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2.
Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci ; 29: e179, 2020 Nov 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33153509

ABSTRACT

AIMS: Compared to their heterosexual peers, youth who identify as lesbian, gay or bisexual (LGB) tend to suffer higher rates of peer victimisation from bullying. However, studies of LGB adolescents' participation as bullies are scarce. We aimed to examine the possible association of sexual minority identity and the heightened risk of not only being bullied but bullying others as well. We also explored the effect of one's sexual identity on their involvement in bullying through the mediation of coping strategies and mood states. METHODS: A total of 12 218 students were recruited from 18 secondary schools in China. The demographic information, positive and negative coping strategies, mood state (anxiety, depression and hypomania) and information related to bullying and being bullied were collected. Multinomial regression was used to assess the heightened risk of sexual minority groups in comparison to their heterosexual adolescents' counterparts. A structural equation model (SEM) was used to test the mediating role of coping strategy and mood state between one's sex, sexual identity and bullying experience. RESULTS: Two trends could be observed: (1) LGB groups reported heightened risks of being bullied and bullying others at school than heterosexual peers. However, being a sexual-undeveloped girl seemed to have a protective effect on bullying-related problems. (2) Birth-assigned males were more likely to be bullied as well as bullying others at school when compared to birth-assigned females. SEM analysis revealed that being a sexual minority was directly associated with a higher frequency of being bullied (B = 0.16, 95% CI [0.10, 0.22], p < 0.001) but not bullying others (B = 0.02, 95% CI [-0.02, 0.06], p = 0.398) when compared to the heterosexual group. Negative coping, hypomania, anxiety and depression were associated with a higher frequency of being bullied, while positive coping was associated with a lower frequency of being bullied. Moreover, negative coping, hypomania and depression were associated with a higher frequency of bullying others, while positive coping was associated with a reduced likelihood of bullying others. In addition, being bullied and bullying others were significantly correlated in the SEM model. CONCLUSIONS: This novel research investigated the dynamic nature of the interaction between victim and bullying of LGB school adolescents in China, with a specific exploration of the psychological mechanism behind the pattern of being bullied and bullying others. School-level interventions aimed at teaching positive coping strategies to lower psychological distress are recommended to support sexual minority students.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Bullying/psychology , Crime Victims/psychology , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology , Students/psychology , Adolescent , Adolescent Behavior/psychology , Anxiety/epidemiology , Anxiety/psychology , Bisexuality/ethnology , Bisexuality/psychology , Bullying/statistics & numerical data , China/epidemiology , Crime Victims/statistics & numerical data , Depression/epidemiology , Depression/psychology , Female , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Homosexuality, Male/ethnology , Homosexuality, Male/psychology , Humans , Male , Peer Group , Prevalence , Schools
3.
J Lesbian Stud ; 24(3): 240-254, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31621513

ABSTRACT

Through an ethnographic study of a party for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT)+ women, this article examines contemporary sociospatial practices LGBT+/queer women utilize to build community during the festas juninas in Natal, Rio Grande do Norte. While these popular festivals associated with the rural space of the Brazilian Northeast may seem to replicate colonial, religious, and traditional structures, they have also have become fertile ground for queer contestations of heteronormative structures in the Northeast. I argue that LGBT + women in Natal engage in a cultural and spatial anthropophagy: devouring, absorbing, and hybridizing different cultural influences and types of space to create new community formations. By consuming many of the symbols, images, and cultural productions of the festas juninas they actively construct a hybrid anthropophagic space for LGBT + women and challenge moralistic values associated with rural Northeastern culture.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Female , Anthropology, Cultural , Brazil , Cultural Characteristics , Female , Feminism , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Humans , Residence Characteristics , Women
4.
J Lesbian Stud ; 24(2): 77-93, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31258009

