Association between sexual orientation acceptance and suicidal ideation, substance use, and internalised homophobia amongst the pink carpet Y cohort study of young gay, bisexual, and queer men in Singapore

Abstract Background Gay, bisexual and queer (GBQ) men are frequently subjected to minority stressors that have negative impacts on their health. Milestones that include the acceptance and disclosure of sexual identity amongst GBQ men are hence key instruments in understanding the prevalence of inter...

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Main Authors: Clarence Ong, Rayner Kay Jin Tan, Daniel Le, Avin Tan, Adrian Tyler, Calvin Tan, Chronos Kwok, Sumita Banerjee, Mee Lian Wong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-05-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10992-6
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spelling doaj-8a3a8861557748f4821d6567efcc337f2021-05-23T11:03:47ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582021-05-0121111110.1186/s12889-021-10992-6Association between sexual orientation acceptance and suicidal ideation, substance use, and internalised homophobia amongst the pink carpet Y cohort study of young gay, bisexual, and queer men in SingaporeClarence Ong0Rayner Kay Jin Tan1Daniel Le2Avin Tan3Adrian Tyler4Calvin Tan5Chronos Kwok6Sumita Banerjee7Mee Lian Wong8Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of SingaporeSaw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of SingaporeAction for AIDS SingaporeAction for AIDS SingaporeAction for AIDS SingaporeAction for AIDS SingaporeAction for AIDS SingaporeAction for AIDS SingaporeSaw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of SingaporeAbstract Background Gay, bisexual and queer (GBQ) men are frequently subjected to minority stressors that have negative impacts on their health. Milestones that include the acceptance and disclosure of sexual identity amongst GBQ men are hence key instruments in understanding the prevalence of internalised homophobia and predicting health outcomes. As such, this work takes a novel approach to deduce the correlates of delayed acceptance of sexual orientation in young GBQ men as a measure of internalised homophobia through retrospective self-reporting and age-based analysis. Methods Participants were recruited as part of a cohort study exploring the syndemic risks associated with HIV acquisition among young GBQ men in Singapore. We examined their levels of internalised, perceived, experienced homophobia, as well as their health behaviours and suicidal tendencies. Two separate variables were also self-reported by the participants – the age of questioning of sexual orientation and the age of acceptance of sexual orientation. We subsequently recoded a new variable, delayed acceptance of sexual orientation, by taking the difference between these two variables, regressing it as an independent and dependent variable to deduce its psychosocial correlates, as well as its association with other measured instruments of health. Results As a dependent variable, delayed acceptance of sexual orientation is positively associated with an increase of age and internalised homophobia, while being negatively associated with reporting as being gay, compared to being bisexual or queer. As an independent variable, delayed acceptance of sexual orientation was associated with a delayed age of coming out to siblings and parents, suicide ideation, historical use of substances including smoking tobacco cigarettes and consuming marijuana, as well as reporting higher levels of experienced, internalised and perceived homophobia. Conclusion Greater levels of early intervention and efforts are required to reduce the heightened experience of minority stress resulting from communal and institutional hostilities. Areas of improvement may include community-based counselling and psychological support for GBQ men, while not forsaking greater education of the social and healthcare sectors. Most importantly, disrupting the stigma narrative of a GBQ ‘lifestyle’ is paramount in establishing an accepting social environment that reduces the health disparity faced by GBQ men.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10992-6Sexual orientationHomophobiaInternalized homophobiaMental healthMen who have sex with menSingapore
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Clarence Ong
Rayner Kay Jin Tan
Daniel Le
Avin Tan
Adrian Tyler
Calvin Tan
Chronos Kwok
Sumita Banerjee
Mee Lian Wong
spellingShingle Clarence Ong
Rayner Kay Jin Tan
Daniel Le
Avin Tan
Adrian Tyler
Calvin Tan
Chronos Kwok
Sumita Banerjee
Mee Lian Wong
Association between sexual orientation acceptance and suicidal ideation, substance use, and internalised homophobia amongst the pink carpet Y cohort study of young gay, bisexual, and queer men in Singapore
BMC Public Health
Sexual orientation
Homophobia
Internalized homophobia
Mental health
Men who have sex with men
Singapore
author_facet Clarence Ong
Rayner Kay Jin Tan
Daniel Le
Avin Tan
Adrian Tyler
Calvin Tan
Chronos Kwok
Sumita Banerjee
Mee Lian Wong
author_sort Clarence Ong
title Association between sexual orientation acceptance and suicidal ideation, substance use, and internalised homophobia amongst the pink carpet Y cohort study of young gay, bisexual, and queer men in Singapore
title_short Association between sexual orientation acceptance and suicidal ideation, substance use, and internalised homophobia amongst the pink carpet Y cohort study of young gay, bisexual, and queer men in Singapore
title_full Association between sexual orientation acceptance and suicidal ideation, substance use, and internalised homophobia amongst the pink carpet Y cohort study of young gay, bisexual, and queer men in Singapore
title_fullStr Association between sexual orientation acceptance and suicidal ideation, substance use, and internalised homophobia amongst the pink carpet Y cohort study of young gay, bisexual, and queer men in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Association between sexual orientation acceptance and suicidal ideation, substance use, and internalised homophobia amongst the pink carpet Y cohort study of young gay, bisexual, and queer men in Singapore
title_sort association between sexual orientation acceptance and suicidal ideation, substance use, and internalised homophobia amongst the pink carpet y cohort study of young gay, bisexual, and queer men in singapore
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Background Gay, bisexual and queer (GBQ) men are frequently subjected to minority stressors that have negative impacts on their health. Milestones that include the acceptance and disclosure of sexual identity amongst GBQ men are hence key instruments in understanding the prevalence of internalised homophobia and predicting health outcomes. As such, this work takes a novel approach to deduce the correlates of delayed acceptance of sexual orientation in young GBQ men as a measure of internalised homophobia through retrospective self-reporting and age-based analysis. Methods Participants were recruited as part of a cohort study exploring the syndemic risks associated with HIV acquisition among young GBQ men in Singapore. We examined their levels of internalised, perceived, experienced homophobia, as well as their health behaviours and suicidal tendencies. Two separate variables were also self-reported by the participants – the age of questioning of sexual orientation and the age of acceptance of sexual orientation. We subsequently recoded a new variable, delayed acceptance of sexual orientation, by taking the difference between these two variables, regressing it as an independent and dependent variable to deduce its psychosocial correlates, as well as its association with other measured instruments of health. Results As a dependent variable, delayed acceptance of sexual orientation is positively associated with an increase of age and internalised homophobia, while being negatively associated with reporting as being gay, compared to being bisexual or queer. As an independent variable, delayed acceptance of sexual orientation was associated with a delayed age of coming out to siblings and parents, suicide ideation, historical use of substances including smoking tobacco cigarettes and consuming marijuana, as well as reporting higher levels of experienced, internalised and perceived homophobia. Conclusion Greater levels of early intervention and efforts are required to reduce the heightened experience of minority stress resulting from communal and institutional hostilities. Areas of improvement may include community-based counselling and psychological support for GBQ men, while not forsaking greater education of the social and healthcare sectors. Most importantly, disrupting the stigma narrative of a GBQ ‘lifestyle’ is paramount in establishing an accepting social environment that reduces the health disparity faced by GBQ men.
topic Sexual orientation
Homophobia
Internalized homophobia
Mental health
Men who have sex with men
Singapore
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10992-6
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