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Depression and Alcohol Abuse Higher for Bisexual Women Than Bisexual Men Print E-mail
Living - Relationships
TS-Si News Service   
Tuesday, 08 November 2011 16:00
Celtic Knot.Fairfax, VA, USA. Bisexual women are more likely than their male counterparts to suffer from depression and stress and to binge-drink, according to a new national study.

Bisexual women also are at greater risk to smoke and be victimized, the research finds.


Lisa Lindley, the George Mason University researcher who led the study wonders "Why? That's what we keep asking." She has some theories. "Bisexuals are often invisible," she says of bisexual women. "There's a lot of prejudice against them. They're told You're confused — pick one. There tends to be this expectation or standard that a person picks one sexual identity and sticks with it. I think there's a lot of misunderstanding about bisexuals. I think their risk has a lot more to do with stigma."

Lisa Lindley, MPH, DrPH, CHES.

Lisa Lindley, MPH, DrPH, CHES, is Associate Professor, Global and Community Health, College of Health & Human Services, CHHS.
Lindley and her co-authors Katrina M. Walsemann and Jarvis W. Carter Jr. of the University of South Carolina used a nationally representative sample of 14,412 people — 7,696 women and 6,716 men — in the survey. The survey first was given in 1994-95 when the respondents were enrolled in grades 7-12 and given again in 2007-08 when they were 24 to 32 years old. The new findings appear in the American Journal of Public Health (AJPH).

Lindley, an associate professor in the College of Health and Human Services, uses three different dimensions of sexuality — identity, behavior and attraction — and links them to a variety of health outcomes.
  • Both bisexual girls and boys were more likely to be high-risk for depression, stress and alcohol abuse when they were teenagers.

  • The odds dropped for men as they got older, but not so for women.

  • Women who were strictly identified as straight or gay did not have the same risk factors as bisexual women.

Lindley's research builds on new information. Until now, few national studies have asked about sexual attraction, behavior and identity. Some think bisexuals are increasing the risk level reported among the overall lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.

More studies are needed to understand what is going on with these young women, Lindley says, since researchers need to learn more about the individual communities. "They're not all troubled," she says of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community. "They're not all high risk."

Discordance could be at the heart of the issue for bisexual women, Lindley says. "They're saying, I identify one way, but I behave in a different way and am attracted in another way," she says. They may be more isolated and may not feel as if they have someone to talk with who understands what they are going through.

More young women than men reported that they were attracted to both sexes and that they were "mostly" straight or bisexual. "Women are more likely to have sexual identities that fluctuate over time," Lindley says. "Whereas with men, it tends to be either I'm straight or I'm gay."

Men didn't report feeling as depressed or stressed as women did. They also didn't binge-drink or smoke as much as bisexual women. So why are men better off?

"I don't know is the honest answer," Lindley says. "Perhaps it's because men, if gay or straight, have a stronger connection to their community. Bisexual women may not feel as if there is a community for them."

CitationThe Association of Sexual Orientation Measures With Young Adults’ Health-Related Outcomes. Lisa L. Lindley, Katrina M. Walsemann, Jarvis W. Carter. American Journal of Public Health 2011; doi:10.2105/AJPH.2011.300262

Abstract

Objectives. We examined associations among 3 dimensions of sexual orientation (identity, behavior, and attraction) and key health-related indicators commonly studied among sexual minority populations: depressive symptoms, perceived stress, smoking, binge drinking, and victimization.

Methods. We analyzed data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, Wave IV (2007-2008) when respondents were aged 24 to 32 years (n=14412). We used multivariate linear and logistic regressions to examine consistency of associations between sexual orientation measures and health-related indicators.

Results. Strength of associations differed by gender and sexual orientation measure. Among women, being attracted to both sexes, identifying as "mostly straight" or "bisexual," and having mostly opposite-sex sexual partners was associated with greater risk for all indicators. Among men, sexual attraction was unrelated to health indicators. Men who were "mostly straight" were at greater risk for some, but not all, indicators. Men who had sexual partners of the same sex or both sexes were at lower risk for binge drinking.

Conclusions. Using all 3 dimensions of sexual orientation provides a more complete picture of the association between sexual orientation and health among young adults than does using any 1 dimension alone.

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 08 November 2011 13:01