ABSTRACT

Mainstream research on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender Los Angeles (LA) has ignored Latinx queer communities until recently, and lesbian Latinas, particularly those who are migrants and/or refugees, have been especially marginalized. Building on scholarship and creative work by Chicana, Latina, women of color feminist, queer of color, and queer migration activists and scholars, this essay contributes to research on Mexican, Central American, and Latina lesbians in LA. In her research on sexually non-conforming Latinas, Katie L. Acosta argues that to better understand Latinas' sexualities in all their complexities, future scholarly work should address the pleasures and desires of Latina lesbians, as well as the quality and stability of the relationships they nurture in the borderlands. Building on queer migration research and using what Nan Alamilla Boyd and Horacio Roque Ramírez call "queer oral history," this article focuses on two everyday lesbians in LA whose stories add depth to our understandings of LA queer history and to the lives of queer migrants in the city. The narratives of Luna and Dulce, migrant lesbians from Mexico and Guatemala, respectively, provide a context for better understanding diverse experiences of migrant Latina lesbians in LA. Situating their lives within ongoing research on lesbian Latinas, this essay focuses on three themes-migration, leisure spaces, and family-to explore how these inform the women's everyday choices and shape their practices of freedom. Their stories and perspectives have been instrumental in enabling me to develop an interdisciplinary theoretical framework that I call "finding sequins in the rubble," through which we can recognize and understand how queer Latinx communities engage in processes of queer-world making and radical possibility through everyday acts of resilience and self-care in the midst of familial, institutional, and state violence.


Subject(s)
Hispanic or Latino , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Transients and Migrants , Adult , Female , Guatemala/ethnology , Humans , Los Angeles/ethnology , Mexico/ethnology
5.
J Lesbian Stud ; 24(4): 332-347, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31633452

ABSTRACT

Using ethnographic data from a study in Honduras, this article looks at how my research was shaped by shifting perspectives on my gender, especially from the perspectives of the participants within the unique context, Gender identity was not always a personal conception, as is common in contemporary U.S. queer culture; instead, gender was co-constructed and dependent on the language used (Spanish or English), whether I had my children with me in the field, and visible access to material resources (a motorcycle, for example). This article is significant to the fields of qualitative and educational research methods, queer and gender studies, and transnational feminism.


Subject(s)
Feminism , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Ethics , Female , Gender Identity , Humans , Male , Psychological Theory
6.
Aust N Z J Public Health ; 43(3): 281-287, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30548950

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study revisits disparities in health and wellbeing by sexual identity in Australia, identifying which domains demand priority policy intervention, documenting differences between gay/lesbian vs. bisexual populations, and examining change over time in the relative health and wellbeing of sexual minorities. METHOD: I fitted multivariable ordinary least squares and random-effect panel regression models on 20 outcomes to compare the health and wellbeing of heterosexual, gay/lesbian and bisexual people, using 2012/2016 data from a national probability sample - the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey. RESULTS: I found strong associations between sexual minority identities and most health and wellbeing outcomes. These were comparatively larger for: role-emotional health, mental health and general health; bisexual compared to gay/lesbian people; and minority women compared to minority men. I found no change over time in the relative health and wellbeing outcomes of gay/lesbian people, but evidence of worsening circumstances among bisexual people. CONCLUSION: There are important disparities in the health and wellbeing profiles of different sexual minority populations in Australia, based on sex (male vs. female), sexual identity (gay/lesbian vs. bisexual), and observation time (2012 vs. 2016). Implications for public health: Sexual identity remains an important marker of risk for health and wellbeing outcomes within Australia, underscoring the importance of fully integrating sexual identity in health policy and practice.


Subject(s)
Bisexuality/psychology , Health Status Disparities , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Homosexuality, Male/psychology , Adult , Australia , Bisexuality/ethnology , Female , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Homosexuality, Male/ethnology , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Mental Health , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies
7.
Br J Sociol ; 69(2): 323-351, 2018 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28688168

