4.6 Article

Profiles and Predictors of Dating Violence Among Sexual and Gender Minority Adolescents

期刊

JOURNAL OF ADOLESCENT HEALTH
卷 68, 期 6, 页码 1155-1161

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2020.08.034

关键词

Sexual minority; Gender minority; Dating violence; Discrimination; Victimization; Childhood maltreatment

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [P2CHD042849, F32AA023138]
  2. Dutch Research Council (NWO) in the NWO Talent Programme

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study aimed to examine the vulnerability of sexual and gender minority adolescents to dating violence, finding that they were more likely to be affected by dating violence, but social stressors may account for these differences.
Purpose: Sexual and gender minority adolescents report higher levels of dating violence compared with their heterosexual and cisgender peers. The objectives of the present study were to (1) identify latent profiles of dating violence; (2) examine if sexual and gender minority adolescents were particularly vulnerable to certain profiles of dating violence; and (3) explore how experiences of peer victimization, discrimination, and parental maltreatment explained this greater vulnerability. Methods: High school students in Grades 9 and 11 from the 2016 Minnesota Student Survey (N = 87,532; mean age = 15.29 years, SD = 1.23) were asked about their sexual and gender identities, their gender nonconformity, their experiences of verbal, physical, and sexual dating violence victimization and perpetration, as well their experiences of childhood maltreatment, peer victimization, and gender-based and sexual minority status-based discrimination. Results: Multinomial logistic regression analysis in a three-step latent class analysis procedure suggested five profiles of dating violence victimization and perpetration across the entire sample. Sexual and gender minority adolescents were generally more likely to be in classes high in dating violence victimization, perpetration, or both, compared with their heterosexual and cisgender peers. Gender nonconformity was also associated with greater risk for being in high dating violence classes. These differences, however, were generally nonsignificant when the social stressors of childhood maltreatment, peer victimization, and experiences of discrimination were accounted for. Conclusions: Although findings suggested greater vulnerability for dating violence among sexual and gender minority adolescents, they underscore the importance of how minority stressors generally accounted for this greater vulnerability for dating violence. (C) 2020 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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