4.5 Article

Do Psychosocial Factors Mediate Sexual Minorities' Risky Sexual Behaviour? A Twin Study

期刊

HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
卷 41, 期 1, 页码 76-84

出版社

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/hea0001129

关键词

behavior genetics; psychosocial adversity; substance use; sexual minority; risky sexual behavior

资金

  1. United Kingdom Medical Research Council [MR/M021475/1, G0901245]
  2. US National Institutes of Health [AG046938]
  3. Commonwealth Scholarship, a global scholarship program - Foreign and Commonwealth Office, United Kingdom
  4. Academy of Finland [274521, 284385, 319403]
  5. Academy of Finland (AKA) [319403] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that increased lifetime sexual partners among sexual minority women is fully mediated by psychosocial adversity and substance use, while this effect is only partial (31.1%) in men. The best-fitting genetic models indicate that these relationships are not confounded by correlated genetic and environmental influences.
Objectives: Risky sexual behavior among sexual minorities (lesbian, gay, and bisexual individuals) are partly attributed to mental health and other social disparities; but this may be confounded by correlated genetic and environmental influences. As preregistered, the present study investigated indirect associations between sexual minority status and increased lifetime sexual partners through increased psychosocial adversity (depressive and anxiety symptoms, intimate partner violence, and early life adversities) and substance use (alcohol, cannabis, and other illicit drugs), confounding by correlated genetic and environmental influences, and sex differences in these relationships. Method: The sample comprised sexual minority and heterosexual twins who participated in the first and second phases of the latest wave of data collection in the U.K. population-based Twins Early Development study cohort (June 2017 through February 2019; n = 9,697 and 8,718, respectively, M-age = 22.3 +/- .92 years). Structural equation modeling was used to specify psychosocial adversity and substance use as mediators while genetic and environmental confounding was further determined by biometrical genetic analyses in which similarities in identical and nonidentical twins were compared. Results: Increased psychosocial adversity and substance use fully mediated increased lifetime sexual partners in sexual minority women while this effect was partial (31.1%) in men. The best-fitting genetic models indicated that these relationships were not confounded by correlated genetic and environmental influences. Conclusions: The relationships between sexual minority status, psychosocial adversity, substance use, and sexual health disparities appeared independent of genetic and environmental influences. Individual and systemic interventions to reduce psychosocial disadvantage and substance use can also decrease sexual health disparities among sexual minorities.

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