ABSTRACT

This article draws upon responses given by volunteers who work in the Beijing LGBT Centre regarding perceptions of sexual identity, and how Chinese culture affects hidden or open sexual identities of Chinese lesbian and gay people in this region. The insights gained from those working carefully to create social change offers an important and original contribution to the field of gay and lesbian studies in China. The findings indicate the volunteers at the Beijing LGBT Centre are frustrated by the lack of acceptance of non-heterosexual relationships among Chinese culture and society, and by the disregard of lesbian gay and bisexual (LGB) people by the Chinese government. The findings also illustrate stigmatization of homosexuality in China is enacted in structural terms (such as in the lack of policy, legislation and positive endorsement by governmental and socio-political organizations), public expression (such as negative attitudes, beliefs or reactions towards LGB people) and internalized repression (through fear of stigmatization, and subsequent abuse due to negative societal attitudes and discrimination). Influenced by the Chinese tradition of conforming to group values, the findings from this study show that volunteers at the Beijing LGBT Centre believe LGB people in China are generally hesitant to disclose their sexual identities, and reject the idea that there had been a collective shift in Chinese culture regarding increased acceptance of LGB people. It also finds volunteers at the LGBT Centre in Beijing blame Chinese culture for its lack of acceptance of non-heterosexual relationships, and state stigmatization of homosexuality in China is due to deep-rooted cultural homophobia.


Subject(s)
Attitude , Homosexuality, Female , Homosexuality, Male , Prejudice , Social Stigma , Beijing , Bisexuality/ethnology , Bisexuality/psychology , Female , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Homosexuality, Male/ethnology , Homosexuality, Male/psychology , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Prejudice/ethnology , Prejudice/psychology , Social Identification
8.
Cult Health Sex ; 20(1): 28-39, 2018 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28508706

ABSTRACT

This study explores the complex interaction between ethnicity, gender and [homo]sexuality and how this creates a framework of stigma that compels some British Pakistani lesbians to remain within the closet. The 'closet' here is a metaphor that describes the concealment of one's homosexual identity and the outward 'performance' of heterosexuality. British Pakistani lesbians precariously inhabit a sociocultural environment that constrains the expression of female sexuality. Women who oppose and contravene heteronormative values and ideals unsettle comfortable assumptions of heterosexuality. Being in the closet keeps lesbians isolated and marginalised from their ethnic and cultural communities. Drawing on findings from online interviews with seven British Pakistani lesbians, the study explores what shapes their decision to stay within the closet and how doing so influences their self-perception. Being in the closet is a source of considerable conflict, strain and anxiety, which has an impact on the women's readiness to embrace individual choice, freedom and desire. Findings orientate the reader toward an understanding of the multiple, interlocking systems of social relations within which British Pakistani lesbians are marginalised as the result of their gender, sexuality and ethnic identity.


Subject(s)
Culture , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Religion and Sex , Self Concept , Adolescent , Adult , Disclosure , Female , Grounded Theory , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Pakistan/ethnology , Social Stigma , United Kingdom
9.
HIV Med ; 18(9): 667-676, 2017 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28378387

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Here we examined the hypothesis that some stable HIV-infected partnerships can be found in cohort studies, as the patients frequently attend the clinic visits together. METHODS: Using mathematical approximations and shuffling to derive the probabilities of sharing a given number of visits by chance, we identified and validated couples that may represent either transmission pairs or serosorting couples in a stable relationship. RESULTS: We analysed 434 432 visits for 16 139 Swiss HIV Cohort Study patients from 1990 to 2014. For 89 pairs, the number of shared visits exceeded the number expected. Of these, 33 transmission pairs were confirmed on the basis of three criteria: an extensive phylogenetic tree, a self-reported steady HIV-positive partnership, and risk group affiliation. Notably, 12 of the validated transmission pairs (36%; 12 of 33) were of a mixed ethnicity with a large median age gap [17.5 years; interquartile range (IQR) 11.8-22 years] and these patients harboured HIV-1 of predominantly non-B subtypes, suggesting imported infections. CONCLUSIONS: In the context of the surge in research interest in HIV transmission pairs, this simple method widens the horizons of research on within-pair quasi-species exchange, transmitted drug resistance and viral recombination at the biological level and targeted prevention at the public health level.


