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. 2014 Dec;37(8):1293-302.
doi: 10.1016/j.adolescence.2014.09.006. Epub 2014 Oct 4.

How a romantic relationship can protect same-sex attracted youth and young adults from the impact of expected rejection

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How a romantic relationship can protect same-sex attracted youth and young adults from the impact of expected rejection

Laura Baams et al. J Adolesc. 2014 Dec.

Abstract

Same-sex attracted youth's well-being is jeopardized by components of minority stress, but this stress can be buffered by social support. What is unknown is whether a romantic relationship can also serve as a buffer. With an online survey we examined the link between components of minority stress, psychological well-being, and its moderated relation by romantic relationship status among 309 Dutch same-sex attracted youth (16-24 years old, 52.9% female). The results showed that minority stress components (internalized homophobia, expected rejection, and meta-stereotyping) were negatively related to psychological well-being. Moderation analyses revealed that only the impact of "expected rejection" on psychological well-being was buffered for those involved in a romantic relationship. This shows the particular functional link of romantic support in rejection contexts.

Keywords: Adolescents and young adults; LGB; Minority stress; Romantic relationship; Same-sex attracted.

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