2020
DOI: 10.1089/lgbt.2019.0352
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Substance Use Disparities at the Intersection of Sexual Identity and Race/Ethnicity: Results from the 2015–2018 National Survey on Drug Use and Health

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Cited by 65 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…Studies have also consistently found that risk of hazardous drinking and drug use, including marijuana use, is lower among exclusively heterosexual women than among women who identify or are classified as "sexual minority" (including lesbian, bisexual, "mostly heterosexual," or identify as heterosexual and report same sex partners; Drabble, Midanik, & Trocki, 2005;Hughes, Szalacha, & McNair, 2010;Hughes et al, 2020;Hughes, Wilsnack, & Kantor, 2016;McCabe, Hughes, Bostwick, West, & Boyd, 2009;Schuler, Prince, Breslau, & Collins, 2020;Schuler, Rice, Evans-Polce, & Collins, 2018;Trocki, Drabble, & Midanik, 2009). A recent scoping review found that although some studies reported higher rates of hazardous drinking and drug use among bisexual women compared to lesbian women, others found no significant difference between these two groups (Hughes et al, 2020).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies have also consistently found that risk of hazardous drinking and drug use, including marijuana use, is lower among exclusively heterosexual women than among women who identify or are classified as "sexual minority" (including lesbian, bisexual, "mostly heterosexual," or identify as heterosexual and report same sex partners; Drabble, Midanik, & Trocki, 2005;Hughes, Szalacha, & McNair, 2010;Hughes et al, 2020;Hughes, Wilsnack, & Kantor, 2016;McCabe, Hughes, Bostwick, West, & Boyd, 2009;Schuler, Prince, Breslau, & Collins, 2020;Schuler, Rice, Evans-Polce, & Collins, 2018;Trocki, Drabble, & Midanik, 2009). A recent scoping review found that although some studies reported higher rates of hazardous drinking and drug use among bisexual women compared to lesbian women, others found no significant difference between these two groups (Hughes et al, 2020).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only one tobacco study examined racial/ethnic differences in outcomes , no alcohol interventions examined differences by race/ethnicity, and interventions for methamphetamine use included samples that were predominately non-Hispanic white, cisgender, gay or bisexual men, or MSM. The lack of attention to racial/ethnic differences is important given that SGM people of color are subject to stigma, prejudice, and discrimination across intersecting minority identities that can increase risk for substance use (Schuler, Prince, Breslau, & Collins, 2020).…”
Section: J O U R N a L P R E -P R O O Fmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These additive stressors may, in turn, contribute to higher levels of substance use and poorer health or psychosocial outcomes. At the same time, as Schuler and colleagues have noted [ 9 ], empirical studies do not consistently support an additive stress perspective, and in some cases, persons with multiple minority identities (e.g., racial/ethnic minority identity and SGM identity) have similar or more favorable profiles of substance use or related outcomes than peers with fewer minority identities (e.g., non-Hispanic White SGM peers) [ 9 ]. Regardless of the direction of differences found in empirical studies, the social contexts at the intersections of sexual orientation, gender identity, race, and ethnicity contribute to unique lived experiences [ 1 , 10 , 11 ] that may be obscured when all SGM persons are grouped together and compared in aggregate to non-SGM peers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%