Subject(s)
Data Mining/methods , HIV Infections/drug therapy , HIV-1/genetics , Sexual Partners/classification , Ambulatory Care/statistics & numerical data , Cohort Studies , Female , HIV Infections/ethnology , HIV Infections/virology , HIV-1/classification , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Homosexuality, Male/ethnology , Humans , Male , Phylogeny , Self Report , Standard of Care
10.
LGBT Health ; 4(1): 4-10, 2017 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28113005

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: For Black women who have sex with women (BWSW), obtaining routine healthcare can be obstructed by a number of psychosocial barriers, including experiences of stigma, related to both sexual orientation and race, and medical mistrust, both race-based and global. Previous research demonstrates that sexual orientation and race-based stigma, as well as global and race-based medical mistrust, each have a negative impact on health outcomes and engagement in care (EIC) independently. This study addresses gaps in the literature by examining the impact of these psychosocial barriers and their interactions among BWSW, an understudied population. METHODS: Participants (256 BWSW) were surveyed at a Black Gay Pride festival. Separate generalized linear models assessed the independent and multiplicative effects of participants' self-reported sexual orientation stigma, race-based stigma, race-based medical mistrust, and global medical mistrust related to their engagement in routine physical exams and blood pressure screenings. RESULTS: Prevalence rates of both stigma measures were low, but prevalence rates of global and race-based medical mistrust were high. The results show that experiencing sexual orientation stigma or having race-based medical mistrust predicts significantly lower EIC. Furthermore, the frequencies of obtaining recent physical examinations and blood pressure screenings were significantly related to three- and two-way interactions between stigma and medical mistrust, respectively. CONCLUSION: There is an urgent need to address the intersectionality of these psychosocial barriers in an effort to increase BWSW's EIC.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/psychology , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology , Social Stigma , Trust/psychology , Adult , Female , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice/ethnology , Humans , Linear Models , Physical Examination/psychology , Self Report
11.
J Homosex ; 64(5): 654-670, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27268594

ABSTRACT

Young people who discover their sexual attraction to people of the same sex often go through a period of ambivalence or distress, especially when they grow up in an environment that condemns homosexuality. The Dutch sociopolitical context makes the expression of same-sex desires among those with non-Dutch roots even more complicated and risky, as prevailing schemes of interpretation render the two identities incompatible. This study explores the expressions of same-sex desires and identities as well as the different forms of agency of bicultural gay youth. In-depth interviews with 14 young adults reveal how young people negotiate bicultural identities in Dutch society that brings to the fore complexities in managing diverse sexual identities and strong religious and cultural affiliations in tandem. Their strategies have the effect of questioning dominant discourses and transcend the oppositional dichotomy between sexual and ethnic forms of sociocultural otherness.


Subject(s)
Gender Identity , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology , Adult , Cultural Characteristics , Denmark , Ethnicity/psychology , Female , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Homosexuality, Male/ethnology , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Religion , Young Adult
12.
J Lesbian Stud ; 21(2): 204-218, 2017 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27593516

ABSTRACT

Much has been written on the successful lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex movement in South Africa, and the resulting institutionalization of sexual minority rights. Comparatively less has been written about the forms of activism undertaken specifically by Black lesbians that are not oriented toward legal change. In this article, I assert the need to examine public demonstrations of mourning as an act of Black lesbian resistance to violence in South Africa. Based on in-depth interviews with members of Free Gender, a Black lesbian organization, I argue that members' conceptualizations of mourning as providing community support force a reconsideration of what it means to be human. In order to grasp the decolonial potential of Free Gender's activism, I draw on Sylvia Wynter's argument that a singular Western bourgeois conception of human has come to dominate globally.


Subject(s)
Grief , Homophobia/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Politics , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology , Violence/ethnology , Adult , Female , Humans , Qualitative Research , South Africa/ethnology
13.
J Lesbian Stud ; 21(2): 133-150, 2017 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27768541

ABSTRACT

Understandings of African lesbian sexualities have been affected by silence, repression, and uncertainty. The subject of lesbian experiences and sexualities in Africa constitutes an opportunity for feminist scholars to address the transnational politics of knowledge production about African lesbians' lives and the contours of lesbian art, activism, and relationships in African nations. This article contextualizes the state of research on African lesbian sexualities and introduces the special issue.


