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. 2023 Nov-Dec;10(8):629-638.
doi: 10.1089/lgbt.2022.0212. Epub 2023 Jul 19.

The Relationship Between Intersectional Oppression and Affirmation and Latino Sexual Minority Men's Mental Health

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The Relationship Between Intersectional Oppression and Affirmation and Latino Sexual Minority Men's Mental Health

Daniel Mayo et al. LGBT Health. 2023 Nov-Dec.

Abstract

Purpose: Latino sexual minority men (LSMM) may experience oppression based on their ethnicity, sexual orientation, and migratory status, yet scientific literature is only beginning to explore the intersection of these experiences. This study examined mental health (MH) in relation to LSMM's experiences of intersectional oppression and affirmation. Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of baseline data from a cohort study examining LSMM's (n = 290) health care engagement in Miami, FL, from February to September 2020. Latent class analysis (LCA) identified classes based on self-reported multiple identity discrimination (e.g., race, ethnicity, and skin color), sexual orientation stigma/affirmation, and migration-related stress. Logistic and linear regressions examined associations between class membership and anxious, depressive, post-traumatic stress, somatic symptoms, and overall MH burden. Results: The LCA revealed a three-class solution: (1) affirmed LSMM (73.8%), (2) LSMM with intersectional oppression (21.7%), and (3) LSMM with immigration stress (4.5%). The three classes varied in terms of multiple identity discrimination, sexual orientation stigma/affirmation, and migration-related stress. Compared with Class 1, Class 2 had greater conditional probabilities of reporting clinically significant depressive (p = 0.033) and post-traumatic stress symptoms (p = 0.031), and at least one MH concern (p = 0.018). Greater depressive symptoms (p = 0.007), post-traumatic stress symptoms (p = 0.049), somatic symptoms (p = 0.024), and clinically significant MH concerns (p = 0.018) were found among Class 2 than among Class 1. Conclusion: Findings identified three groups of LSMM based on their experiences of intersectional oppression and affirmation. Discrimination at the intersection of multiple identities, sexual orientation stigma/affirmation, and migration-related stress were associated with LSMM's MH outcomes, particularly among immigrants.

Keywords: Latino; intersectionality; mental health; minority stress; oppression; sexual minority men.

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Conflict of interest statement

S.A.S. receives royalties from Oxford University Press, Guilford Publications, and Springer/Humana press for books on cognitive behavioral therapy. The authors have no other conflicts of interest to disclose.

Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
Patterns of oppression and affirmation among 290 LSMM across 3 latent classes. Class 1: LSMM with low intersectional oppression and high affirmation; Class 2: LSMM with high intersectional oppression and low affirmation; Class 3: LSMM with high immigration stress and moderate sexual orientation-related oppression. LSMM, Latino sexual minority men.

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