AI Article Synopsis

  • Emotional support from family and friends is crucial for health outcomes, particularly in marginalized communities, and its significance increased during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • A study using data from the National Couples' Health and Time Study (NCHAT) found that exclusively heterosexual individuals primarily sought emotional support from family, while sexual minority individuals turned to friends for support.
  • Factors such as openness about sexual identity, the importance of that identity, experienced aggressions, and relationship satisfaction were linked to the levels of emotional support received from both family and friends among diverse sexual populations.

Article Abstract

Emotional support, particularly support from family and friends, is essential to health outcomes especially for marginalized communities. Although emotional support is recognized as a critical resource, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, to date no research has examined access to support during the pandemic for sexual diverse populations. This study aims to apply minority stress theory by drawing on a new population-based data source of 3,642 respondents, the National Couples' Health and Time Study (NCHAT), which oversampled sexual and gender diverse populations during the pandemic. We focus on two sources of emotional support: family members and friends. Exclusively heterosexual respondents relied more on emotional support from family than respondents who identified as exclusively gay/lesbian, bisexual including pan, omni, and queer, and those reporting another sexual identity or multiple sexual identities. However, respondents who did not identify as heterosexual relied more on emotional support from friends compared to exclusively heterosexual respondents. There were no significant differences among respondents with sexual minority identities in regard to family or friend support. Other factors, such as outness to friends and family, identity centrality, aggressions, and relationship satisfaction are found to be associated support from friends and family. The findings presented here add to a growing body of work on social support while adding sexual minority-specific factors that may affect receipt of, need for, and outcomes relating to support. This work contributes to understanding of the social climate and resources available to sexual diverse populations during a major public health crisis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10492653PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch.2023.102910DOI Listing

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