all 5 items for each parent ( Perceived parental closeness: The number of the shared activities the respondent participated in with their mother and father in the past 4 weeks: (1) went shopping, (2) played a sport, (3) attended religious services or a church-related event, (4) went to a movie, play, museum, concert, or sports event, and (5) worked on a project for school Perceived family support: Five questions that asked respondents, “How much do you feel that: (1) your parents care about you? (2) people in your family understand you? (3) you want to leave home? (4) you and your family have fun together? (5) your family pays attention to you?” ( |
| 26. Przedworski et al. ( | Age: Gender: 50% females, 50% males Ethnicity: 6.5% Black, 6% Hispanic, 14% East Asian, 10% South Asian, 63% White Relationship status: 46% not in a relationship, 37% in a non-cohabitating relationship, 3% engaged, 14% married or living together | Social stressors: Two items from the |
| 27. Riley et al. ( | Age: LGB Gender: 70.1% females, 29.9% males Ethnicity: LGB sample: 1.4% American Indian/Alaskan, 9.6% Asian, 2.7% Black/African-American, 11.0% Hispanic/Latino, 2.7% other, 1.4% Puerto Rican, 71.2% White Non-LGB sample: 0.5% American Indian/Alaskan, 11.6% Asian, 2.4% Black/African-American, 7.2% Hispanic/Latino, .5% multiracial, .4% Native Hawaiian/other, 2.8% other, 1.5% Puerto Rican, 72.1% White | Stress: Coping styles: Brief |
| 28. Robinson et al. ( | Age: 13–14 to 19–20 years Gender: 50.4% females, 39.6% males Ethnicity: Only “White British” sample was used | Victimization: Participants were asked whether they experienced specific forms of peer victimization during the previous 12 months. Parents also reported whether their child was bullied through name calling in wave 1 (no/yes). |
| 29. Rosario et al. ( | Age: 17–25 years ( Gender: 64.4% females, 35.6% males Ethnicity: 93.9% White | Attachment: Scale assessing participants’ degree of satisfaction with their relationship with their mother across nine items (e.g., general communication, affection, support, respect, shared time, interests) (Jaccard & Dittus, Parental affection: Mothers reported their satisfaction with their relationship with their child across the same nine items completed by their children on the attachment measure ( |
| 30. Safren and Heimberg ( | Age: 16–21 years, Gender: 51.9% females, 48.1% males Ethnicity: LGB sample: 48% African-American, 2% Asian, 9% Hispanic, 32% White, 9% biracial, 2% Arabic Non-LGB sample: 58% African-American, 40% White, 2% biracial Education level: LGB sample Living situation: LGB sample: 57% with parents; 16% with roommates; 11% other adult relative; 5% with grandparents; 5% with siblings; 4% on their own; 2% group or residential Non-LGB sample: 50% with parents; 10% with roommates; 11% other adult relative; 2% with grandparents; 6% with siblings; 2% in foster care; 2% group or residential | Social support: Coping: The Stress: |
| 31. Shenkman et al. ( | Age: Gender: 52.83% females, 47.17% males Relationships: 54.8% no partner Education: 61.2% had academic degree Place of residence: 88.4% lived in the city Place of birth: ~ 94% Israel, ~ 6% elsewhere SES: | Attachment avoidance was assessed on a subscale of the |
| 32. Sigurvinsdottir and Ullman ( | Age: 18–71 years, Ethnicity: Heterosexual women: 48% African-American, 36% White, 2% Asian, 7.90% other, 13.10% Hispanic, 5.9% multiracial Bisexual women: 36.8% African-American, 41.1% White, 2.1% Asian, 10.6% other, 13.1% Hispanic, 9.5% multiracial Employment: 43.40% of heterosexual women and 37.9% of bisexual women were employed Education: Heterosexual women: 33.8% college degree or higher, 43.4% some college, 13.9% high school graduate, 8.9% not completed high school Bisexual women: 26.3% college degree or higher, 37.9% some college, 23.2% high school graduate, 12.6% not completed high school Income: Heterosexual women: 38.1% ≤ $10,000, 19% $10,000–20,000; 12.1% $20,000–30,000, 30.8% £30,000 Bisexual women: 47.3% $10,000 or less; 22.6% $10,000–20,000; 9.7% $20,000–30,000; 20.5% ≥ £30,000 | Perceived social support: Frequency of social contact: 5 questions asking how often a person comes into contact with informal social network members (Donald & Ware, |
| 33. Smith et al. ( | Age: 19–25 years Gender: 59.9% females, 39.8% males, 0.3% transgender-identified Ethnicity: 69% Caucasian, 11.2% Asian American/Pacific Islander, 7.7% Latino, 5.2% Black/African-American, 6.9% other | Institutional betrayal: A modified version of the |
