| Literature DB >> 36078799 |
Nancy Vargas1, Jesse L Clark2, Ivan A Estrada1, Cynthia De La Torre3, Nili Yosha4, Mario Magaña Alvarez1, Richard G Parker5, Jonathan Garcia6.
Abstract
Systemic oppression creates a context in which Latinx LGBTQ+ youth experience social isolation. Social isolation has been associated with mental and physical health disparities, including disproportionate levels of depression, substance use, self-harm, and attempted suicide. These disparities are often magnified in rural and suburban areas with fewer identity-affirming spaces. This community-engaged study reports on the formative process of developing a Latinx LGBTQ+ telenovela (soap opera) allyship intervention based on critical consciousness theory. We conducted eight focus groups with community advisory boards, which included Latinx LGBTQ+ youth (n = 12), health and social service providers serving LGBTQ+ youth (n = 10), 4-H Latinx alumni youth (n = 12), and 4-H Latinx parents (n = 8). We interviewed nine Latinx LGBTQ+ youth enrolled in a film-making workshop. As a result of our multi-stakeholder approach, we: (1) described how stakeholders reflected on and decoded intersectional isolation on the individual, community, and structural levels; and (2) identified ways that stakeholders suggested taking action by improving access to resources to address social isolation, provide culturally competent healthcare, and co-create an enabling social environment. Our study indicated the importance of tapping into core values and intersectional identities to build solidarity among and within marginalized groups to dismantle oppressive systems.Entities:
Keywords: Latinx LGBTQ+ youth; community-engaged qualitative research; critical consciousness; social isolation; solidarity
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36078799 PMCID: PMC9518045 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191711080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Methods used, participant type, and domains.
| Method | Participants | N | Main Domains |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Latinx LGBTQ+ youth, 18–24 years old | 12 | Bullying and resources to address intersectional marginalization; |
| 4-H Latinx youth, 18–24 years old | 12 | Bullying and resources to address intersectional marginalization; | |
| 4-H Latinx parents | 8 | Intersectional marginalization; Meaning of citizenship; Community building to address social isolation; | |
| Health/social service providers | 10 | Resources necessary to address social isolation; Daily institutional practices in their workplace; | |
|
| Latinx LGBTQ+ youth, 18–24 years old | 9 (of 10 agreed to be interviewed) | Connect lived experience with themes that emerged in focus groups; Reflecting on Bullying; Civic Responsibility; Community building; Mutual Identification/Solidarity |
Latinx LGBTQ+ Youth’s Perspectives on Social Isolation.
| Leads to Isolation (Total Identified = 118) | Protects from Isolation (Total Identified = 118) | |
|---|---|---|
| Attitudes | “Mental fear”; “Feeling like you’re not worthy because you don’t look in a certain way”; “Reduced knowledge of other and different communities”; “Reduced knowledge of self” | “Make out in front of them”; “Acceptance”; “Respect yourself”; “Say no to silence”; “Ignore mediocre people’s opinions”; “Being more open and vocal about these issues”; “Try to remove any bias or stigma from your mind”; “Knowing how to communicate”; “Trust in yourself and have confidence” |
| Proximal health risks | “Developing a form of eating disorder and body dysphoria”; “Suicide or self-harm and drug use because of depression and anxiety and isolation”; “If you are obese” | “Stop being depressed” |
| Peers | “Persecution, bullying around gender presentation from family and peers, being forced to present differently that you feel comfortable”; “Weak relationships to family, friends, and significant others” | “Talking to a good gay friend”; “Defend others from being attacked, treated badly, and from being badly talked about” |
| Mentors | “Out lists, openly out LGBTQ mentors, teachers, and adults”; “Adults should set the standard for acceptance, respect, and inclusion of LGBTQ+ youth” | |
| Other support system | “I felt alone when someone didn’t ask me to go to their advocacy group”; “I feel isolated when people don’t include me”; “Envy in the LGBTQ community and we don’t support each other”; “Your community, beating each other up”; “Unsafe because of all the violence that you see happening today”; “Moving a lot/readjusting socially” | “Having in-depth conversations with LGBTQ+ members to learn and grow from it”; “Checking up on people you may not even know or are friends with”; “Going to support groups” “Talking to your boss about your problems”; “Educate others about red flags, stigmas, sexuality, gender, etc.” |