Subject(s)
Homophobia/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Africa/ethnology , Female , Feminism , Humans , Social Sciences
14.
J Lesbian Stud ; 21(4): 453-464, 2017 Oct 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27633553

ABSTRACT

Autoethnographic self-reflection is a strategy for teachers to examine their pedagogies and academic workspaces at large. In the process of moving from teaching composition at an institution in the Midwest to one in Southeast Queens, this author describes significant shifts in how she perceived herself as a Brown queer pedagogue. In order to analyze these shifts in ways that advance her pedagogical praxis, the author evaluates the research tools available to her and offers a hybrid method for reflection, which she calls "vulnerable automythnography." Applying this reflective practice to a specific classroom occurrence, the author considers some ways in which vulnerable automythnography offers underrepresented teachers and students an opportunity to examine the aggressions Black, Brown, and queer bodies face in academic settings. She posits this method of reflection as a tool for savvy resistance and intervention.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/psychology , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology , Black or African American/ethnology , Faculty/psychology , Female , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Humans , Self Concept
15.
Women Health ; 57(8): 962-975, 2017 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27633929

ABSTRACT

This article presents the qualitative findings of a mixed-methods study that explored factors influencing lesbians' breast health-care behavior and intentions. A total of 37 semi-structured face-to-face interviews were conducted among women who self-identified as lesbians or women who partnered with the same gender who were aged 20 years or above in four areas of Taiwan (North, Central, South, and East Taiwan) between August 2012 and October 2012. Interviews were audio recorded with participants' consent. The interviews were analyzed using constant comparative analysis with Nvivo audio-coding support. Four themes were identified to be strongly associated with the lesbians' breast health-care behavior and their intentions, namely, gender identity, gender role expression, partners' support, and concerns about health-care providers' reactions. Important barriers to the women's breast health-care behavior and intentions were masculine identity ("T-identity" in Taiwan), masculine appearance, concerns about health-care providers' lack of knowledge of multiple gender diversity, and their attitudes toward lesbians. Conversely, their partners' support was a factor facilitating the women's breast health-care behavior and intentions, particularly for the T-identity lesbians. These findings suggest the significance of and need for culturally competent care and are important for improving Taiwanese lesbians' breast health.


Subject(s)
Breast Self-Examination , Health Behavior/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female , Intention , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Adult , Female , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Middle Aged , Qualitative Research , Surveys and Questionnaires , Taiwan , Women's Health
16.
J Lesbian Stud ; 21(2): 186-203, 2017 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27604054

ABSTRACT

Tracing a series of intertextually linked short stories from the 1990s to the present by women writers from Nigeria and its diaspora-Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Unoma Azuah, Chinelo Okparanta, and Lola Shoneyin-I suggest that although the figure of the African lesbian appears "new" in the context of heightened contemporary attention to the issue of homosexuality, this figure has a literary history. Ghanaian Ama Ata Aidoo's novel Our Sister Killjoy: Or, Reflections From A Black-Eyed Squint (1977) inaugurates this formation, in which the imagining of female same-sex desire is entangled with articulating the experience of migration under the shadow of imperial histories. In these short stories, the emphasis on the difficulties of love in puritanical times and transnational places produces the figure of the African lesbian as a symbol of appealingly human vulnerability, resilience, and complexity.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Literature, Modern , Adult , Africa/ethnology , Female , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Homosexuality, Female/history , Humans
17.
J Lesbian Stud ; 21(2): 151-168, 2017 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27636351

ABSTRACT

This article examines the discursive construction of female same-sex sexual identities in Nairobi. We identify the discursive forces of "choice," devaluation, and invisibility as influential within Kenyan media representations of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex citizens. Using creative focus groups and participant observation, we demonstrate how same-sex attracted women in Nairobi resist and rearticulate these discursive forces to assert their identity and agency as individuals and as a queer community.


