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Sources of Social Support, Self-Esteem and Psychological Distress Among Chinese Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual People

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Publisher Routledge
Date 2024 Apr 10
PMID 38596760
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Abstract

Objective: Minority stressors are associated with increased psychological distress, and social support is considered as a significant protective factor to mitigate the psychological distress in LGB individuals. In China, LGB individuals suffer additional pressure from society and family, but only a few studies have explored the effect of social support on the psychological distress of Chinese LGB individuals and the mechanism underlying the association. The current study aimed to examine the mediating role of self-esteem in the relationship between three sources of social support (from family, friends, and others) and psychological distress in Chinese LGB individuals.

Methods: 227 LGB individuals ( age = 25.9 years; SD = 5.6) who were voluntarily recruited by a combination of snowballing and targeted sampling strategies. Path analysis was used to test the associations between variables.

Results: Results indicated that 31.3% of LGB individuals had a high level of psychological distress. The results showed that social support from family, friends, and others was associated with higher levels of self-esteem and lower levels of psychological distress. Only the mediating effect of self-esteem was found between friend support and psychological distress.

Conclusions: This study demonstrated that friend support might be a protective factor against psychological distress in Chinese LGB individuals, and more friend support could potentially relieve psychological distress by building higher self-esteem. These results highlight the importance of fostering friend support in the group of Chinese LGB individuals.

Citing Articles

Understanding suicidal ideation disparity between sexual minority and heterosexual Chinese young men: a multiple mediation model of social support sources, self-esteem, and depressive symptoms.

Huang Y, Liu J, Huang G, Zhu D, Zhou Y, Hu J Front Psychiatry. 2024; 15:1265722.

PMID: 38559394 PMC: 10978729. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1265722.

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