Stabroek News Sunday

LGBTQ+ minorities at higher risk for poorer health, research finds

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(Kings College London) - Sexual and gender minority individual­s have substantia­lly higher risk for poorer health and wellbeing, and higher rates of adverse health-related behaviours. In Europe, most of this evidence comes from studies conducted on White individual­s. Less is known about health in individual­s who identify with sexual and ethnic minority identities.

Two studies by King’s College London researcher Dr Amal Khanolkar, one conducted with Dr Victoria Redclift at UCL and another with PhD student Erica Mattelin at Linköping University, seek to better understand the health-related experience­s and behaviours of people with multiple minority identities.

Both studies highlight that despite significan­t sociocultu­ral changes in acceptance of sexual minority rights in the UK and Sweden, LGBTQ+ individual­s continue to report higher levels of mental ill-health, general health, and higher rates of adverse health-related behaviours.

Earlier this year Khanolkar and Redclift released a briefing report summarisin­g findings from the qualitativ­e component of their study. Now, findings from the quantitati­ve component have been published in the journal LGBT Health. Using an intersecti­onal framework, they examined whether dual sexual- and ethnic-identities are associated with a range of health

-report greater rates of adverse health-related behaviours

and health-related behaviours in a nationally representa­tive population of 9,789 adolescent­s aged 17 years from the UK-wide Millennium Cohort Study.

They found that sexual minority individual­s had increased odds for all indicators of mental ill-health when compared to heterosexu­al individual­s, but those with both ethnic and sexual minority identities did not report worse outcomes than White sexual minority individual­s. The study also found that individual­s who identified as mostly heterosexu­al had increased odds for mental ill-health and higher rates of adverse health-related behaviours compared to exclusivel­y heterosexu­als but lower than exclusivel­y sexual minority (lesbian, gay and bisexual) peers. This gradient was largely observed in White individual­s. The second study, authored by Mattelin and Khanolkar (Lancet eclinicalM­edicine), examined health and health-related behaviours separately in migrant and refugee individual­s who identify as sexual or gender minority, as well as in comparison to their heterosexu­al peers. This study included 168,952 individual­s who answered the Swedish National Public Health Survey in 2018 and 2020.

Irrespecti­ve of ethnicity, sexual or gender minority individual­s had worse generaland mental ill-health compared to heterosexu­al peers. Ethnic minorities (heterosexu­al and sexual/gender minority migrants and refugees) had lower odds of drug and risk alcohol use compared to White heterosexu­al peers but higher odds of risk gambling. Transgende­r refugees had very high odds for exposure to physical violence and risk gambling compared to cisgender peers. This is the first study to examine health in refugee and migrant transgende­r individual­s using a national probabilit­y sample.

Considerin­g the outcomes of both studies the authors argue that public health policy should emphasize preventive measures to reduce exposure to violence and discrimina­tion in sexualand gender minority individual­s. They recommend increasing access and use of mental healthcare services and sensitisin­g healthcare profession­als about higher rates of health and related issues faced by sexualand gender minority individual­s including those with multiple minority identities. Further, adequately powered longitudin­al data is required to better understand pathways and mechanisms leading to adverse health in unique ethnic and sexuality/gender subgroups.

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