Subject(s)
Choice Behavior , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Social Behavior , Social Values , Adult , Female , Humans , Kenya/ethnology , Narration , Qualitative Research
18.
J Lesbian Stud ; 21(2): 169-185, 2017 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27611436

ABSTRACT

Drawing on lessons from the experiences of women who exchange same-sex erotic energies, this article suggests that advocates of same-sex human rights should take into account epistemic erasures colonized people experience when activism and policies regarding sexual freedom ignore various linguistic and community structures that create spaces for diverse ways of knowing and being. Since the late 1990s, the discourse on homosexuality in Uganda has motivated important debates concerning human values of sovereignty, rights, and family, and has expanded freedoms of sexual expression while at the same time conditioning these freedoms to be experienced in colonial ways of self-knowledge. The language that frames these debates continues to locate human rights for Ugandans who exchange same-sex erotic energies outside the locales-family, history, and language-of intelligible episteme for them. To make sense of this claim, I draw "exchange of same-sex erotic energies" from a saying in Rukiga language spoken by Bakiga in southwestern Uganda, okugira omukago mukika nikwokunywaana oruganda, to think about family and community in which same-sex erotic energies are lived and experienced. This article attempts to redirect attention from colonial constructions of homosexuality to indigenous and decolonial perspectives in relation to women in Uganda who exchange same-sex erotic energies in their struggle for meaning in community. I argue for pedagogies and epistemologies of place and memory in the struggle for human rights and sexual rights.


Subject(s)
Colonialism , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Human Rights , Adult , Female , Humans , Uganda/ethnology
19.
J Lesbian Stud ; 21(2): 219-241, 2017 Apr 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27611999

ABSTRACT

This article explores the politics of representing Black queer and trans subjectivities in the recent documentary film and photography of South African lesbian visual activist Zanele Muholi. While Muholi's work has been most often been positioned as an artistic response to the hate-crimes and violence perpetuated against Black lesbians in South African townships, most notably acts of sexual violence known increasingly as corrective rape, I argue that Muholi's documentary texts trouble the spatial, gendered, and highly racialized articulations that make up an increasingly global corrective rape discourse. The article considers how her visual texts foreground and (re)visualize Black queer and trans gender experiences that relocate, challenge, collaborate with, and at times, perform, masculinity as means to subvert heterosexist and racist constructions of township space and the Black gendered body.


Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Masculinity , Motion Pictures , Sexual and Gender Minorities , Violence/ethnology , Adult , Female , Humans , South Africa/ethnology , Transgender Persons
20.
Fertil Steril ; 106(5): 1221-1229, 2016 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27473352

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess the perceived importance of childbearing and attitudes toward assisted reproductive technology (ART) among Chinese lesbians and the impact on their psychological well-being. DESIGN: Survey-based study using a 39-item questionnaire. SETTING: Not applicable. PATIENT(S): A total of 438 Chinese lesbians between the ages of 18 and 35 years. INTERVENTION(S): None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Perceived importance of childbearing; attitudes toward ART; and levels of anxiety and depression. RESULT(S): Perceived importance of childbearing to Chinese lesbians was negatively associated with age (r = -0.23), relationship length (r = -0.18), and full-time employment (F = 4.29). Compared to heterosexual childless women, Chinese lesbians thought childbearing was significantly less important (3.30 vs. 6.00 on a 1-10 scale, t = 14.6). Most lesbian respondents (92%) supported legalizing same-sex couples' access to ART, although less than half (41%) wanted to use it themselves to have children. Among lesbians who thought childbearing was important to their parents or their partners, not wanting ART was associated with higher anxiety levels. CONCLUSION(S): This is the first quantitative study of childbearing attitudes of lesbians in Asia. The data suggest that Chinese lesbians in the study who perceived childbearing as important to their parents or to their partners but did not want to seek ART reported higher anxiety levels. This study helps raise health care professionals' awareness of Chinese lesbians' attitudes toward childbearing as well as calls for a better delivery system of fertility and mental health services to address the psychological burden of Chinese lesbians in relation to reproductive issues.


Subject(s)
Asian People/psychology , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female/ethnology , Homosexuality, Female/psychology , Reproduction , Reproductive Techniques, Assisted , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Anxiety/ethnology , Anxiety/psychology , Family Relations/ethnology , Female , Hong Kong/epidemiology , Humans , Mental Health/ethnology , Perception , Quality of Life , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
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