| Representation | “Sexualized”; “Unique dating challenges in reference to being LGBTQ and the marriage gradient/homogamy”; “I feel socially isolated when people think I’m dumb just because I’m Mexican”; “Lack of Latinx representation”; “A lack of understanding of what being LGBTQ is like/lack of empathy” | “Increase representation in media in regards to Latinx LGBTQ+ identities”; “Latinx media with positive portrayals of LGBTQ people living happy lives”; “Show stories that subvert stereotypes or shift them from general to specific”; “Searching on Facebook for people like us”; “Going on Grindr you can find people like us” |
| Policies, laws, & practices | “Dealing with language barriers and the expectation in America for non-English speakers to accommodate English speakers”; “I feel isolated when I don’t get the same opportunities as white people”; “Lack of sexual education and gender orientation and identity, education makes youth feel isolated and leave them to search for their own educational materials” | “Opportunities for teachers, counselors, families to come out and announce themselves as allies”; “Educate Latinx immigrant families about LGBTQ+ identities and how to support”; “Involve discussion about sexual/gender identity in health and sex education curriculum” “Sexual and gender identity competency/sensitivity training for teachers/administration”; “Increase the amount of Latinx therapists that are also LGBTQ+ friendly” |
| Material and financial resources | “Homelessness after coming out or being outed”; “Location on the socioeconomic map”; “I feel used and hurt when I get underpaid. I feel like it’s because of my race and sexuality” |
Latinx 4-H youth’s Perspectives on Social Isolation.
| Leads to Isolation (Total Identified = 118) | Protects from Isolation (Total Identified = 118) | |
|---|---|---|
| Attitudes | “Open-mindedness”; “outgoing mindset”; “positive self-image”; “sense of belonging”; “feeling safe and welcome”; “educating yourself” | |
| Proximal health risks | “Depression”; “mental instability”; “being disabled”; “physical differences” | “Physically healthy”; “able body” |
| Peers | “No support from friends”; “bullying”; | |
| Representation | “Positive and supportive social media”; “spreading awareness”; “your identified group being more positively represented through media” | |
| Policies, laws, and practices | “Political parties” | “Access to information considered taboo”; “systems that are inclusive, flexible, and equitable”; “stopping all sorts of segregation or labeling of groups, us vs. them”; “empowering organizations”; “access to healthcare” |
| Material and financial resources | “Lack of telecommunication”; “transportation”; “low family income”; “poverty”; “homelessness”; “non-traditional housing situations”; “live in area with low resource accessibility” | “Access to transportation and secure housing” |
1 Note: whenever an attribute was described as a way of “being” (e.g., being Latino, being a minority, being homeless, being undocumented, being disabled), we coded it at individual level. When the issue was framed in terms of policies or laws (immigration laws, legal system) or as a system level issue about access, inequity, or non-inclusive space it was coded at the institutional or resource/structural level. This distinction is critical because it highlights the importance of shifting the framing of social isolation as a problem where LGBTQ+ youth have personal characteristics and attributes that put them at risk to an understanding of contextual, institutional and system factors that place these youth in vulnerable circumstances. It is important to highlight that youth who listed “being undocumented” did not identify the need to change laws that place undocumented youth in situations of vulnerability. Analytically, this indicates that critical consciousness is necessary to frame social isolation as the result of contextual factors and institutional policies rather than as an issue of personal responsibility. In addition, there is another opportunity to generate critical consciousness in the fact that race and ethnicity were listed as traits that constitute barriers to social isolation. If instead youth were able to generate pride from those identities, they would perceive them as facilitators and sources of solidarity.