| 34. Spencer and Patrick ( | Age: Mean 21.34 Gender: 69.6% females, 30.4% males Ethnicity: 88.2% non-Hispanic White, 11.8% other Living arrangement: 9.5% alone, 12.4% with a domestic partner, 40.5% with non-relatives, 37.9% with relatives/other Residence: 54.6% rural, 45.4% urban Relationship status: 55.2% in a committed relationship, 45.1% other Religion: 24.2% Protestant, 28.1% Catholic, 26.1% Jewish or other, 21.2% none Employment: 85.9% college/university; 14.4% employed/other | Social support: Measured with the Personal mastery: The seven-item |
| 35. Szalacha et al. ( | Age: 25–30 years Education: 10% year 10 or less; 19.2% year 12 or equivalent; 26.6% Trade/diploma; 34.2% university diploma; postgraduate degree 10.6% Income (AUD): 2% 15,999 or less; 4.9% 16,000–36,999; 11.6% 37,000–51,999; 81.1% 52,000 or greater Relationship Status: 34.7% single; 41.6% married; 20.4% De facto; 2.7% separated/divorced Parental Status: 68% no children; 32% 1 or more children Residence: 60.5% urban; 39.5% rural | Interpersonal violence: The |
| 36. Tate and Patterson ( | Age: 24.25 – 34.67 ( Gender: 53.20% females, 46.80% males Ethnicity: 63.50% White/Caucasian, 22.8% African-American, 15.8% Hispanic, 8.8% other, 6.79% Asian descent, 3.4% American Indian Education: Ranged from 1 (eighth grade or less) to 13 (completed post-baccalaureate professional education) Income: Annual income ranged from $0 to $1000 k ( | Perceived Stress: 4-item short form of the Parent relationship quality: assessed using questions about frequency of communication, quality of contact, and parental closeness. Responses were summed creating a composite score for each parent. Scores ranged from 3 to 15, with higher scores representing more favorable overall relationship quality ( |
| 37. Teasdale and Bradley-Engen ( | Age: Average age = ~ 16 years Gender: 52% females, 48% males Race/ethnicity: 42% White, 20% African-Americans, 24% Hispanic, 14% other origins (including Asian, Native American and other) Location: 54% attended schools in suburban communities, 29% in urban communities, 17% in rural communities | Social stress: Measures of adolescent perceptions of prejudice by students (single item); witnessing/experiencing physical/sexual victimization experiences (3 items); family problems (single item about desire to run away from home); attempted/committed suicide of a close friend or family member were created Social support: Single item that asked respondents their level of agreement with the statement “You feel socially accepted.” Respondents were also asked how much they felt that parents, teachers, and friends care about them |
| 38. Ueno ( | Age: 18–23 years ( Gender: 46% females, 54% males Ethnicity: 27.2% non-Hispanic White; 23.8 African-American; 24.8% Cuban; 23.7% other Hispanic; 0.1% other race Education: 80.4% graduated from high school | Victimization: Major discrimination events: total score from a five-item inventory (Williams, Yu, & Jackson, Daily discrimination: Items measuring minor but chronic and routine discrimination experience in daily life (Williams et al., Negative life events: measured by the total score from a 33-item checklist for a period of 12 months (Avison & Turner, Chronic strains: Wheaton’s ( Family support: Measured by a scale that focused on emotional support by family (Turner & Marino, Friend support: the summed score of eight items similar to family support items ( Optimism: Mastery: Pearlin and Schooler’s mastery scale ( Self-esteem: Rosenberg’s self-esteem ( Mattering: Summed score from a five-item scale (Rosenberg & McCullough, Fun-seeking orientation: The Relationship status: Dichotomous variable (1 = currently in a marital or dating relationship; 0 = otherwise) Number of sexual relationships: the lifetime total including opposite-sex and same-sex relationships Early first sex: Dichotomous variable (1 = had sex before age 15 for men or 16 for women; 0 = otherwise) Parents’/friends’ permissiveness of drug use: Summed scores from five-item scales ( Friends’ drug use: Summed score of a three-item scale ( |
| 39. Wong et al. ( | Age: Gender: 57.6% females, 39.3% males Education: 0.5% primary or below, 5.9% secondary, 91.8% tertiary or above. 93.7% of participants were university students Dating status: 73% dating, 3% cohabitating, 6.6% broke up in past month, 16.3% broke up in past year | Dating violence: The Sexual orientation concealment: Two items assessing how many family and friends know about the respondents’ sexual orientation |
| 40. Woodford et al. ( | Age: Gender: 61.2% females, 38.8% males Ethnicity: 72% White | Interpersonal mistreatment: Constructed measures assessing personal and ambient hostility, incivility, and heterosexist harassment. Respondents asked how often they had witnessed, heard, or knew about and personally experienced each behavior on campus in the past year. Each variable was dichotomized |
Cronbach’s alphas (α) presented in this table are from the sample of the study in question