Latinx 4-H Parents’ Perspectives on Social Isolation.
| Leads to Isolation (Total Identified = 93) | Protects from Isolation (Total Identified = 48) | |
|---|---|---|
| Attitudes, | “Frustration”; “low self-esteem”; “insecurity about yourself”; “feeling inferior because of language race, color, sexual preference”; “feeling guilt”; “loneliness” | “Express your identity without fear and with freedom” |
| Proximal health risks | “Depression”; “having a disability;” | |
| Peers/mentors | “Rejection from family, school friends, coworkers, church, and society, teasing, bullying and violence due to race, color, or sexual preference or tendency” | “Good friends that encourage them to succeed” |
| Other support system | “Suffering sexual abuse which leads them to decide not to have relations with the opposite sex and not have trust to tell someone about it”; “Fear of speaking and getting close to other social groups because of not having a legal situation in a foreign country”; “Live far away from their community and family so they do not find out about their sexual preference” | “Teaching our children to share and help in programs to become friends with LGBT groups although they do not consider themselves to be LGBT”; “Read and learn about diseases that we imagine are contagious and teach our children to respect others and to be respected”; “supportive school counselors” |
| Representation | “Culture of tolerance in the media” | |
| Policies, laws, and practices | “Discrimination for different color of skin” | “Workshops in schools to train children, families, and teachers to ‘accept’ and ‘not to judge’ LGBTQ youth”; “Support from representatives and congress people that support expressions of respect for tolerance toward those who are and think differently”; “That law enforcement does not repress them and act with intolerance for their identities” |
| Material and financial resources | “Poverty”; “The migratory situation of their parents can cause insecurity” |
Health and Social Service Providers’ Perspectives on Social Isolation.
| Leads to Isolation (Total Identified = 96) | Protects from Isolation (Total Identified = 85) | |
|---|---|---|
| Attitudes | “Punishing/snapping at people who make honest mistakes”; “Shame with weaknesses” | “Being careful not to let your personal trauma override others’ joy”; “Open mind to view and affirm others experiences” |
| Proximal health risks | “Disability;” “Drug and alcohol abuse;” “HIV/AIDS status;” “Unaddressed depression;” | |
| Peers | Dating, coming out, asking out, lateral oppression, my bisexual partner is transphobic”; “’The struggle’ I face—my peers don’t understand how stressed I am, they insist ‘we all have stress’” | “Create/host peer support groups” |
| Mentors | “Having mentors that look like you”; “Lived experience to make connections” | |
| Other support system | “Lack of affinity groups/social supports”; “Prioritizing ‘not rocking the boat’ over actual support”; “Forcing youth to come out”; “Safety concerns with online dating”; “Suffering abuse (sexual, physical, emotional)” | “Stopping to take the time to actually interact with those we serve”; “Chosen family, acceptance, no judgement or questions only love and support” “Community outreach to the Latine community, creating relationships for the youth to come to us”; “Resources for youth’s support system (adults in their lives)”; “Spiritual support” |
| Representation | “Celebrate their culture”; “Music/poetry/art that represents the population”; “Books, websites that reinforce identity”; “Put up visible signs of support (safe space, rainbow flags, photos of diverse couples/families)”; “Use affirming language”; “Use our own pronouns more often during introductions”; “Online multi-lingual targeted adverts for youth resources”; “Latinx centered community websites” | |
| Policies, laws, and practices | “Resigning ourselves to high turnover staff not investing”; “Seeing staff/volunteers’ good intentions and providing no further training”; “Tokenization”; “Electronic medical records system doesn’t always have clear SOGI [sexual orientation and gender identity] info—preferred names only seen on some screens”; “Applying for anything in the system and needing to provide ID”; | “More Latinx folks in positions of power, representation matters”; “Including Latinx queer and trans people in regular programming”; “Use open ended questions (re: SOGI, dating, etc.)”; “Hire participants into supportive roles”; “Bilingual staff and volunteers”; “Educating benefit specialists how documentation requests can be triggering”; “Explain what IDs are used for and that they will never disclose documentation status to anyone” |
| Material and financial resources | “Lower incomes because of discrimination”; “Lack of services that affirm all of their identities”; “Homelessness” |